Interesting
They are perfectly usable as desktop machines...if you're deaf
already, and live in a climate that needs year-round heating. 8-)
I almost do! Where I live, we expect August to be our warmest month.
It is drizzling and 61° again today. Our summer's almost been canceled.
If you have a different monitor you could use, try it, if it works then you
have
isolated your problem to the monitor itself, if you get the same results then
you have isolated the problem to the CPU itself.
What OS are you running?
Do you run antivirus software on your machine on a regular
On Aug 10, 2010, at 11:54 AM, Brian Fuelleman wrote:
If you have a different monitor you could use, try it, if it works
then you have isolated your problem to the monitor itself, if you
get the same results then you have isolated the problem to the CPU
itself.
What OS are you running?
Do
On Aug 10, 2010, at 11:24 AM, TVirkkala wrote:
Here's something I haven't seen before, a particular kind of trouble.
An early PowerMac G4 Quicksilver. You start it up, the O.S.'s Apple appears,
and then the screen dies. It's all given up.
Possibly the video is set to a refresh
To finish off this thread (at least the title topic) and for the
record:
-The Digital Audio's 466MHz does fit -- as is -- into the Gigabit. So
no soldering needed there, it's not even too tight.
-The processor runs at 350MHz, just as Len predicted.
However, I can't get the Sonnet card to work in
Greetings all,
I was able to move a spare G5 (1.8GHz, DP) from my school office to
home studio. At the office, sleep on the unit was not a luxury; now at
home it would be a nice feature. The G5 does not sleep; when I
manually put it to sleep, it goes through the motions to the point of
shitting
On Aug 10, 2010, at 4:54 PM, Geke wrote:
To finish off this thread (at least the title topic) and for the
record:
-The Digital Audio's 466MHz does fit -- as is -- into the Gigabit. So
no soldering needed there, it's not even too tight.
Did not know that. My warning was based upon QS