Complaints of SuperDrive failures grow
A developer Friday told AppleInsider the drive on his Mac mini was only used a handful of times before the attempted install of Snow Leopard. After he inserted the installation disc for Mac OS X 10.6, the drive would not mount any other optical discs. Now, he said, the drive will not read or write any CD or DVD.
"Unfortunately, I have not been able to get Appleâs cooperation on resolving this," the developer said. "For now, I am advising all my Mac clients not to upgrade and I am not guaranteeing that any solution I build will run on Snow Leopard."
He also cited a colleague who had a similar problem on a two-year-old MacBook Pro. After the user attempted to install Snow Leopard, an error code was displayed. The drive would read CDs, but stopped mounting DVDs. When Apple replaced the SuperDrive in the MacBook Pro, the problem was not resolved.
However, the problem seems to go well beyond Snow Leopard. While a handful of users attempting to install the operating system have posted in recent days on the Apple Support discussion boards, user reports of failing Mac SuperDrives go back months, well before last week's release of Snow Leopard.
Numerous users have claimed problems with the drive models "MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-857E" and "HL-DT-ST DVDRW GSA-S10N," though other models appear to be affected as well. Given numerous claims that the drives were rarely used, it's possible that the SuperDrives had problems all along, but were not accessed often enough for the issue to surface.
The developer said he spoke with AppleCare support, and was told that when a drive ejects more than one disc without playing it, the hardware is replaced, as there are no tools for troubleshooting software errors with optical drives.
"Of course, if replacing the hardware doesn't solve the problem (as appears to be the issue for some people who have tried) they're going to have to come up with a better strategy," he said.
New iPod cases again suggest inclusion of camera
Once again, third-party iPod case manufacturers appear to confirm that Apple will announce new iPod touch and iPod nano models with cameras at next week's press event. In new photos from Engadget, cases once again show holes for camera lenses on the presumed new hardware.
Rumors of the new hardware developed earlier this year and were later given more concrete support when a plethora of cases showed camera holes.
While a recent report suggested the iPod classic could also receive a camera upgrade, no third-party cases so far have suggested such a device is forthcoming.
46 Comments
Uh, oh.
My MacBook Pro's MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-857E has been useless for almost a year. Can't read CDs, can't read DVDs, can't burn anything. Had to buy a crappy external drive that makes more noise than my vacuum and shakes my desk like a washer-dryer. So upsetting. I could use my Apple Care but can't send my Mac away for more than a day...
My Mini started installing then stopped and the superdrive started making noise so Interrupted it and put it in my external drive and completed the install. I have no tried my superdrive to see if it still works.
I've been having super drive problems since Leopard. I even had apple replace the damn thing on warranty and the same thing happened again within the week. Organizing ti to be replaced on warranty again and now on Snow Leopard. But to me there is not difference between Leopard and Snow Leopard on this issue. The super drive just aint working right.
I've got 12 Intel Macs in my house and one of my Mini's displayed this behavior. It was unable to install Snow Leopard, but would read CDs.
I ended up having to use a portable drive to install with. I'm not sure if I agree with this guys assessment that Snow Leopard is the culprit.
It could just as well have been an issue of seldom to never using the drive and it becoming damaged or to dirty to operate. Although all attempts to install after cleaning the drive with canned air were to no avail.