PowerBook G4 SuperDrive Speed Bump Hack
George Wright writes "A guy called cynikal has managed to hack the firmware on the PowerBook G4's "Superdrive" (the Panasonic UJ-815A slimline slot loading DVD-R/RW burner) to enable DVD-R burning at 2x (instead of 1x), DVD-RW burning at 1x (instead of it being disabled), CD-R burning at 16x (instead of 8x) and CD-RW burning at 8x (instead of 4x). Thanks a lot cynikal! The drive now reports as a UJ-815A instead of a UJ-815, and has a firmware revision of D101 instead of the DOC4, DOCB or DWDB the PowerBooks came with. A firmware downgrader can be obtained from the same place to downgrade back to DOCB if you want to, and there is a discussion thread."
Non-official firmware things like this scare me. If it wasn't included by Apple, there's most likely a reason.
Caveat emptor. Even though it's free.
Etiquette is etiquette. He kills his mother but he can't wear grey trousers.
Well, I installed the firmware hack on my 17" Powerbook. Looks to me like it's working fine; still reads CDs at least. I'm too poor to buy DVD-R discs (spent all my money on the Powerbook), so I can't say if there are any improvements in that department. At least nothing's burst into flames yet.
Every cloud has a silver lining (except for the mushroom shaped ones, which have a lining of Iridium & Strontium 90)
I installed this on my 12" PowerBook. ;) ). Pitty that it doesn't enable a region free player or enable the DVD-Ram.
This is great! Now I can finaly burn to DVD-RW and the speed increases are also pretty cool. I haven't noticed any side effects as of yet (i don't think it would be a good idea to burn a DVD-R faster if your laptop is on the blanket
It is possible to also downgrade the drive back to its original DOCB. You are however not able to do this on a 17" PowerBook. There is no real increase for the 17" PB except now I think you can burn 2x DVD-R. Therefore I would not really recomend people with 17" PBs to do this.
"You win again Gravity!" -Futurama (Zapp)
b) Double the power (and thus increase the power consumption, and thus increase the heat output) of said drive. Consumers file class-action lawsuit over fried components and newly acquired lap-burns.
Think fast: You're Apple, which one do you pick?
This just in... A house fire yesterday was found to be caused by a new type of computer security system which causes a stolen computer to burst into flames. Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah was unavailable for comment.
-John Fenley
It works great on my 12" PB... The only question I have is does this reduce the life of the drive? I bet it doesnt though.
:-P
Now if someone would write a firmware update that turned on the keyboard backlighting
Like anyone can even know that
i just installed it on a 12" PowerBook G4 with superdrive.
just burned 4.2 gigs of DiVX DVD rips onto Apple 2x media in thin jewel cases with Toast 5.1.2 at 2x. Burned in 30 minutes flat. No errors. Formerly could only burn at 1x.
just burned mandrake ix86 9.2b iso onto Memorex black CD-R 700 meg media with Toast 5.1.2 at 16x Burned in 4 minutes and 15 seconds. formerly could only burn at 8x.
it works for me. Of course, I installed a PowerMax ata-33 ide card, Intrega USB for Windows only PCI card, a SonnetTech G4/450 CPU card, and Firewire PCI card in a PowerMac 7500 running Mac OS X 10.2 and used it as my primary email server until 6 months ago..... so i'm not exactly the conservative computer user...
ymmv and if your powerbook blows up, don't blame me.
guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
In the case of the iBook it is because when you desktop span, you diasble quartz extreme as the video ram must be shared between both displys. Without quartz extreme, the GUI is much much slower and less responsive. Thus Apple choosing to disable the screen spanning option and keeping the performance of the laptop as advertised.
Alas, there's NO region free firmware for this drive yet.
Matsushita took some steps to prevent this: the firmware is encrypted, etc...
More and more drives are protected against patching (Pioneer, etc...). Smells like some kind of pressure from the movie industry here...
Is it just me, or another seriously important point being overlooked? I quite agree that heat is of a large concern, having access to (and a lot of experience with) both a 12 and 17 inch PowerBook, but seeing as these machines are laptops, they are frequently not plugged in to AC power.
Admittedly, trying to burn a DVD while moving the laptop around is not such a wise idea, but power consumption (and by direct extension: battery life) might also have been a valid [marketing?] reason for locking the speed of this drive down. Of course, is it any more energy efficient to burn twice as long at half the speed?
http://www.csreloaded.com
Of course, you should undoubtedly use caution when burning at speeds not recommended (and in fact restricted) by Apple: Use on a flat surface in no more than room temperature conditions. If you are extra cautious, you can purchase a cooling fan, put it in the refrigerator or heck, even resort to not installing this unsupported firmware.
"I tend to think of OS X as Linux with QA and Taste", James Gosling, creator of Java
No matter how off topic this is, I must correct some things in the above...