Where is your Agent fro Apple mini in Egypt

Where can i get Apple mini in Egypt

The Apple Support Communities are an international user to user technical support forum. As a man from Mexico, Spanish is my native tongue. I do not speak English very well, however, I do write in English with the aid of the Mac OS X spelling and grammar checks. I also live in a culture perhaps very very different from your own. When offering advice in the ASC, my comments are not meant to be anything more than helpful and certainly not to be taken as insults.
http://www.apple.com/uk/buy/locator/map.html?tySearch=1&viaProduct=2&viaSpecial= -1&strCountry=EGY&q=Cairo

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    Hi. I just went to an apple shop yesterday to get an Apple Mini-DVI to DVI to hook my 17 inch iMac to a 20 inch external display(Samsung SyncMaster 204B) and was surprised by the length of the cord. How can you connect the two displays with such a short cord? Am I missing something? I could use it if I put my second display right in front of my iMac as opposed to putting them side by side... I read some posts and noticed that some of you are using the cord so just wondering how you do it...

    Thank you for your reply. I had a look at the cable you are using but they are much longer than the DVI to DVI cable…I want to hook my iMac to an external display, not a TV though…
    I hook mine to a DVI-HDMI cable to plug into my HDTV.
    You probably just need a standard DVI cable if your
    TV has a DVI input. The "cord" is mainly just an
    adapter.

  • I need to connect I-Mac G5 to HDMI TV, I think I need this: Video Out: mini-VGA (mirror only) to HDMI, where can I buy? Apple Bluewater no help.

    I need to connect I-Mac G5 to HDMI TV, I think I need this: Video Out: mini-VGA (mirror only) to HDMI, where can I buy? Apple Bluewater no help.

    VGA is an analog signal HDMI is digital. A simple cable would not work you would need something that converts the analog signal to digital.
    A search of VGA to HDMI turned up a few possibilities but nothing specific. In any case the picture on the TV will not be very good given the source.
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    Message was edited by: Frank Caggiano - I'll ask the hosts to move this to the proper community.

  • I am trying to reset my Apple TV.  Where to I find the Apple TV Summary page .  Thank you for your help. Gary

    I am trying to reset my Apple TV. 
    Where to I find the Apple TV Summary page . 
    Thank you for your help. Gary

    Thanks for trying to help
    I should have been clearer  My 3rd generation apple tv stoped working. Will not turn on. Battery in the remote changed, new and tested so that is not the issue. I am following the apple support directions to reset from a windows computer (directions from apple support page) and number 5 says to "clicl restore apple tv from the apple tv summary page"  which I can not find anywhere.
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  • Apple Mini DVI to Video Adapter is not working. Please Help...

    I bought an Apple Mini DVI to Video Adapter to connect my Macbook to a TV using normal video cable. When I connect the cable, my Laptop DIsplay gives a flickr once and then it shows nothing. I checked Display in the system preference where I don't get a secondary monitor option. My TV is panasonic and it's an old one. I work on Final Cut Pro and it's very very important to see my videos on a TV. What am I doing wrong with the connection? Anyone Please Please help...

    Your probably not doing anything wrong. There are thousands of users with Similar issues and it seems to be with many different adapters.
    We have Mini DP to VGA (3 different brands) and they all fail most of the time. This seems more prevalent with LCD Projectors. I've tested some (50+) with VGA Monitor (HP) and they all worked, LCD Projector (Epson, Hitachi, and Sanyo) and they all fail, DLP Projector (Sanyo) and one worked.
    My Apple Mini DP to DVi works most of the time. My Mini DP to HDMI (Generic non Apple) works every time.
    The general consensus is that Apple broke something in the OS around 10.6.4 or 10.6.5 and its not yet fixed. As we are a school we have logged a case with the EDU Support group so will see what happens.
    Dicko

  • Poor colour depth/banding with Apple Mini-DisplayPort-to-VGA adaptor?

    I'm using the Apple Mini Display Port to VGA adaptor to hook my MBP up to a projector in the theatre where I give lectures.
    I am getting colour depth/ banding issues - images seem to be displayed in thousands of colours, rather than millions, creating really bad banding problems.
    I know it isn't an issue with the projector - for comparison purposes I tried playing a DVD through a DVD player connected to the projector, and then through the MBP connected to the projector, and the diference in colour depth was really noticeable. In fact it was virtually unwatchable through the MBP.
    Is there a preference pane I'm missing somewhere which will increase the colour depth?
    Is there a better adaptor than the Apple one that I need to buy?
    Or is this a problem inherent in the minidisplay port to VGA conversion process?
    Any tips or pointers would be greatly appreciated.

