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MacBook Users Fix Trackpad Problem with Origami Paper
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Fri Jun 30, 2006 12:35 AM
from the unfolding-answers dept.
from the unfolding-answers dept.
yonnage writes "Some Apple MacBook owners are plagued with what seems to be a defective trackpad button. The button, when pushed, seems "squishy" and sometimes even unresponsive. While these MacBook owners are getting turned away at the Apple Genius Bars, they have come up with a custom and unique solution to the problem. A piece of paper, placed strategically under the battery pack where the trackpad is located, seems to fix this problem for most users."
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Could work, but for how long? (Score:5, Insightful)
Disable USB Drives - Remotely [digg.com]
Re:Could work, but for how long? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:Could work, but for how long? (Score:5, Funny)
I wouldn't trust "circular indents" in a tossed about laptop. And what's the solution?
The force that holds the Universe together.
Duct tape.
(well, well, I would actually use some crappy adhesive tape instead of the spacecraft-grade variety, but you got the idea)
Parent
It's not quite that simple. (Score:4, Funny)
It's not quite that simple.
The article is inaccurate. It says you you can fold an origami star or merely just fold the paper in a square. Neither of these methods will work. Instead, fold the origami (or other, but origami paper is preferred) into a crane, as shown here [monkey.org]. Then smash the origami crane with your fist, using a quick up and down motion, as if you were masturbating.
From here, follow the rest of the directions in the article, and your trackpad should soon be clicking like there's no tomorrow.
Parent
Re:It's not quite that simple. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Could work, but for how long? (Score:3, Funny)
you COULD do that, (Score:5, Funny)
Paper Over Hot Battery? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Paper Over Hot Battery? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:Paper Over Hot Battery? (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Sounds like a decent way to burn your house down (Score:4, Funny)
stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:5, Insightful)
Same thing with this whole "discoloration" thing about the palm rests. People, laptops are machines, they wear out, they have flaws. It's like some people get so emotionally attached to their computer that if they see one flaw with it they have to write an article about it.
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:5, Insightful)
Um, Apple was having these sorts of problems loooong before the intel switch. Logic boards on iBooks? Hinges/latches on last gen powerbooks? Etc, etc, etc.
The public is still being charged a premium price for comparitively less powerful hardware.
I'm going to assume you completely missed the last 5 years of PowerPC development which ended up with a G4 chip that could barely run a calculator, and a G5 that would initiate nuclear fusion if placed into a laptop. They switched because they had basically no choice if the wanted to remain in the computer business.
The move to standard hardware now provides consumers with a basis for comparison. Before, you couldn't compare megahertz to megahertz because the G3/G4/G5 processors were more efficient than standard desktop Intels. Now you can because Apple is using the same hardware, and they can't hide behind motorolla/ibm anymore.
So now it's not that PowerPC is more powerful - it's just that they can't dupe consumers into thinking it is? How about just make good computers and let the public decide instead of lying to them? And if you're still trying to suggest that the new dual core Intel chips are slower than a G4, you're nuts. Talk to anyone who's used both.
Software and software alone is what's driving Macintosh sales, since quality and performance are no longer viable selling points.
One chip does not a whole machine make. Compare Thinkpads (pre Lenovo especially) with, say, eMachines - they both use Intel, but there the similarities stop. Honestly, as a latecomer to the Apple camp, I've never understood the obsession with microchips among a group of people who wouldn't recognize one if they were staring at it. Apple makes its money through an OS that many people feel is far superior to Windows, and by creating well-designed machines that are very functional and visually striking. This has not changed with the Intel switch. And like most makers of functional, pretty machines, something comes up lacking and sometimes that's component testing (kind of like a European sports car). But the thing is, that is NOT new.
Parent
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell that to my G3 iBook and its 6 logic boards.
Parent
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:5, Interesting)
Duh. Mac systems have always been known to be extremely dodgy as far as rev1 is concerned, which is why veterans whose live doesn't require to immediately upgrade usually wait for rev2 of any hardware Apple produces.
iMacs, iBooks and PowerBooks always suffered high defect rates for rev1s, the difference is that since Apple had much less popularity, there were less switchers and we had fewer internets on the web, it was noticeably less publicized.
