Dictionary
Thesaurus
Reference
Translate
Web
Sad Mac
2 reference results for: Sad Mac
Wikipedia

A Sad Mac is an iconic symbol used by older-generation Apple Macintosh computers (hardware using the Old World ROM) to indicate a severe hardware or software problem that prevented startup from occurring successfully. The Sad Mac icon was displayed, along with a set of hexadecimal codes that indicated the type of problem at startup. This was used in place of the normal Happy Mac icon, which indicated that the startup-time hardware tests were successful. In earlier models, a tune (Chimes of Death) was played, and later models featured a digitized sound of a car crash. In the MC68000-based machines (those models earlier than the Macintosh II as well as the original Macintosh Classic), no sound was played.

The Sad Mac was made in 1987 by Apple Computer.

A Sad Mac may be deliberately generated at startup by pressing the interrupt switch on Macintoshes that had one installed, or by pressing Command and Power keys shortly after the startup chime.

Sad iPod

On the iPod, if damage or an error occurs to the hardware (or the firmware), a Sad iPod appears, much in the same way as the Sad Mac.

References

Wikipedia

A Sad Mac is an iconic symbol used by older-generation Apple Macintosh computers (hardware using the Old World ROM) to indicate a severe hardware or software problem that prevented startup from occurring successfully. The Sad Mac icon was displayed, along with a set of hexadecimal codes that indicated the type of problem at startup. This was used in place of the normal Happy Mac icon, which indicated that the startup-time hardware tests were successful. In earlier models, a tune (Chimes of Death) was played, and later models featured a digitized sound of a car crash. In the MC68000-based machines (those models earlier than the Macintosh II as well as the original Macintosh Classic), no sound was played.

The Sad Mac was made in 1987 by Apple Computer.

A Sad Mac may be deliberately generated at startup by pressing the interrupt switch on Macintoshes that had one installed, or by pressing Command and Power keys shortly after the startup chime.

Sad iPod

On the iPod, if damage or an error occurs to the hardware (or the firmware), a Sad iPod appears, much in the same way as the Sad Mac.

References

Share This:Share This: digg.comShare This: ma.gnolia.comShare This: www.stumbleupon.comShare This: del.icio.usShare This: FacebookShare This: favorites.live.comShare This: www.technorati.comShare This: furl.netShare This: myweb2.search.yahoo.comShare This: www.google.com