Re: Beige-Stock

2002-12-14 Thread Gregg Eshelman
--- Jeff G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It also grips in its tight little PDS slot, a > Daystar Accelerator running at > a merciless 33Mhz., and RamDoubler. If you think that's speedy, get the 50Mhz version. :) With FPU of course. = "I'm sorry, but you can't list fish as 'durable goods' in

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Gregg Eshelman
--- Ian Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 12/14/02 4:47 PM, "Gregg Eshelman" > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Best bet is to Ethernet the IIsi, iMac and P100 > > together then setup routing software on the iMac. > > Which routing software should I use? No idea for OSX. I haven't much "b

NuBus Mafia up

2002-12-14 Thread Chris Lawson
Well, sort of. I've got a bunch of stuff in the dbase, though I'm nowhere near done. I *have* spent most of the last two Saturdays working on the search engine, however, which appears to be pretty much working the way it ought to be. If anyone sees problems with the search engine or has any sugg

Beige-Stock

2002-12-14 Thread Jeff G
My son's gone to spend the nite at a friend's home. That left me with a spare bit of time to pull together my prize Mac IIci and put the finishing touches on it. It's got a SuperMac Spectrum 8*24 Ver. 1.60 vid card, which I can't seem to find anything about on Google, 32MB of RAM, O.S. 7.6.1 on

Re: Java, 68k

2002-12-14 Thread James S Jones
A few refreshed memories: The "Gold" Netscape was v3. The non-free 4.08 was called the Pro version. 4.08 used the system Java runtime (MRJ), not a Netscape version. It may be the case the the Pro 68K version actually uses Java; the standard version didn't. It does include the calendar module th

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread the pickle
At 19:28 -0500 on 14/12/02, Ian Johnson wrote: >On 12/14/02 4:47 PM, "Gregg Eshelman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Best bet is to Ethernet the IIsi, iMac and P100 >> together then setup routing software on the iMac. > >Which routing software should I use? Try asking on the iMac list ;) -- th

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Ian Johnson
On 12/14/02 4:47 PM, "Gregg Eshelman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Best bet is to Ethernet the IIsi, iMac and P100 > together then setup routing software on the iMac. Which routing software should I use? -- Vintage Macs is sponsored by and... Small Dog Electronics

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Ian Johnson
On 12/14/02 6:31 PM, "the pickle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At 13:47 -0800 on 14/12/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote: > >> The only "sticky bit" I can think of is does the iMac >> support using the Ethernet port and the internal >> 802.11b card (AirPort) at the same time? > > It does if it's running

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread the pickle
At 13:47 -0800 on 14/12/02, Gregg Eshelman wrote: >The only "sticky bit" I can think of is does the iMac >support using the Ethernet port and the internal >802.11b card (AirPort) at the same time? It does if it's running 10.2. -- the pickle FAQ Software Archive

Re: Java, 68k

2002-12-14 Thread Bill Judson
(...The MRJ 2.0, that is!) -- Over, Jutso -- Vintage Macs is sponsored by and... Small Dog Electronicshttp://www.smalldog.com | Enter To Win A | -- Canon PowerShot Digital Cameras start at $299 | Free iBook! | Support Low End Mac

Re: Java, 68k

2002-12-14 Thread Bill Judson
On Date: Fri, 13 Dec 2002 01:04:38 -0800 James S Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote > > I've never seen it anywhere. I've only seen it referenced, much like > MRJ 2.0 for 68k is reference on one of the Mac OS install CDs. > > On Friday, December 13, 2002, at 01:01 AM, Gregg Eshelman wrote: > > >

Re: "Muttley grumble" without background and/or other sounds mixed in?

