Sad Libs Mac OS

Apple support is here to help. Learn more about popular topics and find resources that will help you with all of your Apple products. It's Sad Mac Vs. Blue Screen of Death! I wrote a patch/utility that disables OS X's default functionality of starting iTunes when the play button is pressed. This utility basically modifies the Remote Control Daemon (rcd) and comments out the Apple Script command to start iTunes.This has worked fine until 10.7, but with 10.8 rcd now has code signature. The patch now causes Exception Type: EXCCRASH (Code Signature Invalid) after. Use a Mac OS X installation Disc. If you’re unable to use Internet Recovery Mode or create a bootable USB installer, you can still use a Mac OS X installation disc. These discs are available for OS X Snow Leopard, OS X Lion, and OS X Mountain Lion. If your Mac is from 2012 or earlier, there was an installation disc in the original box.

Sad

Optional Libraries, Frameworks and Applications for Mac OS X

boost_1.47.0-darwin9-bin4.tar.bz285143811Oct 13 2012
cairo-1.10.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz7668431Oct 13 2012
cairo-1.11.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz8125963Oct 13 2012
cairo-1.12.16-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz5368061Mar 10 2014
cairo-1.12.16-darwin10-static-pkgconfig.patch1524Mar 26 2014
cairo-1.12.16-darwin13-static-pkgconfig.patch2178Mar 27 2014
cairo-1.14.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz3227864Apr 27 2015
cairomm-1.11.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1159086Apr 27 2015
clang-4.0.0-darwin15.6-Release.tar.gz263479823Apr 9 2017
cloog-0.18.0-darwin13.tar.gz1375754Nov 25 2013
cran-usr-local-darwin15.6-20170320.tar.gz415440376Mar 20 2017
curl-7.43.0-darwin10.tar.gz770902Aug 7 2015
db-5.1.25-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz28405811Oct 13 2012
ffi-3.2.1-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz31110Apr 27 2017
fftw-3.3.4-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1066719Apr 27 2015
fftw-3.3.6-2-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz1072630Apr 13 2017
fontconfig-2.11.0-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz8794096Mar 10 2014
fontconfig-2.11.1-add.tar.gz13918Apr 16 2014
fontconfig-2.11.1-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz8781522Apr 16 2014
fontconfig-2.11.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz5336903Apr 27 2015
fontconfig-2.8.0-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz7199092Oct 13 2012
freetype-2.4.4-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz4904037Oct 13 2012
freetype-2.5.3-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz2410089Mar 10 2014
freetype-2.5.5-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1664186Apr 27 2015
gdal-1.11.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz169061650Apr 29 2015
gdal-1.11.4-darwin13.tar.gz165608716May 4 2016
gdal-1.9.0-data.tar.gz381034Apr 5 2013
gdal-1.9.0-lib-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz81692331Oct 13 2012
gdal-2.1.2-darwin13.tar.gz209683293Nov 10 2016
gdal-2.1.3-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz65771536May 2 2017
gdal-2.4.2-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz326098054Jul 29 2019
geos-3.3.3-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz48506063Oct 13 2012
geos-3.4.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz13459621Apr 29 2015
geos-3.6.1-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz16589295Apr 13 2017
geos-3.7.2-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz17278147Jul 29 2019
gettext-0.19.8.1-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz8224384Apr 27 2017
gfortran-4.8.2-darwin13.tar.bz215485555Nov 25 2013
ggobi-2.1.8-darwin8-bin2.tar.gz1098945Jan 9 2009
glpk-4.47-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz5621739Oct 13 2012
glpk-5.2.0-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz2096510Apr 27 2015
gmp-4.2.4-darwin8-bin4.tar.gz881762Jan 9 2009
gmp-4.3.1-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz783864Oct 13 2012
gmp-4.3.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz1445907Oct 13 2012
gmp-5.0.2-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz918768Oct 13 2012
gmp-5.1.3-darwin13.tar.gz452697Nov 25 2013
gmp-6.0.0-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz478909Apr 27 2015
gsl-1.16-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz4227475Apr 27 2015
gsl-1.16-darwin13-x86_64.tar.gz4223452Jan 7 2015
gsl-1.16-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz4120058Apr 13 2017
GTK+_2.14.3-X11-darwin8-bin2.tar.gz26147455Jan 9 2009
GTK+-2.24.17-darwin10-x86_64.tar.bz234457819Mar 30 2013
hdf5-1.10.0-1-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz30768546Apr 24 2017
hdf5-1.8.14-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz16711523Apr 27 2015
hdf5-1.8.8-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz48808262Oct 13 2012
hiredis-0.11.0-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz123712May 11 2014
icu-52.1-darwin10-x86_64.tar.gz34707040Nov 14 2013
icu-54.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz37292892Apr 27 2015
jags-1.0.3-ppc64.tar.gz433713Jan 9 2009
jpeg-9-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz811289Apr 27 2015
jpeg-9-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz761180Apr 9 2017
jpeg-v8d-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz2753147Oct 13 2012