Apple's extremely bad record with rev1s is the reason why I'm still waiting before buying a mac. That, and the Core2 being released by the end of the year that seem to literally spank the Core (and AMD chips) perfs-wise.
Parent
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:3, Funny)
So, uh...
How many internets do we have on the web now?
Re:stupid Macbook tricks make frontpage? (Score:3, Funny)
Useless tricks become useful (Score:3, Funny)
Same problem... (Score:5, Informative)
Or go into the system preferences and set it so that tapping the trackpad clicks. (Tapping it with two fingers to 'right-click' is nice too...)
- sm
Re:Same problem... (Score:3, Funny)
One thing all these MacBook problems have shown me (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:One thing all these MacBook problems have shown (Score:3, Insightful)
And before someone feverishly responds "What does one data point prove?", I only mention this episode because someone is extra
All about the Apple Care problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re:One thing all these MacBook problems have shown (Score:3, Informative)
The other thing is that I know quite a few people with macbooks and none has yet had any problems as those mentioned on slashdot. My guess is that many mac users tend to be more active online than other l
Why all the blogging? (Score:5, Insightful)
When I buy a new computer / household device that does not live up to my expectations, I return it to the store and demand a refund or a new one that works properly. I always get what I want, including from vendors such as Apple.
Now why does no-one in the blogosphere think of that? Why start fiddling around with pieces of paper, toothpicks, reinstalling software, "trying this and that because a friend told me". Why? WHY?
GO BACK TO THE STORE AND DEMAND A PROPER PRODUCT!
I could never understand that, either (Score:4, Insightful)
But you should see the GIGANTIC thread about this issue in Apple forums. Folks try everything except for the right thing - take it to the store and have it repaired or replaced. Some folks have been posting into that thread for MONTHS.
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Re:Why all the blogging? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why all the blogging? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:I blame the switchers. (Score:4, Interesting)
The site seems to contradict itself when it says "Lenovo managed to tie Apple in each case in the laptop survey" but then says "...Apple also scored an 82, with Lenovo at 69..." Or maybe the numbers are just different than the survey.
I wonder if Apples numbers could be skewed because Apple owners are sort of a special group(no insult or compliment intended by special). There is probably much less brand loyalty among the owners of Windows machines. I also wonder what the price difference is between comparable Apple and Windows machines (if any), and what kind of support and quality that could buy if a Windows vendor would/could/does sell it.
Maybe the lesson to take from the report is that if you're going to buy a Windows box, that you shouldn't buy it from any of the companies listed, because Apple proves that they could do much better.
I wonder if you would get better support if you told them you were a consumer reports member and you always fill out their surveys.
Parent
Not sure what it means (Score:5, Insightful)
First Generation (Score:4, Interesting)
That's the evidence (Score:5, Funny)
FUD tag (Score:3, Insightful)
Cue FUD tag on this story in 3...2..1..
Other MacBook problems (Score:3, Informative)
Here are the MacBook problems people wrote about:
1. the bottom gets very hot (one person compared it to a vulcano), not suitable for laptop work
2. plastic around the screen likes to come off
3. the white MacBooks get "stained" where people rest their hands. These stains cannot be cleaned with any kind of a cleaning agent.
4. trackpad problems like this one.
Guess which type of a laptop I'm now leaning towards?
Re:Other MacBook problems (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Other MacBook problems (Score:4, Insightful)
Never heard this one. As long as you didn't abuse it, I'd expect Apple would replace it.
Actually, nail polish remover (non-acetone, non-isopropyl alcohol kind) does the trick. Also, this happens to a small number of people. Perhaps if you just have unlucky skin chemistry?
Test one out at the Apple Store.
In fact, I suggest looking at all of those issues at the Apple Store. I tested the heat on the MacBooks/MacBook Pros, which are all running full-time on power, and while they were all warm, they were not "OMFG BBQ!" hot.
