Ibook won't boot up on own or from OS installation CD (need help in Yemen)

Hello,
I'm currently in Yemen for a few months and my ibook seems to have died on me. The country isn't exactly brimming with Apple support technicians so any advice or suggestions people could give me would be really appreciated.
I have an older ibook (dual USB G3 which I bought in June 2001). It has the occasional application or OS freezes, but typically restarting solves these. Yesterday, however, when I tried restarting the computer wouldn't boot up - it would get to the gray start up screen with the apple and spinning wheel and would just sit there with no progress even after an hour. I removed the airport card and extra RAM, but no luck.
I ran the Apple Hardware Check CD, but everything came up clean. I also ran Norton Utilities Disk Warrier and it found Major Errors in some of the directories (I have the list at home if that would help) all of which it said it fixed. However, it wasn't able to complete checking the HD, at one point it tried to find some files and never was able to get any further in the check - it would just sit for hours with no progress. When I tried rebooting the computer on its own it got no further than a gray screen.
At this point I decided it might be easiest just to reinstall the opperating system. I put in the installation disks (OS 10.2.4) and tried booting up from the CD - the boot up was very slow and ultimately (maybe after 10 minutes) instead of a gray screen with an Apple logo it came up with the "forbidden symbol" (i.e. the circle with the slash through it that you see on no smoking signs).
At this point I'm not quite sure what to since it isn't booting up from the installation CD - are there any other tricks I could try or reason why it won't boot up from the CD? I also have a copy of 10.4 installation CD but I'm hesitant to install it just because the ibook is such an old computer and it would require the extra RAM to run it (currently I have 300 something of RAM in the computer). I also have a 20 GB external harddrive with me if there's anyway I could boot up with it.
Three years ago the laptop had major problems and basically died, but went into Apple and seemed to have been fixed and had the logic board replaced. After this point I got a new laptop (which I'm hiting myself for not bringing with me at this point) and haven't really used this computer frequently - maybe 5 to 10 times in the last 3 years, it really is a "spare" laptop. I used it for about a week before coming and it seemed to be working fine.
At this point I'm really open to any suggestions on how to fix and jury rig it to work for the next 3 months (really I just need to be able to use Word and iPhoto) or so as I won't be using it once I get back to the States. Any suggestions or help would be greatly appreciate. Thank you very much!!

Hi, and welcome to Apple Discussions.
Which utility did you use on the iBook? Was it Norton DiskDoctor or Alsoft's DiskWarrior? They are two entirely different things.
Norton DiskDoctor was developed for OS 9. It doesn't recognize OS X as a legitimate operating system, identifies OS X as "errors" on your drive, and sets about "fixing" those errors, really messing things up in the process. (It does this even if you run it in OS 9 on a drive that has OS X on it.)
Apple calls the sign you are seeing when trying to boot from the CD a "prohibitory sign."
Check out this Apple Knowledge Base article on what to do about a prohibitory sign at startup:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106805
Maybe something there will help.

Similar Messages

  • IBook won't boot from CD

    I bought this iBook, used, with Tiger on it. A while back, it had Debian Lenny installed onto it. Now I can't reinstall Tiger...
    I have tried holding "C" before the gray screen when it boots, and I've tried holding "option". It only shows the disk with the Linux penguin, but not my Tiger install CD. Holding C, it only loops trying to read the CD; it does NOT reboot, it just unsuccessfully continues attempting to read the disk.
    I know it not be a problem with my CD, because I can't reinstall Debian or Kubuntu or Ubuntu, even from the disk used in the past. I have tried resetting the PRAM and PMU..
    Is there any hope?? I'm done with using Linux.

    Yes, the iMac will still boot from the CD. The iBook won't boot from any disk anymore, not even retail Panther. I know that the CD drive still works, because I'm using it right now to listen to music in Debian.. I think something's up with the open firmware, and I should update it but that can only be done through Classic right? There's not even an update for my iBook, I think.
    I've tried burning several different linix distros, and they all work with my iMac but not iBook.
    And, yes, it is a set of four CDs for Tiger.