2002-12-14 Thread Cameron Kaiser
> I'm seeking the Don Messick "Muttley grumble" without background and/or > other sounds mixed in (I note that the "Muttley snicker" is indeed there > at "80sNostalgia.com - Classic TV - Dastardly & Muttley - Sounds" by > itself with no other sounds added in a .wav file, but unfortunately the > "Mu

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Gregg Eshelman
--- E McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > OK, if there's no base station, why not just get two > more network cards and > wire them to the router? The Netgear box is working just like an AirPort base station would. There's no wireless solution for the IIsi. He could get a PCI card for the P100

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Gregg Eshelman
--- Ian Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > No, there isn't a base station. Here's the setup. > > --My side of house-- > iMac (Ethernet) (AirPort Card)* > Mac IIsi (Ethernet) > Pentium-100 Linux/Win98 box (Ethernet) > --Other side of house-- > Netgear wireless router > Cable modem (wired to rout

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Gregg Eshelman
--- E McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At 05:18 AM 12/14/2002, Ian Johnson typed thusly: > > > > What, exactly are you trying to do? Hook an ABS > through Ethernet to > > the IIsi? > > > How is the ABS going to get its TCP/IP > connection? > > > >What does ABS stand for? > > > Airport Base

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Ian Johnson
On 12/14/02 4:09 PM, "E McCann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > OK, if there's no base station, why not just get two more network cards and > wire them to the router? > The router is on the other side of the building and I don't want to mess with running cables. -- Vintage Macs is sponsored b

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread E McCann
OK, if there's no base station, why not just get two more network cards and wire them to the router? -- Vintage Macs is sponsored by and... Small Dog Electronicshttp://www.smalldog.com | Enter To Win A | -- Canon PowerShot Digital Cameras start at $299 | Fre

Re: "Muttley grumble" without background and/or other sounds mixed in?

2002-12-14 Thread Martin A. Totusek
Thanks for the "80sNostalgia.com - Classic TV - Dastardly & Muttley - Sounds" link. I'm seeking the Don Messick "Muttley grumble" without background and/or other sounds mixed in (I note that the "Muttley snicker" is indeed there at "80s

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread the pickle
At 12:51 -0500 on 14/12/02, Ian Johnson wrote: >The * computers have internet access. I would like to use the iMac to >connect the IIsi and/or the Pentium-100 to the internet. So you want to use the iMac as an AirPort-to-Ethernet bridge. I'm not sure the software ABS functionality is this broad,

Re: Cheddar Curtain/NetNavGold 3.0.4

2002-12-14 Thread ELN/rlf9
>Subject: Re: Computer holocaust aka motherlode in Waukegan >From: Mark Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >In-Reply-To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Message-Id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > >On Thursday, Dec 12, 2002, at 22:27 Europe/London, Phil Beesley wrote: > >>> If anyone is interested, this stuff will go for fr

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Ian Johnson
On 12/14/02 11:31 AM, "the pickle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > What, exactly are you trying to do? Hook an ABS through Ethernet to the > IIsi? How is the ABS going to get its TCP/IP connection? (ABS stands for AirPort Base Station for new readers) No, there isn't a base station. Here's the set

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread E McCann
At 05:18 AM 12/14/2002, Ian Johnson typed thusly: > > What, exactly are you trying to do? Hook an ABS through Ethernet to > the IIsi? > > How is the ABS going to get its TCP/IP connection? > >What does ABS stand for? Airport Base Station, I'd assume (or airborne ballistic system if he gets fr

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread the pickle
At 00:42 +1100 on 15/12/02, Dana Sibera wrote: >On Sun, 15 Dec 2002 12:18 am, Ian wrote: > >> > What, exactly are you trying to do? Hook an ABS through Ethernet to the >> > IIsi? How is the ABS going to get its TCP/IP connection? >> >> What does ABS stand for? > >Airport Base Station, I would gue

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Dana Sibera
On Sun, 15 Dec 2002 12:18 am, Ian wrote: > > What, exactly are you trying to do? Hook an ABS through Ethernet to the > > IIsi? How is the ABS going to get its TCP/IP connection? > > What does ABS stand for? Airport Base Station, I would guess :) -- Vintage Macs is sponsored by

Re: IIsi getting AirPort through iMac

2002-12-14 Thread Ian Johnson
On 12/13/02 10:26 PM, "the pickle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At 19:07 -0500 on 13/12/02, Ian Johnson wrote: > >> Does anyone know if it's possible to set up an iMac to forward AirPort >> signals over an Ethernet network to a IIsi? I'd like to set it up to access >> my broadband internet so I c