--- dan_A [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Umax and can get into files, but when I try to use
Eudora or Netscape
(or iCab) I can't make a connection. I tried
installing OT 1.0.8,
which seems like the oldest version I can find. It
wont install on a
IIci. Is there anything else that I can
--- Jason Trunzo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Other vintage machines are valuable if mint, but the
Lisa takes the cake!
The value of a Lisa depends mostly on if it's in
good cosmetic condition and if it's fully functional.
Generally the later models with normal floppy drives,
more RAM and hard
--- Fran Dollinger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have no way of getting OT on to my IIci unless
someone wants to
walk me through connecting my IIci to my 7300/200
(OS 8.6), which I
am using right now on the cable modem, and then
explain how to
transfer files.(I'm running OS 7.5, no CD on
--- dan_A [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The IIci is running OS 7.5.3, which is the highest
OS that you can
put onto the machine with its OEM processor, and
which to date
doesn't like Open Transport which is the other
component that enables
the IIci to get on the Internet with a cable
Replace the PRAM batteries.
=
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--
Vintage Macs is sponsored by
--- Donovan Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I finally got my LC630
clip
room. While working on it one night I had the TV on
and had just switched
the TV off via the remote when pretty much the same
time off goes the Mac.
I switched on the TV again, and on comes the Mac...
needless to
--- Jason Trunzo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I pulled the cache card and still get the death
chimes...I'm
beginning to think the RAM is bad.
Any more ideas out there? Anyone have some RAM for
sale? I want to
put 32mb in this machine.
Does your IIci have plastic or metal SIMM clips?
--- Snook, John R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=2032468320
I bought one of these and it works good on my LC475.
So I'm going to use it on my grayscale project.
It only cost $17.50 shipping included.
What about going the other way and finding a 9
--- b e n w e l l s | headwerkx
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The SE/30's new hard disk had 7.5.5 already
installed, which was rather
convenient, except that it wants to take 27Mb of RAM
(out of 32Mb) all the
time. Seeing as 7.6.1 is using 9Mb on my IIfx and
9.1 is only using 24Mb I'm
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 22:33 -0700 on 23/06/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
So who's in charge of updating this dead link
http://asu.info.apple.com/swupdates.nsf/artnum/n10416
on this page
http://www.lowendmac.com/video/apple8-24gc.shtml
Hint: I have no control over
--- b e n w e l l s | headwerkx
one question though, according the codes listed,
some of those 3 chip SIMMs
are 4Mb modules - is that possible? Given the other
1Mb and 4Mb SIMMs I've
seen have 8-9 chips on them, I'm wondering if I've
misinterpreted something.
The 8 or 9 chip SIMMs
--- Teri Pittman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think I have one of those cosmic ironies on hand.
I wanted a Color
Classic to try and turn into a Takky. Was given one
Neat.
plot my next move. It runs nicely with the 520 MO
but the OS is so
stripped down that it really needs to be
The problem with Macs and dodgey hard drives is
there's no way to get low level access to ROM routines
for low level formatting a drive. You must boot a
System or Mac OS. Unfortunately if the driver on the
HD is FUBAR or incompatable with a driver on
another disk then you're SOL when it comes to
--- b e n w e l l s | headwerkx
clipped list of failures
Insert deep sigh here
Looks like you're stuck until you get a SCSI Disk
Mode cable and can directly connect it to another
Mac. Got any boot disk that the Disk Mode control
panel will fit on?
Can it be kicked into Disk Mode from
--- Snook, John R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Mr. pickle,
Do you know if a Plus keyboard can be modified to
have a ADB plug on it?
Or does that Datadesk Mac101 keyboard has a custom
chip in it.
If so I want one!
http://www.applefritter.com/prototypes/cassie/index.html
There you'll find a
--- Scott Holder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 12:05 AM 7/1/2002 -0700, you wrote:
http://www.applefritter.com/prototypes/cassie/index.html
There you'll find a schematic of an adaptor for
connecting an ADB keyboard to a 512K or other Mac
that uses the phone cord type keyboard connection.
--- Jason Trunzo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Howdee!
By the '040 card do you mean Sonnet's 040 Presto
card? If so, that
substantially increases your processing speed (to 55
or 60mhz I
think) and allows you to run up to OS 8.6 on your
IIci.
