I think I actually solved the photos import! After trying to import photos from the OLD mac to the NEW one and letting it process for 3 days (!), I gave up and clicked on "stop importing". It obviously wasn't working.
So I shut down both computers and looked at the possible cable connections. HDMI cables give the faster connections, but each has only one and the new monitor I bought only uses HDMI. So I couldn't connect the 2 macs that way.
And trying to import the OLD photo folder to the 4TBMy Passport external drive wasn't working.
So I had the thought of just COPYING the OLD iPhoto folder to it. Took 10 minutes! Then I ejected and unplugged the My Passport external drive and plugged it into the NEW mac. And restarted the NEW mac. (Always a good idea to restart after attached a new device)
Then I went to iPhotos and tried to import from the My Passport. Nothing... Gloom... The iPhoto Library folder stayed "greyed out" (not recognized) on My Passport. But I went back to Finder, and opened the file there. It opened there just fine!
So leaving it open, I went back to the NEW mac and opened iPhoto, chose "import", and moved my mouse to My Passport. The iPhoto folder was BLACK (recognized. I clicked OK (import)
AND IT STARTED IMMEDIATELY COPYING THE PHOTOS!
I can see the photos flashing by on the screen. Apparently there are 65,000 files. After an hour, there are 30,000 remaining, but IT IS WORKING! As the Scarecrow said in 'The Wizard Of Oz' "Oh Joy! Rapture!
Showing posts with label Never Give Up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Never Give Up. Show all posts
Monday, February 10, 2020
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
The Wrist Watch
I have been wearing the same wristwatch for about 40 years. It is so old, there isn't even one on ebay. It is a Sears Phasar digital watch. There is a Phasar 1000 and a Phasar 2000, but not the original unnumbered one.
I love that watch. It loses about a second per day, but it does NOTHING other than show time and day/date. But is a little line at the bottom that underlines the day of week. There are 2 buttons. One selects something to change, the other changes it.
Simple, straightforward, and the buttons are so small you can't activate them by accident. It was a gift from my parents the day I got my first career job in 1975. I have had the battery replaced about once a year, and every 10 years, the velcro band has worn out and I replace that with my favorite watch band "sharkleash". It has 2 velcro straps, so working while wearing it, it doesn't loosen. Watch and band are so part of me.
The watch finally died. Well, gee, who would imagine a cheap digital watch from 1975 would only last 40 years? ;) A jeweler replaced the battery and it only worked when cold; arm-warmth stopped it. So, time to replace it...
WAAAHHHHH!!!! I loved that watch...
But everything good goes away eventually, so I looked for a decent replacement. I learned that I hate all modern watches. They DO too much. Alarm features, Stopwatch features. Even "foreign time zone" features whatever that is.
All I want is time, day, and date. And small is good. I don't want some big clunker on my arm. I would happily wear a "ladies" watch, but they are too small. Having to put on my reading glasses just to read the watch sort of defeats the purpose.
So I found one that didn't have too many features (and WOW had the sharkleash band), and it arrived a couple of weeks ago. I struggled for 2 hours to program it. The manual was only on line and deciding which manual to use was iffy. No specific model identifications on any of the manuals. Utter frustration.
I barely got it to show time, but every time I touched the darn thing, it seemed to change displays. I got permission to return it to Amazon.
But before I did that, I really had to find a better one. I found one that seemed better at Sears, a Casio Illuminator with a simple resin watch band. It had fewer features and one less side button. I went to Sears and bought it. But I hate the watchband. Its a buckle type and I LOVE the velcro type. But it just takes popping the watchband pins and replacing the band.
Wrong! This watchband doesn't have the old removable pins. The pin is solid and would not be removed. Internet searches suggested you could just push the pins out, but these were unpushable.
I DON'T GIVE UP EASILY!
I have a set of watch repair tools. They didn't get the solid non-spring pins out. OK, I have bigger tools. With a small slot screwdriver, I bent the damned pins and pulled them loose with a vise-grip plier. I was only risking $16 if I destroyed the watch anyway.
