Man I wish our goodwill doesnt suck, I asked one day where the computers were, they said downtown, so I called downtown and "the public is not allowed into that area"
bogus
While I was out running errands today, I stopped into a Goodwill store that I don't usually visit (it's all the way across town from my usual routine), but this visit paid off with…
I have been, since reading it some years ago, persuaded that there was never a Retail OS 9.2.2 CD, although Retail OS 9.2.1 certainly exists as [Z-]691-3334-A. This is not a termi…
I have a bunch of iBook 900 MHz systems and I used an ordinary Mac OS 9.2.2 install disc and it worked fine.
Obtain an ordinary Mac OS 9.2.2 install disc and all will be fine.
C…
I have a bunch of iBook 900 MHz systems and I used an ordinary Mac OS 9.2.2 install disc and it worked fine.
Obtain an ordinary Mac OS 9.2.2 install disc and all will be fine.
68kMLAOS 9by Mike RichardsonMon, 29 Jun 2009 - 00:31
Nope. Most likely given it is labeled "SuperDrive" it was merely a computer Apple used internally, probably on a secretary's desk. The SE FDHD came first and except for the label c…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Mac128Sun, 28 Jun 2009 - 19:28
I spotted a Apple property tag on this Macintosh SE SuperDrive.
Link (last photo in the auction)
Would this necessarily mean that it was a late stage testing prototype perhaps? T…
In the light of the discussion and listing in this thread, what could be of interest to you? My Install and Restore CDs for the immediately preceding iBook (600MHz/14-in/8MB VRAM)…
I have the same problem with an iBook G3 (800MHz 32 MB VRAM model). I've got a 9.2.2 installer CD that shipped with the 16MB iBooks, but it hasn't solved the problem for me, eithe…
That's it.
I've downloaded and burned about a dozen .ISO files - all useless.
I also have retail copies of OS 9 -> 9.2.1 and 9.1, neither will let me install. Yes they are…
Not looking good.
2 of the .DMG's claim to be iBook install CD and I have no way of differentiating them as the both contain the same number of files and indeed the exact same fil…
I have heard that later Powerbooks, into the early G4 series even, used ADB internally for the trackpad. What would be involved in hooking into that, I have no idea.
Click to e…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Trash80toHP_MiniSat, 13 Jun 2009 - 16:39
I have heard that later Powerbooks, into the early G4 series even, used ADB internally for the trackpad. What would be involved in hooking into that, I have no idea.
Click to e…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Trash80toHP_MiniSat, 13 Jun 2009 - 16:28
The first Apple PowerBook with SCSI Disk Mode would have have to have been the PowerBook 160, 165, 165c, 180 or 180c - I can confirm that the PowerBook 140 and 170 definitely do no…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Trash80toHP_MiniSat, 13 Jun 2009 - 16:24
I have heard that later Powerbooks, into the early G4 series even, used ADB internally for the trackpad. What would be involved in hooking into that, I have no idea.
Click to e…
68kMLAPeripheralsby BunsenSat, 13 Jun 2009 - 11:21
I have the driver for the Radeon 9200 on my own site. You can find it on this page.
The site is in Dutch (sorry for that), but the file is there and named 'ati-retail-9-2-2-jan200…
I have heard that later Powerbooks, into the early G4 series even, used ADB internally for the trackpad. What would be involved in hooking into that, I have no idea.
Click to e…
68kMLAPeripheralsby registerSat, 13 Jun 2009 - 08:20
Try to install Mac OS 9.2.2 (use os9helper, if necessary). The latest ATI drivers for cards supported by your G3 should be included in the system software.
The first Apple PowerBook with SCSI Disk Mode would have have to have been the PowerBook 160, 165, 165c, 180 or 180c - I can confirm that the PowerBook 140 and 170 definitely do no…