libgit2-0.17.0-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz2013715Feb 15 2013
libiomp-20131213-darwin10.tar.gz165965Oct 23 2014
libpng-1.2.32-darwin8-bin4.tar.gz461783Jan 9 2009
libpng-1.5.18-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz1252333Mar 10 2014
libpng-1.5.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz1265227Oct 13 2012
libpng-1.5.8-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz2586592Oct 13 2012
libpng-1.6.17-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz662389Apr 27 2015
libpng-1.6.28-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz654104Apr 9 2017
libpq-9.4.1-darwin13.tar.gz106622Apr 29 2015
libpq-9.4.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz106624Apr 29 2015
libpq-9.5.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz106941May 5 2016
libsndfile-1.0.25-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz9905965Dec 13 2012
mpc-0.8.1-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz783245Oct 13 2012
mpc-0.9-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz387611Oct 13 2012
mpc-1.0.1-darwin13.tar.gz187074Nov 25 2013
mpfr-2.3.2-darwin8-bin4.tar.gz856732Jan 9 2009
mpfr-3.0.1-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz1761229Oct 13 2012
mpfr-3.1.2-darwin13.tar.gz746704Nov 25 2013
mpfr-3.1.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz336427Apr 27 2015
netcdf-4.1.3-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz20732437Oct 13 2012
netcdf-4.3.3.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz6600712Apr 27 2015
netcdf-4.4.1.1-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz8246309Apr 24 2017
pcre2-10.34-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz1464668Mar 15 04:02
pcre-8.12-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz880244Oct 13 2012
pcre-8.36-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz1483508Jan 9 2015
pcre-8.36-darwin13.tar.gz1229027Jan 9 2015
pcre-8.36-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1229402Apr 27 2015
pcre-8.40-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz1182299Apr 9 2017
pixman-0.20.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz2760518Oct 13 2012
pixman-0.23.8-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz3318482Oct 13 2012
pixman-0.32.4-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz1644323Mar 10 2014
pixman-0.32.6-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1218453Apr 27 2015
pkg-config-0.25-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz162172Oct 13 2012
pkgconfig-0.28-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz243642Apr 27 2015
pkgconfig-0.28-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz243373Apr 9 2017
pkgconfig-system-stubs-darwin13.tar.gz1273Aug 25 2014
proj4-4.9.3-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz1256639Apr 24 2017
proj-4.7.0-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz3197812Oct 13 2012
proj-4.8.0-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz6308348Oct 13 2012
proj-4.9.1-1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz3843823May 20 2015
proj-4.9.3-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz1256758Apr 24 2017
proj-5.2.0-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz2334362Jul 29 2019
protobuf-2.5.0-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz13580013Sep 13 2013
protobuf-2.6.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz10391589Apr 27 2015
qpdf-2.2.2-darwin9-bin3.tar.gz8884393Oct 13 2012
qpdf-5.1.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz4141213Apr 27 2015
QuantLib-1.0.1-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz329551533Oct 13 2012
readline-5.2-12-darwin8-bin4.tar.gz1277391Jan 9 2009
sigc++-4.2.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz4208868Apr 27 2015
szip-2.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz26433Apr 27 2015
tcl8.6.0-darwin10-x86_64.tar.gz2488286Mar 29 2013
texinfo-5.2-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz1571373Apr 17 2015
texinfo-5.2-darwin10.tar.gz1342784Jan 6 2015
texinfo-5.2-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz1346831Apr 27 2015
tiff-3.9.1-darwin8-bin4.tar.gz18183738Oct 13 2012
tiff-4.0.2-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz31964261Oct 13 2012
tiff-4.0.3-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz13379408Mar 10 2014
tiff-4.0.3-darwin13.tar.gz9086601Jan 23 2015
tiff-4.0.3-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz9262282Apr 27 2015
tiff-4.0.7-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz7779131Apr 9 2017
tk8.6.0-darwin10-x86_64.tar.gz1486224Mar 29 2013
udunits-2.1.24-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz439248Oct 13 2012
udunits-2.2.24-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz172043Apr 24 2017
xz-4.999.9beta-darwin8-bin2.tar.gz929474Oct 13 2012
xz-4.999.9beta-git-20100414-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz3464185Oct 13 2012
xz-5.0.3-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz3434689Oct 13 2012
xz-5.0.5-darwin10-bin2.tar.gz1755486Mar 10 2014
xz-5.2.1-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz632660Apr 27 2015
xz-5.2.3-darwin.15-x86_64.tar.gz634310Apr 24 2017
zeromq-2.2.0-darwin9-bin4.tar.gz6824153Oct 13 2012
zeromq-4.0.5-darwin.13-x86_64.tar.gz3223875Apr 27 2015
gtk2.14-x11.dmg26130169Jan 9 2009
GTK_2.18.5-X11.pkg59914166Oct 15 2012
GTK_2.24.17-X11.pkg42591510Apr 1 2013

