Message-Id: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 19 Jun 2005 21:55:19 -0300
From: Bill Briggs [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: hope of Wall Street revival
snip
The screen, keyboard, plastics, all look superb, and I replaced the
hinges on the screen once so they are stiff like
At 8:02 AM +0900 6/21/05, Carl Freire wrote:
Message-Id: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 19 Jun 2005 21:55:19 -0300
From: Bill Briggs [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: hope of Wall Street revival
snip
The screen, keyboard, plastics, all look superb, and I replaced
Hi. I may have asked this a while back - three years ago - but it's
come up again.
I've got a Wall Street that is in nearly perfect condition
physically. It's a 13.3 inch screen model, 250 MHz G3 with gobs of
RAM and a 32 Gig Travelstar drive in it. And I used it 60 hours a
week for 4.5
Have you tried reseating the CPU ?
You also need to remember that if you swap parts, the 250 MHz CPU (Wallstreet1)
wont work on the new motherboard (Wallstreet2).
thanks,
Mad Dog
Hi. I may have asked this a while back - three years ago - but it's
come up again.
I've got a Wall Street
At 12:58 AM + 6/20/05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Have you tried reseating the CPU ?
Yes, I've reseated the CPU card and the RAM.
You also need to remember that if you swap parts, the 250 MHz CPU
(Wallstreet1) wont work on the new motherboard (Wallstreet2).
Are you sure? All of these
I dont believe its a bus speed issue, but a video chipset issue. If you try
and use a ws1 cpu on a ws2 motherboard, it works fine except you get no video
out. I think this due to the ROMs on the ws1 cpu not understanding the newer
video chipset on the ws2 cpu.
I did try the 66/233/no L2