Apple Remote Battery Test, Using an iSight!

by Matt, matt@smalldog.com

What do you do when you suspect your Apple remote is broken, and you have only one Mac to test with? All Macs, except the Mac Pro, now ship with Apple Remotes, and very few remotes have required battery replacement in my tenure as a repair guy. However, some remotes have simply ceased to function.

The surefire way to tell is to fire up Photo Booth, point your remote at the iSight, and hold down any button. If your remote is working properly, the on screen image will show a flashing red dot on the black face of the Apple remote. This is the infrared transmitter in your remote, and if you see this dot it is safe to assume that the remote works properly. The remote acts as transmitter, of course, but there is a separate board in all these Macs to receive the signal. It’s a fairly common part to fail. No Apple Remotes have come in yet for battery replacement, as the remote is so energy-efficient. I managed to drain my Mini’s remote battery, though: it was wedged between couch cushions and engaged long enough to drain the battery.

The human eye is not able to see infrared light, but for some reason the iSight can, and converts it to visible light on the screen. I do not purport to understand how a simple iSight can convert infrared into visible light. Anyone out there know how this works?

by Matt, matt@smalldog.com

Similar Posts

  • Creating Audio Books

    Audio books have been around much longer then iTunes so it’s possible you have a couple Audio books you’ve purchased and ripped onto…

  • How to Clean your Computer

    by Matt, matt@smalldog.com (wirtten by Matt, posted by Ed) Customers often ask whether it’s necessary to clean out their computers. One customer believed…

  • Airport Update to Allow Port 548 Usage

    I absolutely love the new Airport, it supports logging and statistics and supports SNMP which means I can graph the incoming and outgoing…

  • Now, That's Smooth: Monitoring Your Memory

    By David@smalldog.com Mac OS X uses what’s termed a “virtual memory system” (VM system) which essentially refers to the amount of memory an…

  • Extending Your Wireless Network

    I’ve written about this in brief before, but after actually setting up a wireless network using an Airport Extreme 802.11n and an Airport…