  • Clamshell iBook Won't Boot from Jaguar CD (v10.2.3)

    Branching off from a prior thread (https://discussions.apple.com/message/13222609#13222609) in which booting from an OS X CD was a potential solution to a problem, the problem encountered with the potential solution warrants its own thread.
    My machine is a Clamshell iBook (G3), Revision B (with 64MB base RAM and no FireWire). It was purchased new eleven years ago and later ugpraded to 192MB RAM.
    The OS on the hard drive was 9.0.2 until yesterday, when I updated it to 9.1 so I could bring the firmware up to date. I did this before attempting to use the Jaguar CD.
    The CD in question is an original Jaguar install CD, version 10.2.3. This is a two-disc set (the discs are labeled 1 and 2) and is a retail version; my iBook was manufactured prior to the release of OS X (non-server) and does not have an OEM OS X disc.
    When the iBook attempts to boot from the CD, either by pressing "C" at startup or by running the Installer from OS 9.1, it seems to be loading fine until the following appears:
    At this point, the iBook won't load any further and a restart is required.
    The iBook does boot an OS X Cheetah (10.0) CD as well as its own restore disc (9.0.2) and the 9.1 disc that came with Cheetah. Unfortunately, Cheetah doesn't seem to have any effect on the battery (this is why I'm booting with an OS X CD; see the posts in the other thread for details). I don't have any other retail CD versions of OS X to try (aside from a Snow Leopard DVD).
    Aside from this boot problem and the battery issue (the computer won't recognize the battery and displays an "X" through it even after having charged it with an external charger) the iBook is working perfectly fine.

    No. I get the "X" through the battery in the menu bar and no bars, just a plug icon, in the control strip under OS 9.
    The battery is a year old and has never been recognized by this computer. I don't have another Clamshell to test it in but did verify that it can charge in a VST charger.
    The last time the computer recognized a battery was about 6 years ago when the initial batteries were still in use. Both were completely depleted after my charger shorted out; they didn't charge again after I got a new charger. The batteries were healthy at the time and were able to hold 3-4 hours, which was pretty typical mileage for me on this laptop.

  • IBook won't boot, stops at gray screen--HELP

    I couldn't find this exact topic at first glance and I am hoping someone can help me. My ibook is about 5 years old and has only really crashed on my once 2 years ago but I was able to reinstall the OS and go on my way. This time, however, nothing works. I tried to boot up yesterday and the gray screen appeared and that was it along with a strange buzzing sound. I tried Disk Warrior, wouldn't even boot off that. Also tried booting off system disk 1 and didn't get past the language screen, just hung up with that buzz again.
    Does this sound like a logic board issue? Can it be rescued?
    Thanks in advance for any help!

    I'm not sure if the computer can be checked out at home in such a way
    in its present state, to see if there is a logic board failure behind it, now,
    or not. There could be a hard disk drive failure, or ATA controller failure;
    and a short list of other possibilities, best checked over by a specialist.
    Certain keyboard commands and things could be tried (and I usually
    assume they'd been tried before asking here, but that's often not so)
    just to see if one or more of them could get a rise out of the dead Mac.
    Be sure, if you can get the installer disc to boot the Mac, that you
    try and use the Disk Utility to repair disc; maybe more than once;
    and do not try to just reinstall an Archive and Install. The HDD may
    have corruption issues and it may need low-level zero-data and re-
    formatting before a new system could go on there, if it worked at all.
    {Even trying to reset PRAM/NVRAM and then seeing if you can get
    the bootable OSX installer disc to start up the Mac could be OK.
    Maybe that PMU reset, as a last resort? It probably won't hurt...}
    A system on an external bootable enclosed hard disk drive could be
    used by a tech or a prepared home-tech owner, and a clone of the
    machine's system then attempted to be used to boot the ailing Mac.
    If the optical drive and other components relying on the logic board
    are dysfunctional due to a defect on that main board, most external
    devices may also have a hard time trying to use these methods of
    outside efforts to troubleshoot be nominally successful.
    There may be a way a tech can use an second computer to get
    data off the drive in your iBook, should it come to that, by using
    the FireWire Target Disk mode and see if your iBook can start
    and act like an external hard disk drive. A copy of the drive's
    content or parts of it may be made by the second healthy Mac.
    A clone (perhaps not bootable if data on it is damaged and not
    recoverable) could be made if the second healthy computer has
    a clone utility and also an external drive it can copy/clone the
    iBook's drive content over to. This may be asking too much;
    but the home user who has stuff on hand could do it shortly.
    Anyway, there are some ideas online, if you can search google
    and choose appropriate words; I looked but you may need to
    read through several different source links to see if anything
    sounds like it may work. re: iBook won't start past grey screen
    Some users have tried resetting the PMU, others tried NVRAM
    and PRAM; a few tried SafeBoot to see if the system was OK
    enough to load in a reduced startup mode; maybe where the
    system's own Disk Utility could be ran to at least fix permissions.
    And of these, if it is truly a logic board or a failed hard disk drive,
    they won't really do much. Probably no harm; and that is part
    of what troubleshooting is all about, working with zeros and ones!
    Good luck & happy computing!
    edited to add a chapter.