darwin8 = for Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) or higher
darwin89= 32-bit for Mac OS X 10.4 or higher, 64-bit for Mac OS X 10.5 or higher
darwin9 = for Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) or higher
darwin10 = for Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) or higher
darwin13 = for Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) or higher
darwin15 = for Mac OS X 10.11 (El Capitan) or higher
It is safe to use darwin8 binaries on Mac OX S 10.5 (Leopard). Since R 2.10.1 we do not release darwin8 binaries anymore.
bin4 = quad-arch binary (32-bit and 64-bit, Intel and PPC)
bin3 = tri-arch binary (32-bit PowerPC and Intel, 64-bit Intel)
bin2 = universal binary (darwin8/9: 32-bit only, Intel and PPC; darwin10/11: Intel 32bit + 64-bit)
x86_64 = single-arch 64-bit, Intel (omitted for darwin13 binaries which are always x86_64)

https://doodlegugu.weebly.com/it-the-clown-voice-changer.html. Binaries built automatically via recipes are tagged with <system>.<version>-<arch>

Install by unpacking to the root, e.g.:
Most binaries (except for GTK+) live in /usr/local and are static PIC builds (i.e. they can be used in R packages without the need for runtime dylibs).

For more libraries, see the CRAN devpack. Sources for most of the above are available at the project sites or here.

Note (2009/01/15): ggobi binary was modified at the request of the authors to install in /usr/local/ggobi instead of the default /usr/local. CRAN binaries will reflect the change as well. Consequently, you will have to add /usr/local/ggobi/bin to your Sad libs mac os xPATH and if you develop against ggobi /usr/local/ggobi/lib/pkgconfig to your PKG_CONFIG_PATH in order to see ggobi.