    If your monitor has DVI input, get the DVI adapter. DisplayPort is digital, DVI is digital, but VGA is analog - the signal conversion will result in a (slight) drop in quality.

  • What flash player software is good for use with the Apple Mini?

    I get "flash player missing" warning on news sites when I go to available videos. What can I do? I have a 2015 Apple Mini iOS 10 with 500 GB hard disc

    There are no active reference viri in the wild for any of the hard-sold antivirus
    applications to remove from the Mac OS X. You can use ClamXAV from its
    maker's site (no other, as some are bad copies loaded with adware or malware)
    here:    http://www.clamxav.com/   that can help isolate and remove items that
    you may get from someone's email who owns a windows PC, if you do not want
    to forward those to some of your friends who use windows.
    A larger concern may be adware and some kinds of malware, they are avoidable
    but unless you are zealous about how you use your computer gear online, it may
    be possible to get several items that can make using your Mac seem nightmarish.
    Here are a few links to information that are best glossed-over before an issue so
    you may have an idea what you may be up against when or if you do get adware
    or some other malcontent from browsing corrupted web sites. Oh, also avoid the
    torrent or bitorrent sites that offer file sharing or 'free downloads' that you later will
    pay for one way or another. These can be tainted with badware that starts out in
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    of a known software but not from the maker's site (such as a copy of Flash, but
    not from Adobe's own site) these can be a lot of work to undo their bad effects.
    •Remove unwanted adware that displays pop-up ads and graphics on your Mac - Apple Support
    •Adware Removal Guide (see manual removal info -- as well as 'adware medic' link)
    http://www.thesafemac.com/arg/
    •Tech Guides - The Safe Mac: (adware, malware, and performance info guides)
    http://www.thesafemac.com/tech-guides/
    For Adobe Flash, which is not installed in OS X anymore, you could get it, or see
    what else may be helpful to use to see video file content. I don't use it and feel
    that if there is some great need to see a video (most are like trash) the better ones
    now use HTML5 or some other technologies that just work in the browser w/o Flash.
    If you need Flash be careful and keep the OS X updated and be sure to get Adobe
    updates for their product. Some of their products are OK, but some are bloatware.
    The links I posted on how to get the Adobe Flash (adobe help pages) are ones to
    note. There are other items in their site which may or may not be helpful to you.
    You may do well to start a new thread, or ask and someone could ask the ASC Hosts
    to move your post into a new thread of its own; then any replies to it may appear to
    your email used when you set up your account with the support communities forums
    if you have yours set to announce activity or replies, etc to your posts here.
    If your ordered Mini has at least 8GB RAM (it would be soldered in as part of the logic
    board, and so not upgradable; unlike certain former builds that allowed user upgrade)
    and if it has an Apple Fusion or SSD Drive, or a hard disk drive with 7200-RPM spin
    rate, then it would like be quick enough going forward a few years. More random access
    memory (RAM) is separate from drive storage or system hard drive capacity; these do
    different things. A computer may temporarily use storage capacity as virtual RAM, but
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    A Fusion or hybrid, or SSD (solid state drive) can speed up the system since the files
    that would end up being written to that drive and then read as temporary RAM, would
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    may or may not be covered under an extended (optional) AppleCare plan.
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    Good luck & happy computing!

  • Apple Mini DVI to Video Adapter - do you need cables as well?????????????

    Apple Mini DVI to Video Adapter
    i have this already,but do i need a certain cable to go into the TV. as it only has one port instead of the usual 3 av leads have???
    help please,confused...............

    Look in your question and you'll find the answer...
    Apple mini DVI to Video Adapter
    ...the usual 3 av (audio/video) leads...
    DVI is video only so you only need one port... if you were hooking up audio and video you'd need three (1 for video - 2 for the left/right audio channels)

  • Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter Question

    I want to hook up my macbook (late 2008 model) to my tv. Will the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter
    work? If it will work on my tv then what else do I need to get? It looks like you need other wires to hook up to your tv? Thanks in advance for your help!