  • Ibook won't boot, won't recognise hard drive, PRAM reset etc. Help?

    Hi, I'm trying to repair my brother's iBook with limited knowledge. I'm not sure whether it's a G3 or G4 but it was made in 2001, has 2 usb's and a firewire, is white (slightly translucent) and has a 12" screen.
    It started having problems starting up so he copied all his important files, just in time as now it won't work at all.
    It starts up but just comes up with the ?/folder icon flashing. The hard drive starts "ticking" like an old clock as soon as the power button is pressed, as if it's stuck.
    I've tried starting from the 10.3 install CD, this works at first but can't see a hard drive for installation, the same goes for disk utility from the install disk, there's no disk shown to repair.
    I've reset the PRAM, PMU and pressed command, ctrl, alt(or shift?) and the power button.
    I've started in "safe" mode but it won't get past the grey screen with apple icon.
    I've started with alt pressed, this showed an OSX hard drive startup disk ok but would not boot it, it showed the grey screen again with the Apple logo, on one occasion this changed to a "No Entry" sign, a circle with a line through, weird. It has OS9 on here too but that didn't show at all.
    After I drove it from his house (100 miles of vibrations) it started up straight away but froze (again with the ticking sound) after about 10 mins when accessing a file. When it started I had to reset the year and time which had changed to 1976, this is why I reset the PRAM. Is there a PRAM battery on these machines that can be changed? Could that be the problem?
    On one occasion I held the eject key down at startup after having problems getting it out, the screen showed lots of numbers and something saying "panic: we are hanging here" very weird!
    I've pressed down on the case on the left below the keyboard.
    The battery seems to hold plenty of charge.
    Sorry this is so long but I wanted to give as much detail as possible. I've tried everything I can think of & have read about without spending cash or taking it apart. I think the HD may have had it. Any ideas?
    Thanks,
    James

    James,
    No need to apologize for the length. That helps a lot. You can tell the model, speed and size by lifting the keyboard (two tabs outboard of the F1 and F11 keys, make sure it's unlocked - that tiny sloted head between F5 and F6)
    There'll be a bar coded sticker there.
    However I think it's a 500-900 G3.
    It starts up but just comes up with the ?/folder icon flashing. The hard drive starts "ticking" like an old clock ..
    That's classic for a bad hard drive.
    When it started I had to reset the year and time which had changed to 1976, this is why I reset the PRAM.
    That happens when the battery is out with no power plug for longer than a few minutes.
    Is there a PRAM battery on these machines that can be changed? Could that be the problem?
    No there is no PRAM battery in an iBook. There is a super cap that allows a short time so you can change the battery.
    the screen showed lots of numbers and something saying "panic: we are hanging here" very weird!
    Yes that's a kernel panic.
    So it boots from the CD but needs a new hard drive.
    Richard

  • IBook won't boot up after a rest..

