The spinning colour disc is used by the OS to indicate that the current
application is not responding to UI events (eg mouse clicks, key strokes).
It doesn't indicate anything's crashed, just that it is taking a long time
to do something, and you can switch to another application and keep working.
If you switch to another app you can then use Command-Option-Esc etc and
nail the unresponsive app.
IIRC if you hold down the power button for several seconds it will
definitely power the machine down "hard". You can then reboot normally.
I'm not sure how many seconds it takes, so just keep the button held down
until things start happening.
Cheers,
Chris
How did you post this message then?
ctrl-alt-power has no effect?
Strictly, that's not an OS X crash. With those you get a grey veil and
messages in various languages.
Does the beachball spin when you are hovering over anything but VLC's
windows? If no, then you have VLC guzzling all the machine's resources
it can get. cmd-opt-escape should bring up the force quit menu
eventually. If yes, I'm not so sure, I'd say the window manager went
belly up. If you were lucky enough to have sharing set up properly
before it spun out, try ssh from another Mac's terminal. If you care
enough.
If cmd-alt-power does not cause it to restart, then I'd guess yanking
the battery is all you have left. Don't blame me if it fries your
machine. I have never had to try it.
--
I thought I would be the last on earth to mangle my e-mail address.
fsnospam$elliott$$
My windows desktop
> ctrl-alt-power has no effect?
I never knew that combination, I do now.
> Strictly, that's not an OS X crash. With those you get a grey veil and
> messages in various languages.
>
> Does the beachball spin when you are hovering over anything but VLC's
> windows?
It was doing it over everything, the desktop, the dock, everything
> If cmd-alt-power does not cause it to restart, then I'd guess yanking
> the battery is all you have left. Don't blame me if it fries your
> machine. I have never had to try it.
In the end I had to remove the battery, when I rebooted VLC had mysteriously
dissapeared from my machine altogether. I hope I didn't cause any damage
> "Elliott Roper" <nos...@yrl.co.uk> wrote in message
> news:100720041249523314%nos...@yrl.co.uk...
> > How did you post this message then?
>
> My windows desktop
heh!
>
> > ctrl-alt-power has no effect?
>
> I never knew that combination, I do now.
>
>
> In the end I had to remove the battery, when I rebooted VLC had mysteriously
> dissapeared from my machine altogether. I hope I didn't cause any damage
Yeah, VLC is a scary beast. Coupled with the WLAN you might have been
exploring some untrodden paths in the drivers and stuff.
VLC disappearing like that is a bit of a worry. Ask a unix giant here
how that could have happened. On reboot, the system does an automatic
fsck (file system check), which should have tidied up that kind of
wreckage.
> ctrl-alt-power has no effect?
Do you mean Cmd-Ctrl-Power, or does ctrl-alt-power do something special?
--
Pd
Ohmigawd! You are right. It has been so long since I pressed it.