    The new MacBooks that use the NVIDIA 9400M video chip do _not_ support output to analog TVs. Thus, with the current MacBooks the only way to get output to an analog TV is with a third-party VGA-to-analog TV converter box -- you can't just use one of Apple's cables (although you'll need the mini display port to VGA adapter cable to connect to a third-party VGA-to-TV converter box).
    More specifically, you can _not_ use one of Apple's $19, DVI to Video (composite/S-Video) adapters on the new MacBooks.
    See also this discussion:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1927674&tstart=15

  • Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter and Mac mini (2009)

    Can anyone tell me whether the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter listed here:
    http://store.apple.com/ca/product/M9319G/A
    works with the latest Mac mini (early 2009)?
    If it does not what other solutions are there to connect to composite, component or s-video?

    KC from Ann Arbor, MI had this to say as a review on the page to which you have linked;
    10-May-2009
    I bought a Mac Mini (May 2009) and this Mini-DVI to Video adapter with plans to use it to send an S-video signal to an analog TV. Though the sales staff at the Apple store said it should work, it does not. The graphics card apparently should support it, and it may be addressed with a future driver update, but as of now this does not work. I have used a mini-DVI to VGA adapter and monitor to verify that the port is working, and also verified that the S-video cable and TV input work. There are third party VGA to S-video/RCA adapters available so I plan to use one of those for my purposes. This is probably a 5-star product when used with the right Mac; however, Apple should have made it clear that having a mini-DVI port on your Mac is necessary but not sufficient for this to work - hence the 3 stars.

  • Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter - Can't get it to work!

    Bought the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter to hook up my Macbook to my TV. I tried it when it first arrived and it worked within minutes of setting up. Great! I go to set it up and use it again a week later, and it wouldn't work at all. I went through every possible setting I could to try and get it to work, nothing. Do these things have a tendency to go out or short out or something? I'm getting nothing but scrambled screens, grey screens, etc. Nothing seems to work.
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/M9319G/A?mco=MTY3ODQ5OTY
    Any other solutions for playing my laptop on my TV?

    Hey Rob,
    Is your profile information accurate? The MacBook 2,1 was introduced in November of 2006 and discontinued in May of 2007, so the mini-DVI to video adapter ought to work.
    What, exactly, do you see on your screen? Are all of the connections nice and snug? Do you have another RCA cable you can try? You can use a white or red one if you want; they all will work as long as you're connecting the video adapter to the yellow port on the TV.
    ~Lyssa

  • Video Out w/Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter

    Ok this should be an easy question to answer.
    I've tried searching but I can't seem to find a straight answer.
    All I want to do is watch stuff from my macbook on my tv. I have purchased the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter.
    All I want to know is what cable to I need from the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter to the tv. A name or something or even the place to get it would be very helpful. Thanks!

    The answer depends on which video-in connections your TV has. There are several possibilities, but you're going to have to tell us more about your TV.
    If you have an analog (not HDTV) then it probably has either or maybe both s-video or composite video-in. If you have a choice, s-video is better than composite video.
    If you have an HDTV, it probably has both s-video and composite video but may also have VGA, DVI or HDMI video-in. VGA, DVI and HDMI are all digital and would be better than s-video or composite. But, again, s-video would be better than composite.
    Keep in mind, the mini-DVI to video adapter is video only. You're also going to have to find the cables to plug your MacBook into the TV or stereo to get the audio.
    -Doug

  • Will Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter device work on HD TV's?

    I have a Macbook. Will using just the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter work for me if I have and HD TV so that I can watch movies from the Internet on the HD TV screen? How good will the quality be compared to watching on the Macbook itself? And I've noticed how short the chord is for the Apple Mini-DVI to Video Adapter. Will I have to buy another chord to make it reach the back of the HD TV? Thanks.

    As it happens, I just bought the mini-DVI to video connector for my wife's Macbook (C2D) yesterday. I am in Australia (which is a PAL country), but I didn't see anything on the device or the packaging which indicated it as being PAL-specific. In fact, in Display Preferences when it is connected to the Mac and TV and in use, the panel relating to the TV output (which is shown by the Mac on the TV screen) is where you select between PAL-50Hz and NTSC-60Hz, so I'd guess it is a single worldwide device, rather than their being separately-manufactured PAL and NTSC variants of the connector.
    Anyway, on the back of the top cardboard part of the packaging is a picture of the connectors (because you cannot really see the pins in the Mini-DVI connector itself when packaged, due to an opaque plastic "keeper" over the end of the plug).
    To reconfirm what is said above, the pin configuration on the mini-DVI port on the MacBook and what you need on the Mini-DVI connector is a horseshoe or "U" shape. I don't remember if any specific model of Mac is listed, but I believe as long as it is that U-shaped connector you'll be fine with the same connector kit.
    The "mini-VGA to video" connector is not what you want for a MacBook; mini-VGA is not "U"-shaped inside, but rather two rows of pins in "II" configuration (even though the outside dimensions of mini-VGA and mini-DVI look very similar).
    ted.h.
    Mac Mini (Pro Duo) and MacBook (C2D)   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