The classic Macintosh startup sequence includes hardware tests which may trigger the startup chime, Happy Mac, Sad Mac, and Chimes of Death. On Macs running macOS Big Sur the startup sound is enabled by default, but can be disabled by the user within system preferences.[1]

Startup chime[edit]

The Macintosh startup chime is played on power-up, before trying to boot an operating system. The sound indicates that diagnostic tests run immediately at startup have found no hardware or fundamental software problems.[2] The specific sound differs depending on the ROM, which greatly varies depending on Macintosh model. The first sound version in the first three Macintosh models is a simple square-wave 'beep', and all subsequent sounds are various chords.

Mark Lentczner created the software that plays the arpeggiated chord in the Macintosh II. Variations of this sound were deployed until Jim Reekes created the startup chime in the Quadra 700 through the Quadra 800.[3] Reekes said, 'The startup sound was done in my home studio on a Korg Wavestation EX. It's a C major chord, played with both hands stretched out as wide as possible (with 3rd at the top, if I recall).' He created the sound as he was annoyed with the tri-tone startup chimes because they were too associated with the death chimes and the computer crashes. He recalls that Apple did not give him permission to change the sound but that he secretly snuck the sound into the computers with the help of engineers who were in charge of the ROM chips. When Apple discovered this, he refused to change it, using various claims in order to keep the new sound intact.[4] He is also the creator of the iconic (or 'earconic', as he calls it) 'bong' startup chime in most Macintoshes since the Quadra 840AV. A slightly lower-pitched version of this chime is in all PCI-based Power Macs until the iMac G3. The Macintosh LC, LC II, and Macintosh Classic II do not use the Reekes chime, instead using an F major chord that just produces a 'ding' sound. The first generation of Power Macintosh computers also do not use the Reekes chime, instead using a chord strummed on a Yamaha12-string acoustic guitar by jazz guitarist Stanley Jordan. Further, the Power Macintosh 5200–6300 computers (excluding the 5400 and 5500, which have the 'bong' chime like the one in the PCI-based Power Macs) use a unique chime, which is also in the television commercials for the Power Macintosh and PowerBook series from 1995 until 1998, and the 20th Anniversary Macintosh uses another unique sound.

For models built prior to the introduction of the Power Macintosh in 1994, the failure of initial self-diagnostic tests results in a Sad Mac icon, an error code, and distinctive Chimes of Death sounds.

The chime for all Mac computers from 1998 to 2016 is the same chime used first in the iMac G3. The chord is a F-sharp major chord, and was produced by pitch-shifting the 840AV's sound. The Mac startup chime is now a registered trademark in the United States,[5] and is featured in the 2008 Pixar film WALL-E when the titular robot character is fully recharged by solar panels as well as in the 2007 Brad Paisley song 'Online'.[6]

Starting with the 2016 MacBook Pro, all new Macs were shipped without a startup chime, with the Macs silently booting when powered on.[7] In 2020, the startup chime would be added to these models with the release of macOS Big Sur, which allows it to be enabled or disabled in System Preferences.[8] On the macOS Big Sur 11.0.1 beta, it was discovered that the new lower pitched chime was brought to all older supported Macs. In a firmware update included in the macOS Catalina 2020-001 Security Update, and the macOS Mojave 2020-007 Security Update, the new startup chime in Big Sur is brought to all Catalina and Mojave supported Macs except 2012 models.

Happy Mac[edit]

The splash screen under Mac OS 8.
The 'Welcome to Macintosh' screen seen in System 7.5 and earlier.

A Happy Mac is the normal bootup (startup) icon of an Apple Macintosh computer running older versions of the Mac operating system. It was designed by Susan Kare in the 1980s, drawing inspiration from the design of the Compact Macintosh series and from the Batman character Two-Face.[9] The icon remained unchanged until the introduction of New World ROM Macs, when it was updated to 8-bit color. The Happy Mac indicates that booting has successfully begun, whereas a Sad Mac (along with the 'Chimes of Death' melody or one or more beeps) indicates a hardware problem.