It's an 040, best it will do is 8.1. If it's
--- Teri Pittman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Okay, I gotta ask this, as I haven't found any
information about this:
exactly how do DOS cards in Macs work? I have two
of them now, one with a
286 chip and one with a 386 chip. I can vaguely
remember one of these back
in college, that seemed
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yep, and AW should have worked. Weird. Anyway,
WordPerfect is a LOT
better and it's guilt-free because it is legally
free.
It's a good word processor except it's WYSIWYG
HTML mode is 99% useless. Create a HTML document,
save it, close the file then
--- Sam Burrish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
tried putting my copy of AppleWorks 5.0.3 on it
but it
that was a no-go. I'm guessing that it's a
68040 but I
Personally, I find WordPerfect icky. Micro$oft
totally mutilated Apple's
Human Interface Guidelines in their early apps.
WordPerfect
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 22:51 -0700 on 07/07/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yep, and AW should have worked. Weird. Anyway,
WordPerfect is a LOT
better and it's guilt-free because it is legally
free.
It's a good word
--- Robert Hutchins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There's also a Mac version of AOL Press. It has some
funky features, but
I use it a lot and quite like it. I built my site
with it:
http://www.hutchfx.com
Any idea where it can be found? If I have the original
archive filename I may be
--- Robert Hutchins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Note on AOL Press:
For OS 7.x - 8.0 use AOL Press v 2
For OS 8.5 - 9.1 use AOL Press v 1.2.2
Now why would the older version work on 8.5 and newer,
but not the newer version??? In the Win versions,
only 2.0 can do frames. Frames are very simple
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Aren't you the one who posted the never do this
with frames link? :-p
the pickle
This one? :)
You want frames? I'll give you FRAMES!
http://www.zark.com/headscape/frames.html
=
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I'd nuke and pave using a hacked Drive Setup 1.7.3
and make it all one HFS standard partition. Do it
when booted from a 68K Disk Tools floppy from the
System or MacOS you intend to use on the IIci.
The problems I've had with Macs and drives all came
from mixing and matching disk formatting
--- Donn Haven Lathrop [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You can remove the slotted wheel assemblies, but
should use a bit of
care as they are tricky to get out without breaking
one of the detents
The older mice, with the photoelectric slotted
wheels are worth trying
to repair. The newer ones,
--- Anders Anna-Lee Fager [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Guys,
I have this pile of more or less crappy mice. Most
of them produce erratic movements or lack the little
slippery thingie that is supposed to be the only
thing save for the ball to touch the pad. Is there
anything one can do to get
--- DeVaul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Everyone -- me again!
I have some more questions about my Mac IIci.
First off, I am thinking of adding a Daystar 030
Direct Slot 50 Mhz
accelerator, but this would require the removal of
my Apple Mac IIci cache
card. Question: Would this
--- Visionary [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
William:
Wiping the drive is an option and really, it's a
matter of routine with me.
But I'd hoped to be able to get a backup first in
hopes of rescuing some of
the software presently on the disk. Thus the need
for networkability -- to
do the
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hardly anyone carries them any more because SyQuest
went under in '98 :(
the pickle
Syquest is still alive! www.syquest.com After Iomega
got done plundering, they sold the assets of Syquest
to SYQT Inc. Latest site update was May 14, 2002.
For some
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 03:17 -0700 on 15/07/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hardly anyone carries them any more because
SyQuest
went under in '98 :(
the pickle
Syquest is still alive! www.syquest.com After
Iomega
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
what can i use foster farms for ?
Either as a place to buy chicken from or to do some
word processing on. :) (Foster Farms has been a big
name in chicken in the USA for many many years.)
what can i do to make it faster ?
Put it on the passenger seat of your car
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Apologies if this has been answered better
elsewhere, but I'd like to burn 7.1 to a cd and
install it on my lc 575 in the interest of some
speed. As long as I'm at it, I'd like to burn a few
things to cd and install them. Unfortunately, only
have the pc as the
--- Jason Trunzo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why is the screen amber? The box it came in (if you
look at the ebay
photo) is showing a normal grayscale screen. Was
this a typical
thing for Apple to do...anybody know for a fact that
this machine isn't just blinky?