  • 27: iMac Apple Mini DisplayPort to DVI adapter quits working post-firmware

    I iMac Apple Mini DisplayPort to DVI adapter suddenly quit working after I installed Apple's latest iMac display firmware update. This is an Intel Core i5; the monitor is an LG Flatron 24" Wide, and when it powers up it says "no video input" and goes into power-saving mode. No amount of replugging cables helps, but the monitor works fine on other computers.
    The Displays control panel just shows one monitor, and clicking Detect Displays does nothing.
    I suspect Apple's Display Firmware Update. My installer log shows the following, but the problem only happened today after the latest update:
    6/1/10 9:45 AM 27-inch iMac EFI Firmware Update 1.0
    6/1/10 9:45 AM 27-inch iMac Display Update 1.0
    6/4/10 11:47 AM 27-inch iMac SMC Firmware Update 1.0
    6/4/10 11:47 AM 27-inch iMac Display Update 1.0
    6/5/10 7:29 AM 27-inch iMac Display Update 1.0
    I have automatic updates disabled, but after each update I would see more firmware updates ready, but caution leads me to never install more than one of these at a time, and then to wait a while to see if anything bad happens. The odd thing is that the Display Update 1.0 seems to have been installed three times in this course of events. Alas, there appears to be no way to uninstall a firmware update.
    Here is the System Profiler Graphics/Displays output:
    Chipset Model: ATI Radeon HD 4850
    Type: GPU
    Bus: PCIe
    PCIe Lane Width: x16
    VRAM (Total): 512 MB
    Vendor: ATI (0x1002)
    Device ID: 0x944a
    Revision ID: 0x0000
    ROM Revision: 113-B9110C-425
    EFI Driver Version: 01.00.383
    Displays:
    iMac:
    Resolution: 2560 x 1440
    Pixel Depth: 32-Bit Color (ARGB8888)
    Main Display: Yes
    Mirror: Off
    Online: Yes
    Built-In: Yes
    Connection Type: DisplayPort
    Display Connector:
    Status: No Display Connected
    It says the Mac sees no display connected, and the display gets no video signal. Since the adapter is an active device (it has powered electronics to convert DisplayPort signals to DVI signals) I suppose it could have just coincidentally died. But that seems unlikely given that the thing worked perfectly just before the last firmware update.
    Does anybody have similar experience, or better yet, a fix?

    Unfortunately the Apple Knowledge Base does not give much information about this update. Such has how to tell if it has been successfully installed. I suspect that because it keeps recurring in the install log that it has not been installed successfully as yet. Are you receiving this update through Software Update? Can you locate the installer for this update? It maybe located in Apps/Utilities.
    Some firmware update installations can be interrupted/corrupted by attached devices. If you find the update's installer on your iMac, I suggest that you detach all external devices from the iMac, use an Apple USB keyboard & mouse if available, follow the instructions carefully and install the update manually. If you do not locate the installer I suggest downloading manually from the link below and installing it.
    The Knowledge Base article mentions that your iMac should also have a Graphics Firmware Update. I suggest that you download and install that as well.
    27-inch iMac Display Firmware Update 1.0
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL998
    27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update 1.0
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL984
    Dah•veed

  • Why Apple Mini-DVI to DVI Adapter couldn't be connected?

    i purchased Apple Mini-DVI To DVI adapter but it couldn't be connected to any port of my macbookpro 13" without retina
    if you 've solution please advise.

    What is the model identifier of your MBP? Also what oSX are you using?
    You can find this info by clicking on the Apple in the menu bar About this Mac, in the first window it should should show the OSX Version.
    Then click on More info, and the next page (Hardware overview) second line should be Model Identifier: x,x
    What are you connecting to and what type of input(s) does it have. If you do not know how to idendify the inputs, post the make, model of the device. 

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