    I hava the most weird problem with my iBook..
    As I have it running, it works just fine.
    I can boot it up, install software and do all sorts of things with it but when I turn it off and let it stay like that for like couple of hours, it won't boot up no more.
    With the OS disk I can revive it, just now it took 5 tries, but it started and now as I shut it down and turn it on again there is no problem. But yet again, if I let it stand there for a hour or two, we are back in with the same problem, it won't finf the boot disk and needs to be revived with the OS intallation disk.
    I reinstalled the whole (clean install) system today, had everything set up and installed all my software and such and there was no problem during the whole day, but now I had it turned off for few hours, it's just the same..
    What might be the problem??

    Now there is a new HD and it works better than this iBook has ever done.
    That's great! Glad that resolved your issue.
    So, problem solved, not in a conventional way but solved.
    Well, actually, pretty conventional. The average life of an internal HDD in a laptop is approximately 3 to 5 years, and even if they survive beyond that they can fail suddenly or else continue with progressively degraded performance until they expire. The new HDDs have larger capacities and faster rotational speeds, both of which significantly boost performance.
    Good luck.
    cornelius
    Thanks for leaving feedback in Apple Discussions by marking the "solved" post.

  • Tangerine iBook won't boot

    My cousin has a Tangerine iBook, and she noticed today that it won't boot. She says the power indicator light ring around the power port isn't lighting up anymore, so I am guessing fried motherboard or the power adapter has gone bad. Does this make sense or are there other things I should be looking for? Thanks!

    Try a different power adapter. Maybe one of your friends has a clamshell or a black G3 PowerBook.
    It is a known issue that the cable connection between the yoyo power adapter near the plug breaks easily after some years of use - so don't give up too soon.
    Next thing would be the DC-in board.
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Mac/iBook-G3-Clamshell/DC-In-Board/49/12/Page-1
    When the plug goes in and out a thousand times it looses its contact and needs to be resoldered.
    Sometimes the DC-in board is fried and the logicboard is still working.

  • Dropped iBook - won't boot up, help!

    Because I'm an idiot, I dropped my beloved G4 iBook on the ground and now it won't boot up. I can get it to turn on, I get the startup chime, it gets to the blue screen with the grey Apple and spinning progress indicator...and that's it. The spinning disc just keeps on spinning indefinitely. No error messages, no kernel panic, nothing like that. Tried booting in Safe Mode...get the blue screen with grey apple, no spinning disc, and that's as far as I can get.
    I bought it secondhand from a friend so no warranty or Applecare or anything like that. Is the hard drive okay? Could something have come loose and just needs to be snapped back into place? Did the motherboard get cracked? What could cause this type of problem, especially since I can't even get it to boot in Safe Mode, and what can I do to fix it? Is it even fixable? Have I lost all my files? Can I just take it to a repair shop and everything will be okay?!?!
    helllllllp!!!! :'(

    Hi from another idiot iMac user (I last posted when I spilled a glass of water on my desktop's keyboard...)
    I dropped my iBook G4 on the stairs this morning Since it sort of slid down the carpeting I thought I'd be OK but it was just like the other used described - Apple logo, spinning startup icon, a few clicks and whirrs then nothing.
    I followed your instructions below, and the Installer loaded. I have clicked on Introduction, agreed with the licensing, selected a destination (clicked on HD), but then I got a message "You cannot install Mac OS X on this volume without changing your install settings. Click Options to change settings. A newer version of Mac OS is installed."
    I never got a Repair Disk button. I never installed newer software, unless it was an update that downloaded from Apple. What should I do?
    Thanks!!!!
    Mary

  • 14" iBook won't boot past Blue Screen?

    Hi,
    I have in my possession my Sisters 14" iBook G4. It boots with the grey Apple logo but then freezes at the blue screen. I'm guessing it's either the hard drive or logic board, does anyone have a procedure to follow to diagnose the fault? I don't have the original discs but do have a 10.5 retail box.
    Thanks in advance.