Monochrome CRTs only have
SyQuest Technology, Inc. went bankrupt in 1998.
Iomega bought their technology but chose not to
incorporate any of it into
their existing products. SyQuest continued business
under chapter 11 until
the judge shut them down completely in early 2001.
Infinitum, LLC bought
the remainder of the
--- Jim Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
clip
Help! Should I just toss it? Or is there some magic
driver or formatting
utility that will let me turn that free space into
usable turf? Thanks to
all who respond.
-- Jim Scott
Somewhere, somehow, get access to a PC with a SCSI
controller that
--- Hardy Menagh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The label says 45 MB Removable Hard Disk and
Ehman Quality Macintosh
Peripherals Since 1985 which, I'm guessing is about
when it was made.
The cartridge measures 5 3/8 x 5 3/8 and has a red
drum (Mrs.
Torrence) in the upper right corner that you
--- Jim Lunceford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeff:
There's a removable chip on there, looks like a
small ROM chip.
'Says, 1003359-0001A Spigot NuBus Ver.1.0
Is that what your looking for?
Looks like you have a video capture card there.
=
http://www.junkscience.com All the Junk
--- Mark Benson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It took my 17 without flinching, creaking or
otherwise. Unless your
17 is unusually heavy I'd say your ok.
If you want a heavy monitor, try an IBM 6091-19
from an RS-6000 workstation. :) I'm trying to figure
out which is cheaper, buying a new hot
--- Steven [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When I was on dial-up, I found FreePPP worked best
(I think the last version
was 2.1). I also found that MacTCP was the worst.
I know FreePPP is freeware.
Download freePPP at www.rockstar.com
=
http://www.junkscience.com All the Junk that's fit to
See what ibeep 2 from here will do for you.
http://www.unitus.org/classicmac/system.html
=
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__
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Yahoo! Health - Feel better, live better
http://health.yahoo.com
--
--- Gregg Eshelman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
See what ibeep 2 from here will do for you.
http://www.unitus.org/classicmac/system.html
If that doesn't work, try this.
http://lightning.prohosting.com/~classicm/
=
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Have you tried it with NOTHING in the box but
four 1meg SIMMs in Bank A (preferrably matched and
known to be good) and a floppy drive?
Get it that way then on another Mac, download the
System 7.5 Network Access Disk (NAD) and see if
the IIci will boot from that. (Of course you should
make
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 14:13 -0500 on 31/07/02, R.A. Cantrell wrote:
Thanks for the response. To push the abstraction a
bit further, let's say
we're talking OS 8.1 and that it is on a computer
bought and dragged in
from a garage sale? How about on a stack of HD's
--- william ahearn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
clip
As with the music business (who, let's face it
deserve to be ripped deep -- if it could only be
done without hurting all of the artists),
Without hurting the artists? Ha. Just ask the
artists that haven't been cowed into spouting the
music
--- Teri Pittman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Let's not forget that there are companies that buy
up software programs just to kill it.
SCSI Director is one of those sad tales. TranSoft
apparently bought it from another company, because
version 1.7.2 doesn't have their name. TranSoft
then developed
--- Terry Mathews [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another thought is that Copyright convictions
usually involve actual damages
that is the value of the pirated software to the
company. It would be
difficult to prove that this software that you don't
even sell anymore is
really worth anything to
DirecTV has been finding it a bit difficult to
persue TV pirates in Canada due to a little quirk
in the laws up there.
Since DirecTV service cannot be sold in Canada, it
has a value of zero in that country. Anything of
zero value is worthless and only things that have
value and/or worth can be
Dry bearings. Dismantling a drive to drip a tiny
amount of sewing machine oil on the bearings is
a tricky proposition. Getting the thing back together
is $^!@$@$ near impossible. :P
I have an old Seagate 320meg SCSI that I took apart,
got both bearings oiled but I couldn't get the heads
back
--- Aedan McGhie/Scotland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... it's software piracy said the MS woman, like
a robot.
And there was something on MS web page about that
recently. They
warned charities about doing that kind of thing.
What's _really_ perverse is all the ads Microsoft has
put out
--- Visionary [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How can I check?
Did you format it as HFS+?
Connect it back to the Mac you formatted it on that's
running OS 8.1, click on the drive then hit Command I.
It should say Mac OS Standard or Mac OS Extended.
