Mildly OT: Ready for Fall!

I spent the morning getting the Super C ready for fall; pulled the bedders, checked the tires and fluids, etc. This afternoon I plan to run the Rotocycle through the garden and the bit between the orchard and the highway.

Working on Model C always brings up the contrast between the user serviceability of an older vehicle, and the lack thereof in my Apple computer.

This is an especially stark contrast right now, as the CD drive has had a hardware failure and I can't eject the disk.

In an older IBM machine, I might have replaced the drive myself, allowing me to carefully retrieve the disk, but nowadays Apples are put together like fragile puzzles, with lots of proprietary hardware junk. There isn't enough room inside the cabinet for proper air circulation (which I believe accounts for much of the high level of hardware failures in these machines), much less for someone with bad eyesight to use a nutdriver.

The fact that a tech will probably have to pull the old drive means there is a good chance the disk will be lost somewhere along the way.

Unfortunately it is a semi-rare one which has many of my favorites on it, including Harry Reser's version of "Ukelele Lady," the Johnny Marvin version of "Happy Days are Here Again, and Jolson's "When the Red, Red Robbin..."

(I know, I know, I'm only forty-seven and those are some seriously old tunes.

But I AM a jazz musician, and I have to get my riffs from SOMEWHERE. If you're going to steal, you might as well do it from people who have been dead so long maybe no one will notice...)
 
Not sure about an Apple but most CD drives have a hole in the front where you can stick a paper clip in to release the drawer to manually remove a disk.
 
Yep,

Just like a bathroom doorknob.

Look closely at the front. Somewhere on there is a tiney, tiny hole to insert the end of a paperclip and it will force the door open.

Allan
 
That's the main reason I don't like Apple computers. I can buy parts virtually anywhere for a PC and install them myself. Getting parts for an Apple is difficult at best, and they are NO help at all. Their answer to everything is "take it to an Authorized Apple Repair Center".

Apple does a lot of things right, but customer support ain't one of 'em.
 
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