    Spudnuty - I think you might want to hear this...
    I just bought an ibook G4 1.2Ghz "Late 2004" model off of ebay, had the blue screen problem. I bought it because I thought it might have been the OS (freeze at login) and the previous owner didn't know, but it was an actual freeze... actually froze a few times while at the spinning wheel at startup, and would randomly display a dark blue screen sometimes at startup.
    I am an ACMT, I decided to disassemble the machine as per the service manual and get it down to basically the logic board, even pulled off the top display entirely. Ran an external monitor via mini-VGA, external HD via Firewire... still froze at blue screen. So I decided something similar to your suggestion - I pulled off the heat sink, only to discover that the conventional way of cooling a cpu/gpu (heating compound directly under heat sink) had been abandoned on this model for some crappy adhesive pads. The pads had a bit of thickness to them, so I decided to cut of a small section of the top shield, fold it into a nice square and flatten it. I then put some heat sink compound on both the cpu and gpu, put the metal "shim" on the gpu and tightened down the heat sink. Guess what? Started up in a jiffy. I put a fresh install of Tiger on it, have been playing multiple Quicktime vids looped for a while now... machine is going strong.
    All that to say, shimming works on these later ibook G4 models that get the blue screen, I've confirmed it. Just remove the adhesive pads, shim with something heat conductive (maybe even aluminum foil!), add heat compound and run it for a while.

  • G4 iBook won't boot up all the way

    I have a dp G4 and an iBook G4. My iBook is not booting up. It is stuck at the white screen with grey apple and turning clock-like thingy. I can't find my 10.4 disc to try and boot up from it. I need files off the iBook and thought I'd done this before, but can't remember how. But I thought I'd remembered hooking up both computers via firewire and made the iBook drive mount on my G4. Can someone help me with procedure to hook it up so I can get the file I need off the iBook, and also be able to run Disk Utility or something to try and repair the iBook drive? I have airport on the iBook if there is an option there. Thanks in advance for your help.
    LMW

    Hi.
    To use the FireWire Target Disk Mode, proceed as follows:
    Turn off your iBook.
    Disconnect any FireWire peripheral from both systems.
    Hook both machines with a 6pin FireWire cable.
    Plug your iBook AC power adapter.
    Turn the iBook while holding the T key, until you see a FireWire icon on the display.
    The iBook should mount on the other Mac Desktop.
    On the desktop computer, open Disk Utility, and try to repair the iBook boot volume. In order to make a successful disk repair, the desktop system has to run the same OS X version as the iBook. You should never attempt to repair a disk with a version of Disk Utility from other OS X iteration.
    Good Luck.

  • Mac Mini won't boot up after disconnecting it from iMac

    I have disconnected my Mac Mini from the iMac I had it connected to, and now it won't boot up when I turn it on. Do I need to hold down a key combination to get it to boot from it's own operating system again?

    I have disconnected my Mac Mini from the iMac I had
    it connected to, and now it won't boot up when I turn
    it on. Do I need to hold down a key combination to
    get it to boot from it's own operating system again?
    You should not have to hold down any key to get it to boot to an installed copy of MacOS, though if you hold the option key down, it should take you to the Startup Manager which will give you a list of available MacOS volumes it can boot from. If it doesn't show any, then you don't have a bootable MacOS on your mini.
    Are you getting anything on your screen when you are trying to boot, such as a folder with a question mark?

  • IMac won't boot after iTunes Match - Get diskos2 i/o error. Help!

    So after almost 24 straigth hours up uploading songs to iTunes Match, I woke up this morning and my iMac wouldn't boot. Gets stuck on the gray screen with the apple logo. I booted in verbose mode keep getting a "diskos2 i/o error." With a little googling some people say it's a bad sector and to erase and reinstall Lion others say it's a failing hard drive. Disk Utlity in Recovery Mode says the drive is ok. Any thoughts out there on what I should do? Thanks!

    I am having the same problem. The machine loads just to the point when it says "Loading Mac OSX", then its non responsive for hours. The keyboard and mouse still work, but it won't move past that point.
    When I try to repair the disk, it gives me an error message indicating that the disk cannot be repaired. I am bad at backing up my files, so I want to avoid a fresh reinstallation.
    The worst part is I had just purchased Disk Warrior, and that won't boot up.
    If no solutions are found, does anyone know a way that to initiate the computer in disk mode, so I can hook up another Mac to it, and save all the files?
    -alfredo

  • Macbook won't boot or install OS X from cd/dvd?..