Extended is HFS+. If it says Standard then you
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's been well known for quite some time that
various HD drivers from various
manufacturers may or may not play nicely together.
Tell me about it. :P I loaned a drive to a friend
and told him he could erase it, what was on it
wasn't important. When I
The Mac uses disk drivers because the ROM in the
Mac doesn't know how to talk directly to a whole
bunch of different hard drives with all sorts of
different configurations of cylinders, heads and
sectors. 1984 was in the days before PC hard drive
controllers could autodetect the drive paramaters
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The drivers are placed on the hard disk when the
disk is formatted. All disks
have a driver of some sort on them, no matter what
platform/OS/type of drive,
with the exception of (maybe) CD media.
PCs don't use any special driver on the disk unless
--- Teri Pittman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Look guys, I'm coming from the ugly Windows/DOS
world. I don't understand
the need for drivers to install a hard drive
whatsoever except for that
brief and ugly period in our own history when
there was such a thing as
EIDE which I tried to avoid
--- J.S. Garrison [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry, Greg.
I just set up an AMD 1.2 Ghz box from the year 2002.
It requires drivers for the DVD, Modem, Board chips
like the VIA PC-133
chip, on-board sound, modem hard disk, and etc.
Drivers are not obsolete, yet.
We were discussing
Hmm, this got way longer than anticipated. :) Even
busted the list's 10K size limit. Next part in next
message. :) If Dan thinks it's good enough for
my much neglected Trailing Edge on Low End PC
(or even *gasp* good enough for a spot somewhere
on LEM) be my guest, I think it's a bit long and
Part 2 in response to why Macs use disk drivers and
PCs (generally) don't.
Here follows a history of the PC platform's
trials and tribulations with the hard drive through
the years. Reading it is optional.
Since the IBM PC was introduced in 1981 and the Mac
in 1984 (and the PC was in
--- mart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anybody tell me how I can check what type of
installation was chosen,
for a certain OS?
Suppose I have a HD with 7.5.5. that works with my
IIci and LC's and I want
to take it out to somebody who has a PowerMac
without a HD. I wonder if it
will boot.
Most early PowerMacs will boot from a 7.5 boot
disk.
7.5 through 8.1 have two boot disks, one for 68k
and one for PPC.
If you have a 601 upgrade in a 68k, the 8.1 PPC
boot disk will work as-is. (Maybe 8.0 too, never
tried it.) 7.6 PPC boot disk requires an enabler
for a 601 upgrade but 7.6
--- biomem [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just got a 72pin EDO simms for my LCIII and put it
in.
When I turned it on the 1st time it chimed, loaded
and I looked 'about this
mac' and it said 36000bytes which is right
4+32...but the system memory
showed using 3 of this memory, why?
Use the
--- Bill Zipprich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anybody know what the following card is:
Radius Risc Processor Board
It's a Nubus card with no external connector. Could
it be a card that accelerates graphics?
Probably a PhotoShop accelerator. Should work with
up to PhotoShop 3,
--- Dan Knight [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As many of you may already know, Low End Mac's
PayPal account was
hijacked over the weekend. Someone using the email
address
[EMAIL PROTECTED] managed to hack my password, add
his/her address to the
account, remove my access to the account, and
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 21:55 +0100 on 08/08/02, Mark Benson wrote:
More likely some sort of RIP card; if you can get
access to a scanner, this
What be an RIP board? For those who have not got a
clue.
Raster Image Processor. Useful in service bureaux
and the
--- Darren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What's the problem with direct deposit, better to
keep a transaction
account to pay bills into the other parties account
than to pay another
third party to do it for you. Banks tend to keep
better records.
Maybe banks are different over there?
Notice
--- Dwight Hines [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--
Mark Benson
Any spelling errors are attributed to PEBKAC
What's a PEBKAC?
Problem
Exists
Between
Keyboard
And
Chair
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__
I just got a Pioneer DRM-604X, which is an external
4x, 6 disc, SCSI CD-ROM changer. :)
Unfortunately whomever is in charge of driver software
at Pioneer uploaded the Mac driver as a .sea file
instead of a plain stuffit archive or .hqx or .bin
encoding it. :(
I've tried to download it from here
--- Chris Lawson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gregg Eshelman, you'll love this :)
http://www.applefritter.com/cgi-bin/YaBB/YaBB.pl?board=nubusmafia;action=display;num=1022536987
If you can help in any way, please don't hesitate to
head over to Applefritter and jump right in.