In the end, pick the computer you think will serve you best. If you do decide to get a MacBook, you're already ahead of the game by being aware of the problems others are having, and can quickly take it to Apple for replacement. I would definitely check out the heat and the trackpad on the display models so at least you'll have reasonable expectations.
Parent
Steps: (Score:3, Funny)
1 -- Buy hardware from a company whose business model consists of selling brand hardware with particularly high margins.
2 -- High margins != high price. High margins > high price. High margins = high price + low costs.
3 -- ???
4 -- Profit! For Apple!
This is my first time ever with the 'Profit!' cliche and I promise it will probably be my last.
WOW... (Score:3, Informative)
Should be a sign: Early Adopters beware! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Should be a sign: Early Adopters beware! (Score:3, Funny)
Some perspective here folks! (Score:4, Interesting)
Let's start off with an admission - I use Apple products. There, I've said it. I find OS X to be the best OS for what I do, full stop. OK, my servers are all Linux and _occasionally_ I have to use 'doze, but OS X is my bread and butter OS. My Macbook is one very capable machine.
Now, I don't think you'll find many people who've used it who don't rate OS X. It's a _very_ capable and compelling system which has most of the advantages of a real OS with most of the advantages of a windowing interface - it wins. It ain't perfect, but it's pretty fine. OK OK..enough already. Let's not get into the relative merits of all that...suffice to say, for joe user, it's pretty good. Two of the primary reasons for it's stability are it's compartmentalization of legacy/back compatibility issues (Rosetta and prior to that the mechanisms for OS 9 and 68K compatibility) and the fact that it only has to work on a limited, well defined, set of hardware...these are both big bonuses.
Apple hardware, on the other hand, is slightly less slick, in my experience. QC and design quality are both slightly lacking, resulting in products that don't Quite Work Right. Now, Apple deliberately set themselves up as some kind of centre of design excellence so they are (and should be) judged against higher metrics than your bucket-pc-producer and, against those metrics, their hardware just ain't so good at the moment. Go google the issues on the MB and the MBP or pretty much any of the machines over the past few years and you'll see issues.
Now, my point is, we need to keep this in some sort of perspective - can you imagine Dell taking a machine back because it has a soft trackpad button, or the screen doesn't lie flat against the base of the machine? No, nor can I.
So, Apple isn't perfect, it needs to improve its hardware QC and QA (especially on rev 1 kit), but the only real reason they get such a lot of headlines on these issues is because they've set themselves up as Something Better.....live by the sword, you'll die by it too.
Please, take all these reports with a pinch of salt. Out of the set of compromises you always make when buying a new machine, don't let a few hardware imperfections skew your decision unnecessarily harshly, just 'cos some people are reporting them with the aid of a megaphone...perhaps OS X isn't the best choice for you, but there's a fairly good chance that it might be.
DAVE
Re:Why did apple have to call it a Macbook? (Score:3, Informative)
Not sure what you mean by Apple "combining the consumer and pro brand into 'MacBook'," but:
MacBook = consumer-class notebook
MacBook Pro = professional-class notebook
Re:Why did apple have to call it a Macbook? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why did apple have to call it a Macbook? (Score:3, Insightful)
Old:
* Brand: PowerBook
* Brand: iBook
New:
* Brand: MacBook
* Brand Extension: MacBook Pro
I'm sure Jobs would hate the comparison to fizzy water, but it's sort of like the transition from Coke/Tab to Coke/Diet Coke. Diet Coke is a brand extension of Coke. It's a definite consolidation under the new name. But really, I don't know if that's necessarily a bad thing and Apple is screwing themselves. It puts more weight behind the Mac name, an
Re:double brand extension (Score:3, Funny)
Re:OMFGPONIEZ!!! Apple laptops have problems ?! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Same with Powerbook (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
This is too true (Score:5, Insightful)
I watched a demo on a 17" X86 Powerbook the other day and I decided the ONLY real selling point was the screen, for road warriors. The downside is that in order to get the very thin design they must have made compromises, and I bet this is at the root of both the battery problems and the trackpad problems. Lots of research has gone into making reliable batteries with rolled construction - it is much harder to make a reliable thin battery.
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