    I have a Macbook 09 , and whenever i boot it it loads to the apple logo with the spinning wheel and the loading bar , and pretty much stays there forever, i tried to use an installation cd i used for my imac on it and ive used it on another macbook before but whenever i put the cd in and go to the options menu and select it , it doesnt load up it goes back to the spinning wheel and logo, I tried running terminal and dskchk and it had a disk i/o error.. I figured the hard drive was damaged so i took the hard drive from my other laptop and put it in the macbook to try and see if the disc would install on the new hard drive but it just went to the apple logo and spinning wheel without the loading bar this time, im not sure what could be wrong with this computer.. but i really want to fix it, i heard the ribbon cable could be the problem but not sure because the hard drive still shows up in the options menu.. NEED HELP ASAP! Let me know, thanks!

    Use the disc you used to install Snow Leopard on the computer. You can't use discs from other computer models. The original installer discs are intended only for the computer with which they came.
    You will have to erase your drive before installing based on what you have described:
    Clean Install of Snow Leopard
         1. Boot the computer using the Snow Leopard Installer Disc or the Disc 1 that came
             with your computer.  Insert the disc into the optical drive and restart the computer.
             After the chime press and hold down the  "C" key.  Release the key when you see
             a small spinning gear appear below the dark gray Apple logo.
         2. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue
             button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
             After DU loads select the hard drive entry from the left side list (mfgr.'s ID and drive
             size.)  Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.  Set the number of
             partitions to one (1) from the Partitions drop down menu, set the format type to Mac
             OS Extended (Journaled, if supported), then click on the Partition button.
         3. When the formatting has completed quit DU and return to the installer.  Proceed
             with the OS X installation and follow the directions included with the installer.
         4. When the installation has completed your computer will Restart into the Setup
             Assistant. Be sure you configure your initial admin account with the exact same
             username and password that you used on your old drive. After you finish Setup
             Assistant will complete the installation after which you will be running a fresh
             install of OS X.  You can now begin the update process by opening Software
             Update and installing all recommended updates to bring your installation current.
    Download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.

  • Help! blue screen of death and ibook won't boot at all

    I ran the software update on my ibook (800 mhz, G3 running 10.4.3) today. I repaired permissions and rebooted before hand. I don't have any hacks on it. I have plently of room on the drive for the update (more than 6gigs on the 30 gig drive). I know my ibook is feeling its age, but now she won't start at all!
    When I ran the update (which I already did on my imac with no problems), the ipod updater, quicktime and something else installed without problem. I came into the room to find that the Mac OS 10.4.4 updater had a red exclimation point next to it, and I had an error message that there was a problem with the update and that I needed to reboot. Restarting was my only option so I did. ibook would not start. It hung on the "starting OS X" screen forever (45 minutes). I force-restarted and booted in single-user mode. I have an app called AppleJack installed so I ran that (repairs permissions and such in single-user mode). I rebooted. Nothing. Blue screen of death.
    Any ideas? Should I reinstall OS 10.4 from the CD?

    How is mail different than that?
    Mail keeps mailboxes in their own separate Finder files.
    Home -> Library -> Mail
    Home -> Library -> Mail Downloads
    Notice also that Mailboxes themselves have their own folders in
    Home -> Library -> Mail -> Mailboxes
    Addressbook keeps addresses for Mail in its own set of Finder Files.
    Home -> Library -> Application Support -> Addressbook
    iCal keeps it in
    Home -> Library -> Calendars
    Whereas Microsoft Office is simply everything in one user belongs to:
    Home -> Documents -> Microsoft User Data -> Identities -> Main Identity -> Database
    So in reality you have 4 different places, and simple data corruption inside the database file itself is not going to take out all of the data when you use Mail, Addressbook, and iCal. I find it is much more robust to use Mail, Addressbook, and iCal purely for the reason that data corruption is not as prevalent a problem when your database gets large.
    Single user mode is not a good idea, until the data is actually backed up in some fashion. Once you are getting input/output errors, trying to get it out of a place where there is data corruption by using a data recovery program is the first step with Prosoft Data Rescue.
    You may try to rebuild the database file too, which might work, but since your machine is suffering a lot of input/output errors, I'm suspicious of the health of your hard drive, and you are booting to a blue screen, single user mode may not be enough, even Disk Warrior may not be enough. Now's the time to get all the data off the hard drive into another in a safe place. Data Rescue may be able to recover it. If not, you may have to deal with a data recovery firm.

