AMITIAE - Friday 10 August 2012
Hard Disk Failure on the Office iMac: Part 4 - Repaired, Returned and Renewed |
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By Graham K. Rogers
The first three parts of this mini-disaster are available online:
Back at the office, the power cord was nowhere to be seen so I retrieved that from the store as well. When the iMac was started, I found it had been returned to me with OS X, 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard) installed. It had gone in with 10.7.4 (Lion). I started the Mac App Store application to download a copy of Mountain Lion (10.8) and saw that all information was in Thai. I changed this in System Preferences, but in the meantime had to guess at the buttons to press. I must have got it right as after entering account name and password information, the Mountain Lion download started. It was late Tuesday, so I went home, leaving it to complete the job.
I went for a drink and when I came back a short while later (much less than 30 minutes), it was done with the latest galaxy -- a small "g" please note -- waiting for me. I had two choices: use the Time Machine backup from my MacBook Pro to create a ready-to-run clone of my usual environment; or to build the disk back up from scratch, using the data I had taken off when the disk had self-destructed. Although this was harder, I decided on this slower approach.
Using Fast User Switching, I made sure the acccount was at least usable and set up the Apple ID there. A few minutes later, after automatic synchronisation, I had access to data in Notes, Address Book, Calandar, email (iCloud) and bookmarks in Safari. I was ready to roll, at least basically. As I use a Magic Trackpad with the iMac, I also quickly added the Zoom-scroll in Accessibility preferences and a 3-finger drag to match my way of working on the MacBook Pro. I also made a test purchase from the Mac App Store which recognised that the application I chose had already been purchased using the account details I used and indicated that it was free.
A number of applications that I have been using for years like Aperture and iWork (Pages, Numbers and especially Keynote) were purchased before the Mac App Store existed, and although installed on the Mac legally, never registered as such in this new online source. When I look at the list entry for Mountain Lion (or Lion) it shows "download".
Writeroom, Colorstrokes, Camerabag2, Bronson Watermarker, Sofortbild, Analog, Image Tricks Lite, Photo Effects Lite, iSplash Pro, linesmART. ToyViewer, Nova Bench and Twitter. I also downloaded Dropbox so that I could sync data, particularly with WriteRoom, which I have on all my Macs, plus the iPhone and iPad. The words above were all written using this and were finished on my MacBook Pro at home. I did find a disk with iLife '11 in my office. I had almost fogotten I had this. I had bought a family pack from the online Apple Store when it was first released. I installed the applications (GarageBand, iMovie, iPhoto). When that was done, I saw that the iPhoto icon was broken in the Dock, so checked for updates. Unsurprisingly, all the components of iLife needed updating and I began the download (some 1.53 GB). When complete the broken iPhoto (v. 9.1) icon was repaired and the application opened with my photographs. However, I had to update again (v. 9.3.2) for the most up-to-date version which would allow Photo Sharing and access to the images in the Aperture Library once the library was upgraded, a process that took only a minute or so.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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