Yeah, I've
Welcome!
If you have any IIci Macs in the pile, they'd be
better ones to start with, IMHO, unless you're
going to do something that needs more than three
NuBus cards. :)
=
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__
Do
--- Darren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The file will unstuff using stuffit deluxe 5.5 on
Basilisk
I'll send it to you if you'd like, changed to a sit
file.
Dont think its a .sea file, try renaming it.
Someone else sent it to me already. :)
=
http://www.junkscience.com All the Junk that's
Looks like the Pioneer DRM-604X will have to find
a home connected to one of my Macs, assuming it
works with 7.6.1 or 9.1. :) My PC's SCSI controller
identifies it as a DRM-600.
MS totally screwed up how changers work in 2K and
XP. :P ATAPI/IDE ones show as a single drive only
and you have to
I connected it to my 7300 this morning and apparently
the Pioneer control panel can't see anything on the
secondary SCSI bus. Bummer.
Next step will be to try it on the Power IIci and
see if it works with the single SCSI bus on it.
Can any of the 3rd party disk drivers handle CD
changers?
Looks like FWB CD-ROM Toolkit supports the DRM
series of Pioneer changers.
http://www.fwb.com/ts/cdt/cdt_support.html
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--- Marco van de Voort [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'd assume the reason no one put one out is that
the file name
limitation is hardcoded into a large percentage of
applications. So,
even if the Finder could use a 256 character name,
the apps couldn't.
True. But it could make life
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 23:17 -0700 on 11/08/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
Looks like FWB CD-ROM Toolkit supports the DRM
series of Pioneer changers.
How about the free OEM version in the Daystar
downloads section?
The one in the 604 section here
http://www.lowendmac.com
http://www.pioneerservice.com/downloads/documentation/selftest.htm
Did anyone happen to save a copy of that file on
testing Pioneer CD-ROM changers? The link is dead. :P
=
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__
Do
--- BearAZ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings from Sunny Arizona!
New to the list...but ya gotta start someplace!
So, I'll start with the easy stuff first. I want to
hook up my HP
Deskwriter 660C printer to my IIcx which is running
OS 6.0.8.
Possible? Which drivers? Source for same?
--- Scott Holder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 08:12 PM 8/13/2002 +0100, you wrote:
I think it requires OS 7.5.5 or later. I got AW 5
with my iBook so
it's not that old.
It'll run on 7.1. Most of my 68ks are running that.
Incidentally, it'll also run on A/UX 3.x.
It'd be running as a Mac
--- Marco van de Voort [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
videocards, while I didn't see any other PDS cards
(except one Daystar accel, which I bought)
Got the adaptor if you're going to use it in
anything other than a IIci, IIvx, IIvi or Performa
600? (If it's an 030 PowerCache, Turbo 040 or Turbo
I remembered that http://www.archive.org has a
Wayback Machine where you can enter a URL of
an old or missing website and if they've archived
it you can see it.
They happen to have three copies of
http://www.pioneerservice.com/downloads/documentation/selftest.htm
Happy joy! Unfortunately my
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 23:08 +0100 on 13/08/02, Mark Benson wrote:
Apple NuBus NICS are AAUI - Asante MacCon NICs are
UTP RJ45. I have 2
Not all of 'em. Both made some that were AUI or
10Base-2, or both, as well as
AUI + RJ-45 and RJ-45-only. Apple didn't make many
Ummm, I finally figured out the problem. I was
putting the CDs in right side up but some engineer
at Pioneer decided to build the drive upside down.
Yup, that's it. I was just following standard
procedure like every other CD-ROM drive in the
world but Pioneer had to go and make things
difficult.
--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 23:21 -0700 on 13/08/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
Ummm, I finally figured out the problem. I was
putting the CDs in right side up but some engineer
at Pioneer decided to build the drive upside down.
LOL.
Sorry. That's just funny
--- Marco van de Voort [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Daystar 68030/050. I managed to find a copro, and
add it, but don't know if it
is working. (2 euro)
The FAQ:http://macfaq.org/
Instructions are in the FAQ on how to install the
Power Central control panel for the 030
--- Marco van de Voort [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The 50 MHz CPU _is_ working under NetBSD, and I've a
feeling that it
is on under MacOS also.
