Yep, gotta love that superior Apple engineering… it worked on a cold start.
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Ha ha - I was panicking when I had this happen to me THREE times at last year’s Web Direction’s conference … hasn’t happened since though. Must’ve been the hotel fridge I had the laptop on:
Chris, so you’re saying when I shut the screen to put it to sleep, I moved it and it shat itself? What’s the proper process for bringing it back up then?
Dude - you’re being fed crap Apple support. If only you could think of a mutual friend who knows just a little about Apple hardware. I think holding down the spacebar as a fix qualifies for a ‘FAIL’ moment.
They auto-hibernate. If you have a lot of crap open ram-wise, this can take more than a few seconds and yeah if the sudden motion sensor kicks in, it stops hard drive writes, and can screw up the hibernate process.
The proper process for bringing it back up? No idea, after doing a few cold boots like you did, I got into the habit of making sure I didn’t throw it in my bag til it had properly hibernated. Never had the problem since :p
If it keeps happening of course, you might have a rooted mainboard. Catch me sometime when youre finally up here and I’ll put you in touch with my guy :p
Did you do know that between tapping the spacebar (never heard anyone recommend holding down the spacebar before) which is a ‘whisper in the ear’ to ‘wake up’ and holding down the power button for a full reboot you have a 3rd option?
Try just ‘tapping’ (wrong word but trying to convey ‘press and instantly release’) the power button. This is the equivalent of shouting in the Mac’s ear to ‘wake the $$#%$#%$ up!!’.
Usually works for me (might take a couple of tries) if hibernate has gone a bit skewiff.
As mentioned above full ram and running processes at high CPU load and closing the lid is a hard call for any hibernate scheme scheme. Especially if you shudder the hard drive while closing the lid (activating the protective drive lock).
Should the Apple gear be better at this? Yes.
Is it understandable (and somewhat forgivable) why it might be happening (unless you can tell us that none of the above are involved in this case)? Yes.
February 14th, 2008 at 8:41 pm
Somehow a black screen doesn’t strike fear in my heart as bad as a blue one… :-/
February 14th, 2008 at 9:02 pm
Installed Vista did you?
February 14th, 2008 at 9:25 pm
nope, but I did install the latest Leopard patch.
February 14th, 2008 at 9:58 pm
Ha ha - I was panicking when I had this happen to me THREE times at last year’s Web Direction’s conference … hasn’t happened since though. Must’ve been the hotel fridge I had the laptop on:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/purecaffeine/1443458726/
February 14th, 2008 at 11:41 pm
haha, neat. guess it’s the Black Screen of Death.
February 15th, 2008 at 12:02 am
Oh dear Cam,
Between the white screen and the black screen on the mac book, you really do have to switch to wearing anti-static panty hose dude.
J
February 15th, 2008 at 8:21 am
You moved it before the light stopped flickering, SuddenMotionSensor kicked in and booted out the hibernation process.
February 15th, 2008 at 9:27 am
Chris, so you’re saying when I shut the screen to put it to sleep, I moved it and it shat itself? What’s the proper process for bringing it back up then?
February 15th, 2008 at 6:02 pm
Dude - you’re being fed crap Apple support. If only you could think of a mutual friend who knows just a little about Apple hardware. I think holding down the spacebar as a fix qualifies for a ‘FAIL’ moment.
February 15th, 2008 at 6:58 pm
Basically :p
They auto-hibernate. If you have a lot of crap open ram-wise, this can take more than a few seconds and yeah if the sudden motion sensor kicks in, it stops hard drive writes, and can screw up the hibernate process.
The proper process for bringing it back up? No idea, after doing a few cold boots like you did, I got into the habit of making sure I didn’t throw it in my bag til it had properly hibernated. Never had the problem since :p
If it keeps happening of course, you might have a rooted mainboard. Catch me sometime when youre finally up here and I’ll put you in touch with my guy :p
February 21st, 2008 at 11:03 pm
Did you do know that between tapping the spacebar (never heard anyone recommend holding down the spacebar before) which is a ‘whisper in the ear’ to ‘wake up’ and holding down the power button for a full reboot you have a 3rd option?
Try just ‘tapping’ (wrong word but trying to convey ‘press and instantly release’) the power button. This is the equivalent of shouting in the Mac’s ear to ‘wake the $$#%$#%$ up!!’.
Usually works for me (might take a couple of tries) if hibernate has gone a bit skewiff.
As mentioned above full ram and running processes at high CPU load and closing the lid is a hard call for any hibernate scheme scheme. Especially if you shudder the hard drive while closing the lid (activating the protective drive lock).
Should the Apple gear be better at this? Yes.
Is it understandable (and somewhat forgivable) why it might be happening (unless you can tell us that none of the above are involved in this case)? Yes.
February 28th, 2008 at 11:17 pm
Thought this free tool might be of interest
http://www.jinx.de/SmartSleep.html
February 29th, 2008 at 9:15 am
Thanks Janotte! Looks like that’s worth installing.