The watch repair tool kit has, among other things, a bag of dozens of spring watch pins. I found 2 that would fit in place of the solid rod pins.
So I ripped the damned solid pins loose and that got the stupid resin buckle band off. My sharkleash band was wider than the watch so I used a pair of surgical scissors I got from the doctor who removed my appendix in 1968 (I keep everything that seems useful) and cut a notch in the sharkleash band to fit.
It only took 15 minutes of fighting with the spring-pins to get them in.
But now I have the simple straight-forward cheap digital watch I preferred on the watch band I preferred. It only took 2 online orders, a trip to the local Sears store, and about 3 total hours of work, but I have what I wanted.
For $16 for the Casio watch and $15 for the watch tool kit, I can return the $49 clunky watch I hated to Amazon for free. And I don't care about the money.
I'm a persistent type, LOL! I got what I wanted at the end...
I love that watch. It loses about a second per day, but it does NOTHING other than show time and day/date. But is a little line at the bottom that underlines the day of week. There are 2 buttons. One selects something to change, the other changes it.
Simple, straightforward, and the buttons are so small you can't activate them by accident. It was a gift from my parents the day I got my first career job in 1975. I have had the battery replaced about once a year, and every 10 years, the velcro band has worn out and I replace that with my favorite watch band "sharkleash". It has 2 velcro straps, so working while wearing it, it doesn't loosen. Watch and band are so part of me.
The watch finally died. Well, gee, who would imagine a cheap digital watch from 1975 would only last 40 years? ;) A jeweler replaced the battery and it only worked when cold; arm-warmth stopped it. So, time to replace it...
WAAAHHHHH!!!! I loved that watch...
But everything good goes away eventually, so I looked for a decent replacement. I learned that I hate all modern watches. They DO too much. Alarm features, Stopwatch features. Even "foreign time zone" features whatever that is.
All I want is time, day, and date. And small is good. I don't want some big clunker on my arm. I would happily wear a "ladies" watch, but they are too small. Having to put on my reading glasses just to read the watch sort of defeats the purpose.
So I found one that didn't have too many features (and WOW had the sharkleash band), and it arrived a couple of weeks ago. I struggled for 2 hours to program it. The manual was only on line and deciding which manual to use was iffy. No specific model identifications on any of the manuals. Utter frustration.
I barely got it to show time, but every time I touched the darn thing, it seemed to change displays. I got permission to return it to Amazon.
But before I did that, I really had to find a better one. I found one that seemed better at Sears, a Casio Illuminator with a simple resin watch band. It had fewer features and one less side button. I went to Sears and bought it. But I hate the watchband. Its a buckle type and I LOVE the velcro type. But it just takes popping the watchband pins and replacing the band.
Wrong! This watchband doesn't have the old removable pins. The pin is solid and would not be removed. Internet searches suggested you could just push the pins out, but these were unpushable.
I DON'T GIVE UP EASILY!
I have a set of watch repair tools. They didn't get the solid non-spring pins out. OK, I have bigger tools. With a small slot screwdriver, I bent the damned pins and pulled them loose with a vise-grip plier. I was only risking $16 if I destroyed the watch anyway.
The watch repair tool kit has, among other things, a bag of dozens of spring watch pins. I found 2 that would fit in place of the solid rod pins.
So I ripped the damned solid pins loose and that got the stupid resin buckle band off. My sharkleash band was wider than the watch so I used a pair of surgical scissors I got from the doctor who removed my appendix in 1968 (I keep everything that seems useful) and cut a notch in the sharkleash band to fit.
It only took 15 minutes of fighting with the spring-pins to get them in.
But now I have the simple straight-forward cheap digital watch I preferred on the watch band I preferred. It only took 2 online orders, a trip to the local Sears store, and about 3 total hours of work, but I have what I wanted.
For $16 for the Casio watch and $15 for the watch tool kit, I can return the $49 clunky watch I hated to Amazon for free. And I don't care about the money.
I'm a persistent type, LOL! I got what I wanted at the end...
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