It won't enable the CPU under Mac OS without the
control panel at all. No way, no how. Not the
Daystar 030. It's easy to see the speedup when the
--- Bill Zipprich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
clip a weird card with a 68000 processor
Like pickle said, probably TokenRing. You need the
A/ROSE extention for them. Apple / Realtime Operating
System Extention.
=
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--- the pickle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 17:55 -0700 on 14/08/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
--- Bill Zipprich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
clip a weird card with a 68000 processor
Like pickle said, probably TokenRing. You need the
A/ROSE extention for them. Apple / Realtime
Operating
--- l k m [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a Daystar Universal Powercache card pulled
from a IIci. If I take off
the FPU (that's the chip with MC68882RC33A, right? )
off the card, can I
install it in my SE/30?
If so, is there an easy way to remove the chip?
You must get an SE/30 adapter
--- Snook, John R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
You can But it's not easy.
You need a IIsi PDS adaptor, and you will need to
cut clearance in the SE/30 chassis.
johnsn
DayStar made an adaptor specific for the SE/30.
=
http://www.junkscience.com All the Junk that's fit to Debunk!
--- Snook, John R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
PS. I looked in the FAQ but I can't open the HEX
file that has (maybe) the
info.
Thanks.
It's a Word doc, IIRC.
I'm on a PC.
WinZip will extract BinHex files, but the only Mac
files you can extract and still use are documents
like text and
--- Snook, John R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
That could explain it.
I have a daystar LC adaptor.
It works with a daystar 030 upgrade card (power
cache?).
I was hoping it would work with the 040.
johnsn
It might in an LCIII or LCIII+ or Performa 520 or 550
or Color Classic II.
=
--- Cameron Kaiser [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Some of the tests ran on my classic Mac stable had
rather startling results.
For example, the Daystar PowerCentral control panel
seems to accelerate FPU
performance on the IIci, even with no Daystar
hardware installed.
Apparently you had the
--- Desert Fox [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've got 2 IIcx's with 80MB RAM...
I paid almost $3,000 for some of those Thunder IV GX
cards in various
resolutions. The DSP acceleration is kick butt. The
best is converting to
CMYK, which is sped up by a huge factor.
My IIci with the Turbo 601
What I have a hard time figuring out is why video
card companies love to charge around $5,000 for
the latest and greatest thing? From the earliest
24bit cards for Mac and PC right to the present day
where they can make the same AGP or PCI hardware
for both, the prices have stayed about the same.
--- Marten van de Kraats [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I have used a IIfx myself for quite a while. It is
an oke machine.
BTW Internet browsing is not exactly a lowend
activity, not for
computers of this vintage. They are actually a bit
to slow to do it
properly and some content is out of
--- Marten van de Kraats [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
How about a head to head internet performance
comparo? 386DX/40 VS IIfx.
clip
Don't forget to give the 386 a 40 mhz bus speed mobo
otherwise it wouldn't be fair :-)
Marten
That's what the 386DX/40 is. Full 32bit CPU on a
40Mhz bus. :)
--- Ken Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't know how serious you are about this, but I'm
pretty sure that I
have a 386/40 PC board in my basement (I only wish I
threw out the old
junk...
I also just got a IIfx, but don't know what it has
in it, other than a
sticker on the outside
--- Bill Zipprich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Remember guys, the IIfx had IOP's!
This was an advanced feature. Similar to IBM
mainframes with channel
processors for I/O.
I don't know if PC's ever had that kind of advanced
hardware.
16550N UARTS, that ought to at least equal the IIfx
--- Bill Zipprich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The IIfx IOP's would certainly benefit the Internet
experience as you use
the mouse to navigate.
Also consider that the cursor (hardware cursor) is
controlled via the IOP's
as well.
Well, I suppose he can start by just assembling
whatever he
--- mart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Ben, what do you mean by screen draw lag?
-mart
He means you can see the graphic elements draw on
the screen instead of snapping on. A faster Mac
or a faster upgraded CPU can take care of much of
it.
Hmm, I just noticed he left the T out of Paintboard
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