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- From: steele@vlsi.caltech.edu (Craig Steele)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware
- Subject: Re: Shakey Apple Monitors....
- Date: 14 Nov 1992 04:13:12 GMT
- Organization: California Institute of Technology
- Lines: 15
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1e1ucoINNaf@gap.caltech.edu>
- References: <1992Nov13.221238.23515@guinness.idbsu.edu>
- Reply-To: steele@vlsi.caltech.edu (Craig Steele)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: kiwi.cs.caltech.edu
-
- In article <1992Nov12.225812.1689@osf.org> drand@spinner.osf.org (Douglas S.
- Rand) writes:
- >|> The problem is with a shakey image on Apple's 13 Monitor. The image is
- >|> shakey, almost to the point of giving you a headache sometimes. There does
- >|> not appear to be any magnetic cause, or other environmental cause. The
- >|> machines are in a cluster, and only some are affected, and those appear to
- >|> be random. Anyone else had this problem? Is it a problem with the
- >|> monitors? Thanks in advance...
-
- I recently discovered a new slow rolling on an SE/30 to be caused by a fan
- several feet distant, but on the same electrical circuit. You might try relocating
- one of the shaking machines to an electrically distinct area to see whether your
- power is at fault.
-
- Craig Steele, steele@vlsi.caltech.edu
-