When a Macintosh boots into the classic Mac OS (Mac OS 9 or lower), the system will play its startup chime, the screen will turn gray, and the Happy Mac icon will appear, followed by the Mac OS splash screen (or the small 'Welcome to Macintosh' screen in System 7.5 and earlier), which underwent several stylistic changes. Mac OS versions 8.6 and later also includes the version number in this splash screen (for example, 'Welcome to Mac OS 8.6').

On early Macs that had no internal hard drive, the computer boots up to a point where it needs to load the operating system from a floppy disk. Until the user inserts the correct disk, the Mac displays a floppy icon with a blinking question mark. In later Macs, a folder icon with a question mark that repeatedly changes to the Finder icon is shown if a System Folder or boot loader file cannot be found on the startup disk.

With the introduction of Mac OS X, in addition to the blinking system folder icon, a prohibition icon was added to show an incorrect OS version is found. The bomb screen in the classic Mac OS was replaced with a kernel panic, which was originally colored white but was changed to black in version 10.3. With Mac OS X 10.1, a new Happy Mac was included. This is also the last version that had a Happy Mac icon; in version 10.2, the Happy Mac symbol was replaced with the Apple logo. In OS X Lion 10.7, the Apple logo was slightly shrunk and modified. In OS X Yosemite 10.10, the white screen with a gray Apple logo was replaced with a black screen with a white Apple logo and the spinning wheel was replaced with a loading bar. However, this only applies to Macs from 2013 and later, including the 2012 Retina MacBook Pros, and requires a firmware update to be applied. All earlier Macs still use the old screen. The shadow on the Apple logo was removed in OS X El Capitan 10.11. In 2016+ Macs, the Apple logo appears immediately when the screen turns on.The Face ID logo for the iPhone X was based on the Happy Mac.

Sad Mac[edit]

One version of the Sad Mac icon, this one indicating that an illegal instruction occurred.

A Sad Mac is a symbol in older-generation Apple Macintosh computers (hardware using the Old World ROM and not Open Firmware, which are those predating onboard USB), starting with the original 128K Macintosh and ending with the last NuBus-based Power Macintosh models (including the first-generation 6100, 7100, 8100, as well as the PowerBook 5300 and 1400),[10] to indicate a severe hardware or software problem that prevented startup from occurring successfully. The Sad Mac icon is displayed, along with a set of hexadecimal codes that indicate the type of problem at startup. Different codes are for different errors. This is in place of the normal Happy Mac icon, which indicates that the startup-time hardware tests were successful. In 68k models made after the Macintosh II, the Chimes of Death are played.

Models prior to the Macintosh II crash silently and display the Sad Mac, without playing any tone. The human heart mac os. PowerPC Macs play a sound effect of a car crash, and computers equipped with the PowerPC upgrade card use the three note brass fanfare death chime (A, E-natural, and E-flat), followed by the sound of a drum, same as the Macintosh Performa 6200 and Macintosh Performa 6300.

A Sad Mac may be deliberately generated at startup by pressing the interrupt switch on Macintosh computers that had one installed, or by pressing Command and Power keys shortly after the startup chime. On some Macintoshes such as PowerBook 540c, if the user presses the command and power keys before the boot screen displays, it will play the 'chimes of death'. The chimes are a fraction of normal speed and there is no Sad Mac displayed.

Old World ROM Power Macintosh and PowerBook models based on the PCI architecture do not use a Sad Mac icon and will instead only play the error/car-crash sound on a hardware failure (such as missing or bad memory, unusable CPU, or similar).

Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar and later instead use the Universal 'no' symbol to denote a hardware or software error that renders the computer non-bootable.[11][12]

Sad iPod[edit]

On the iPod, if damage or an error occurs in the hardware or the firmware, for example, if its files are deleted, a Sad iPod appears. This is similar to the Sad Mac, but instead of a Macintosh, there is an iPod, and there are no chimes of death. The icon also lacks a nose, and the frown is flipped horizontally. It also does not show hexadecimal codes indicating what problem occurred in the iPod. This error screen will not show up when a problem occurs in the newer iPods.

