Difference between revisions of "Tonys Mac Journal"

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'''4jan07'''<br>
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#REDIRECT [[User:Tonyr/Journal]]
I'm going to try to record my experience working with the Macs at FreeGeek.  This will be mostly subjective
 
train of thought, first impressions,  immediate reactions, that sort of thing.  This first few entries will be
 
a recap of the things I can remember from that past couple of weeks.
 
 
 
''Audio Skipping''<br>
 
iMacs/PowerMacs with CPU speeds less that 450MHz seem to have problems playing CDs using '''SoundJuicer''' and '''RythmBox''', the CD ripper and CD player installed with Ubuntu.  Playback audio will 'skip', producing gaps of a few seconds, and may even cease altogether.  Loren has been able to solve this by replacing CD drives in slot loading iMacs and PowerMac Towers.  I have solved it by installing '''gxine''' and manipulating its configuration parameters, specifically the increasing the number of buffer blocks and increasing the value of media.audio_cd.drive_slowdown in the xine configuration.  The xine configuration file usually shows up in the users home directory as .xine/xine_config.  '''gxine''' provides acces to most of the configuration parameters through Preferences in its menu.  There are several levels of parameter control in Preferences.  The level named '''Master of the Universe''' allows a the most access.  I have been increasing the slowdown parameter from 4 to 12, and incrreasing the number of buffer blocks from 230 to 500.  Both of those were guesses on my part.  Increasing the number of bufer blocks may not be necessary.
 
 
 
I don't know exactly why either of the solutions works. Some of the CD drives Loren has been using as replacements are much newer drives, and probably offer better performace features.  The fact that there appears to be a configuration solution makes me think that the existing CD drives are not bad, but have lower performance that needs help in software.  There are several different models of CD drive use in the iMacs
 
 
 
There are several problems with the '''gxine''' solution with the lower CPU speed Macs (233-400MHz).  '''gxine''' has a visualization feature that competes with audio for CPU cycles.  Turning the visualization off reduces
 
or eliminates the 'skip' problem.  Visualzation control is under the '''View''' drop down menu, but changes there do not persist across '''gxine''' restarts.  I haven't found a way to make the visualization change permanent.
 
 
 
 
 
'''5jan07'''<br>
 
''iMac G4/700 Flat Panel''
 
It's that half-basketball-long-neck thing with the flat-panel display on the top of the neck.  It came in on 29Dec06.  70MHz PPC, 40G hard drive, 256 MB, DVD/CD.  Runs Mac OS X just fine, but refused to
 
boot the Ubuntu 6.10 installation CD.  Yesterday and today Loren swapped out the hard drive for a wiped drive from the store.  He also (miraculously) found a 256MB SODIMM to upgrade it's memory, with the
 
goal of creating a very nice high end PPC machine.
 
 
 
It turns out this is a very weird machine, even for an iMac.  The system memory is a SDRAM DIMM (regular PC memory). The expansion memory is SODIMM (laptop style). The expansion memory and wireless network card (airport) are underneath the bottom cover plate, which is easily removed.  The drives and system memory are underneath a second bottom plate below the first one, and is much harder to remove and requires application of thermal paste to a thermal transfer plate when re-attaching it. The graphics controller is an nVidia GeForce 2 400 MX, which the Ubuntu PPC install CD apparently doeesn't know how to deal with. The CD  starts to boot normally, gets to the part that says '''loading ramdisk''' and then hangs indefinitely. 
 
 
 
This version of the iMac was not in production very long.  I'm thinking we won't see very many of them, and should probably not spend a lot of resource trying to solve this.  It's more of a 'special project'.  There may be a way to solve it, but it might involve detailed knowledge of the Ubuntu PPC boot process and maybe even some knowledge about how to manipulate OpenFirmware.
 
 
 
As is mentioned below in ''Deviant ATI video contoller'', there are some G4 Towers that also use nVidia controllers.  It will be interesting to see how Ubuntu installation goes on those machines, should we ever get any.
 
 
 
 
 
''The Cube''<br>
 
The pre-cursor to the Mac Mini.  The monitor is separate, and the video connector on the Cube is a special Apple type called [[Wikipedia:Apple_Display_Connector|ADC]] that combines USB, power and          [[Wikipedia:DVI|DVI]].  There are three Cubes in limbo in the Mac triage area.  The newest arrived yesterday, and came with an almost complete package: the Cube, Apple Studio Display 15in (LCD/ADC), power adapter, speakers, keyboard, ADC to VGA adapter (no mouse).  I found a few similar packages on '''ebay''' for $400-$500.  The speakers are USB.  There is no hardware audio controller.  I'm not certain that there is an internal speaker.  I never heard a power-on chime.  The standard Ubuntu installation sure would like to see some audio hardware.  There is support for USB audio in Linux, but taking advantage of it does not seem to be straightforward.  A ''Google'' search turned up one article that suggested installing '''xmms''' and using its ''Preferences'' to select the USB speakers.  I did that, but the speakers still didn't work.  USB audio can probably be made to work, but I think it is another 'special project'
 
 
 
 
 
''Macs That Resist Ubuntu Installation''<br>
 
The ''G4/700 iMac'' and ''The Cube'' raise the question of what to do with nice iMac systems that require undiscovered contortions to get Ubuntu to install with incomplete functionality, or not at all.  The two obvious  suggestions are 1) let MacRenewal have then, and 2) sell them in the store at a discount with labelling that indicates no OS or missing functionality.  A third possibility is to keep them in limbo in hopes (that Saint Nicholas soon would appear, but I digress) that there migh be resource at some point to explore for solutions.
 
 
 
 
 
''Deviant ATI video controller''<br>
 
Almost all of the iMac machines use ATI controllers. The half-basketball machine mentioned earlier and some higher end G4 PowerMac Towers use nVidia controllers.  Other High end G4 Towers use Radeon controllers (which are also ATI, I believe).  The older iMacs use ATI Rage controllers.  There are many, many variations of the ATI Rage contoller.  The list can be found in the log file produced when the Ubuntu desktop start up, '''/var/log/Xorg.0.log'''.  All of the iMacs I have worked on so far have installed Ubuntu with working video, with the exception of the one I worked on today.  This was a 500MHZ 'bubble' iMac.  The video controller was an '''ATI Rage 128 Pro Ultra TR'''.  After installation, Ubuntu was extremely sluggish, and any event (mouse, keyboard) that required video reaction would produce a hang of many seconds, on the order of 30-60.  The best way I could find to solve this problem was to remove the '''glx''' module from the xorg startup configuration.  I did it by running '''dpkg-reconfiugure xserver-xorg''' and unchecking the '''glx'' module when it asked which modules to include.  Removing
 
the '''glx''' module takes away the high performance features of the controller, but does allow reasonable behavior under normal circumstances.
 
 
 
Moral:  Watch out for the '''ATI Rage 128 Pro Ultra''' video controller!
 

Latest revision as of 20:51, 23 March 2007

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