  • Screen went crazy, then black - now iBook won't boot up. Help?

    So, my iBook has problems. therefore I have problems. I was spoiled and grew up using macs as well as having a computer obsessed father who kept everything running smoothly... unfortunately I never took the opportunity to learn from him. So now I'm lost.
    Problem started yesterday, screen went all vertical lines and flickered on and off. Rebooted, got to the login screen, same thing again. Rebooted, chime and grey screen. Reset PRAM, same thing. Started up off install disc, alllllllmost started all the way up... then colored lines, black. Reset PMU, still black, no chime now, just fan/ optical drive noise. Got frustrated, left it alone for a while, tried again and it worked!
    THEN this morning in the middle of chatting, colored lines and black. Rebooted, just chime. Reset PMU, rebooted, and it worked!
    THEN this afternoon... colored lines/ black. repeated above steps, but no luck. Currently all I get is a black screen and fan noise, no chime.
    My iBook was bought July 2005, so it's just over a year old.
    I'm not a computer whiz at ALL... but from things I've read in these discussions it sounds like it could be a logic board issue?
    Any help would be GREATLY appreciated... I'm a broke college student

    So, I suppose you've checked the link on the support page
    http://www.apple.com/support/ in the lower right where you
    can key in the computer's serial number, to see if you have
    any AppleCare original coverage left...? The deal there is
    with the extended optional policy, you get Support by phone
    as well as Service repairs, for a combined period of up to
    three years, total; including the first year's coverage.
    If it is the matter of a few days, you could spring for the call
    to AppleCare (pay per incident, out of warranty) and see if
    you can get your issue covered, even though you probably
    have lapsed official coverage. Sometimes sales support is
    a way to go; other times, if you can get an AppleCare super-
    visor; if you can point (hindsight?) to an issue that may have
    grown into this current failure, that you were unfamilar with,
    that now shows as a probable hardware failure... they may
    be able to have the computer checked over anyway.
    Out of warranty repairs are often expensive on compact and
    portable computers where the parts are very hard to get into.
    To get the computer tested and so on would cost you money.
    If it cannot be booted from the included Apple Hardware Test
    on the included media disc, someone else will have to do it.
    Can your parents help you get a refurbished iBook G4 1.33 12"
    from the Certified page online? Then, get AppleCare w/ in 11 mo?
    These are less expensive machines than the MacBook on budget
    and are significant in value as Certified units direct from Apple.
    PS: I've owned only a few newer Macs; the total however is a
    bit over 100 of them. At one time, I had over 40 in a room and
    all of them worked very well; I restored them, & gave them away.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Problem Capturing from Sony HVR-A1U to FCP 5 using HDV preset

    Hi, i just got a Sony HVR-A1U and am new to HDV. I am a professional editor so i have a full understanding of FCP. Here are my problems and questions. Specs of system : Power Mac Dual 2Ghz G5, 1.5GB Ram, GeForce FX 5200 64mb (Do i need a better GFX c

  • Post Migration from SP2010 -Attach File Button not working in any list new/edit forms

    Hi, We have migrated the SharePoint 2010 farm to Sharepoint 2013 on last saturday and we are noticing an interesting issue after the migration . On any custom list on any web application ,When we create a new item,if we click on attach file button in

  • How to change the Task title on runtime?

    Hi experts again, My customer is struggling with something very simple: how to customize the Task title. You can certainly create an argument in the task, use Data Associations to map the argument, and then use XPath expression to get the value from

  • Can I use C code in labview?

    Hello, I've got a fairly complicated program I've written in C that requires two doubles to be passed to it and it spits out two integers as a result of a very detailed calculation. Is there a way to have labview call this C function? I've tried sear

  • Positioning of text

    I'd like to create a block of text on a blank page that is centered both horizontally and vertically no matter what the size of someone's screen or browser is. Is it possible to do this in Contribute?