HELP!!!! ipod refuses to sync!!!
Message was edited by: Tukr
<Edited by Host>
PC, Windows 7, core i3, 4 gb ram, 500gb hd
PC, Windows 7, core i3, 4 gb ram, 500gb hd
Tukr wrote:
I NEED HELP ok so my iPod Classic (160 gb) started acting up at around 9,000 songs. the album artwork get flipped, scrambled and deleted. (its fine in iTunes) ok thats sad but now a few month later my library has grown to 11,000. mainly friends contributed to it...
and no viruses btw. anyway, iTunes REFUSES to sync my iPod. every single time i get an error code. the last time iTunes did sync some music, and videos but when it came time to unplug the iPod this is what happens: 1. the iPod displays the 'ok to disconnect' screen. once the progress bar gets to the end, it freaks. it shows this picture of a USB cord (i think) and reboots. it might have just been from the 'ok to disconnect' page while the screen is loosing power but idk. i have done the 5r's, reinstalled iTunes 3 times, and have no more ideas. please help, i am out of warrantee (?) and have no money to buy a new ipod. Can someone please help me? Thanks for reading. i dont know how this website works so if i dont reply in the next few days or whatever, my email is <removed>. THANK YOU!
Retracts: 889
Reallocs: 12
Pending Sectors: 0
PowerOn Hours: 2202
Start/Stops: 894
Temp: Current 24c
Temp: Min 10c
Temp: Max 50c
*Reallocated Sectors Count*
Count of reallocated sectors. When the hard drive finds a read/write/verification error, it marks this sector as "reallocated" and transfers data to a special reserved area (spare area). This process is also known as remapping, and "reallocated" sectors are called remaps. This is why, on modern hard disks, "bad blocks" cannot be found while testing the surface – all bad blocks are hidden in reallocated sectors. However, as the number of reallocated sectors increases, the read/write speed tends to decrease. The raw value normally represents a count of the number of bad sectors that have been found and remapped. Thus, the higher the attribute value, the more sectors the drive has had to reallocate.
*Pending sector count*
Number of "unstable" sectors (waiting to be remapped, because of read errors). If an unstable sector is subsequently written or read successfully, this value is decreased and the sector is not remapped. Read errors on a sector will not remap the sector (since it might be readable later); instead, the drive firmware remembers that the sector needs to be remapped, and remaps it the next time it's written.
HELP!!!! ipod refuses to sync!!!