Chimes of Death[edit]

The Chimes of Death are the Macintosh equivalent of a beep code on IBM PC compatibles. On all Macintosh models predating the adoption of PCI and Open Firmware, the Chimes of Death are often accompanied by a Sad Mac icon in the middle of the screen.

Different Macintosh series have different death chimes. The Macintosh II is the first to use the death chimes, a loud and eerie upward major arpeggio, with different chimes on many models. The Macintosh Quadra, Centris, Performa, LC, and the Macintosh Classic II play a generally softer and lower pitched version of the upward major arpeggio, followed by three or four notes, with slight variation depending on the model of the Macintosh. The PowerBook 5300, 190, and 1400 use the second half of the 8-note arpeggio as found on the Quadra and Centris models, or the entire death chime if the error occurs before the screen lights up. The Macintosh Quadra 660AV and Centris 660AV use a sound of a single pass of Roland D-50's 'Digital Native Dance' sample loop, and the NuBus based Power Macintosh models (including 6100,[13] 7100, and 8100) series use a car crash sound. The Power Macintosh and Performa 6200 and 6300 series, along with the Power Macintosh upgrade card, use an eerily dramatic 3-note brass fanfare with a rhythm of drums and cymbals. The pre-G3 PCI Power Macs, the beige G3 Power Macs, the G3 All-In-One, and the PowerBook 2400, 3400, and G3 all use a sound of glass shattering; these models do not display a Sad Mac icon. Since the introduction of the iMac in 1998, the Chimes of Death are no longer used in favor of a series of tones to indicate hardware errors.

See also[edit]

Mac Os Download

References[edit]

  1. ^About Mac startup tones Apple. November 8, 2018. Retrieved February 23, 2020
  2. ^Hardwick, Tim (October 30, 2016). 'Classic Mac Startup Chime Not Present in New MacBook Pros'. MacRumors. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
  3. ^Whitwell, Tom (May 26, 2005) 'Tiny Music Makers: Pt 4: The Mac Startup Sound', Music Thing
  4. ^Pettitt, Jeniece (March 24, 2018). 'Meet the man who created Apple's most iconic sounds: Sosumi, the camera click and the start-up chord'. CNBC. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  5. ^'Apple's Classic Mac Startup Chime is now a Registered Trademark'. Patently Apple. December 12, 2012. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  6. ^Apple Sound Designer on Iconic Startup Sound. Obama Pacman. March 10, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2011.
  7. ^Hardwick, Tim (October 30, 2016). 'Classic Mac Startup Chime Not Present in New MacBook Pros'. MacRumors. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  8. ^Peters, Jay (June 23, 2020). 'The Mac's iconic startup chime is back in macOS Big Sur'. The Verge. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  9. ^Hertzfield, Andy (November 19, 2011). Revolution in The Valley [Paperback]: The Insanely Great Story of How the Mac Was Made. O'Reilly Media. ISBN978-1-4493-1624-2.
  10. ^'Macintosh: 'Sad Macintosh' Error Code Meaning'. Apple. November 30, 2003. Archived from the original on June 17, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2008.
  11. ^'OS X: 'Broken folder' icon, prohibitory sign, or kernel panic when computer starts. Apple'. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  12. ^Delio, Michelle (August 2, 2002). ''Happy Mac' Killed By Jaguar'. Wired.com. Archived from the original on February 4, 2011.
  13. ^'Weird Mac Startup and Crash Sounds'. 512 Pixels. November 14, 2011.

External links[edit]

  • The Original Macintosh: Boot Beep – Folklore.org

Sad Libs Mac Os X

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Macintosh_startup&oldid=1014729985'