AirPort Extreme
en
1 solution Indice de 2 |
Has artifacts attached to the desktop icons and mouse pointer. |
1 solution Indice de 1 |
The iMac occasionally boots without the Apple bong |
1 solution Indice de 3 |
Can I run OS X 10.7 on my iMac? |
2 solutions Indice de 1 |
Wire routing of video inverter causing jerky video? |
Pièces
Outils
Voici quelques outils couramment utilisés pour travailler sur cet appareil. Vous ne devriez pas avoir besoin de tous les outils pour chaque procédure.
Troubleshooting
There are no troubleshooting guides for the iMac G5 20" Model A1076 at this time.
Upgrades
You can cost-effectively upgrade a number of components in the iMac G5 20" Model A1076.
- Memory: If your iMac is still running with only the stock RAM, upgrading with 1 GB of RAM will provide a dramatic performance boost at minimal cost.
- Hard Drive: 80, 160, 250, or 400 GB hard drives came standard with the iMac G5 20" Model A1076. You can upgrade the drive up to 2 TB.
- Optical Drive: The optical drive can easily be upgraded to an 8x SuperDrive.
Identification and Background
You can verify that you have a iMac G5 20" Model A1076 by checking the processor information through "About This Mac" in the Apple menu.
Use the iMac identification system to help you identify your machine. iMacs tend to look very similar, and it's important to know which machine you have before ordering any replacement parts.
The iMac G5 was a series of desktop Macintosh computers designed and built by Apple Inc. using the PowerPC chip architecture. It was the last line of iMac computers that used a PowerPC chip, making it the last of the iMacs that could run Mac OS (Classic) applications.