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I don’t think so.
I think its PCxxxx = DDR, PC2xxxx = DDR2, PC3xxxx = DDR3 etc.

But, the overlapping between generations is probably the cause for people having so much memory compatibility problems? They, like me, thought that for example 400 DDRx -memory is always DDR compatible where in fact the DDR2 can also be 400 and not compatible with the previous generation. 🤯

And highly variable naming conventions with online sellers makes it even more error prone and confusing. If sellers do not know what they are selling then it is really difficult for the buyer to buy correct memory.

But, in my case the iMac G5 400MHz PC3200 RAM is also DDR, like the 333MHz PC2700 RAM in the MDD. And DDR memory is backward compatible to other DDR memories, that is why it worked.
 
I today recapped my Quicksilver AcBel 344W PSU. But no joy. It tries to start but only manages to move the PSU fan slightly. No output whatsoever. I measured all suspect resistors and diodes I could see and they seemed ok. So, the problem is somewhere deep in it and I will pretty much give up for now. I need to watch few more how to troubleshoot and repair your PSU -videos to figure out where to go next. :confused:

Meanwhile, I am waiting for a 20->24 pin ATX-cable which I will make a conversion cable out of and try to get my old ATX-psu to run with the QS.
 
Back home for a couple of days, so have got my hands on the new-to-me 12" Powerbook G4.
It runs 10.5.8 well from an 80GB HDD. Condition is certainly "used", but it has a very healthy battery, which is a huge bonus. It seems to do everything more 'normally' than the 17" A1107. For example, I cannot plug a mouse into the 17 once it has fired up and expect it to work. It must be plugged in before boot. Stuck a mouse dongle into the 12 and off it went. I wonder, then, if this one will boot from USB?
Having set the 12 up to my liking and installed iWork '08, I decided to try something I've not done before.
Because I've had absolutely no luck getting Leopard onto the 17 by any means, I thought I would try a restore to it using TDM. Over FW400, this isn't a swift process, but it does seem to be working. Watch this space...
This 12 is nice. As it isn't likely to be used on-line much, I thought I might actually use it for word processing etc. It certainly seems to run well at basic stuff.
20250830_130100.jpg

20250830_130105.jpg

20250830_132738.jpg


Voila, all ready.

Like the 2017 Retina iMac, I'll not do anything to this machine until I have no option. It is certainly not as easy to get into as the 17, if iFixit instructions are to be believed...
 
It is certainly not as easy to get into as the 17, if iFixit instructions are to be believed...
It's not that it's not easy to get into, it's that an overwhelming majority of fix-up or upgrade tasks require basically a full disassembly every time.

Wanna swap the hard drive? Full disassembly. Wanna swap the optical drive? Full disassembly. Wanna upgrade the RAM? Well at least that has a door on it, but if you're planning on swapping the thermal pads good luck!

Anyway, my 12 was a pretty neat machine until the GPU gave up the ghost. Enjoy yours while you can :D
 
It was mostly last night, but I was using Scrivener on my G5 while inebriated to finish writing a blog post I had on the back burner for a while. I made final touches to it earlier and it's finally published.
 
Back home for a couple of days, so have got my hands on the new-to-me 12" Powerbook G4.
It runs 10.5.8 well from an 80GB HDD. Condition is certainly "used", but it has a very healthy battery, which is a huge bonus. It seems to do everything more 'normally' than the 17" A1107. For example, I cannot plug a mouse into the 17 once it has fired up and expect it to work. It must be plugged in before boot. Stuck a mouse dongle into the 12 and off it went. I wonder, then, if this one will boot from USB?
What version of firmware do these Macs have?

In the List of Open Firmware versions at
https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...l-work-in-a-beige-power-macintosh-g3.2303689/
you can see that Apple disabled USB booting around August 25, 2004.

If you have a Mac/firmware combo not in that list, then consider posting a dump of the ROM using
https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...3.2303689/page-38?post=33883037#post-33883037

USB booting can be re-enabled using a nvramrc script:
https://68kmla.org/bb/index.php?thr...-booting-from-usb-from-the-boot-picker.48601/
 
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What version of firmware do these Macs have?

In the List of Open Firmware versions at
https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...l-work-in-a-beige-power-macintosh-g3.2303689/
you can see that Apple disabled USB booting around August 25, 2004.

If you have a Mac/firmware combo not in that list, then consider posting a dump of the ROM using
https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...3.2303689/page-38?post=33883037#post-33883037

USB booting can be re-enabled using a nvramrc script:
https://68kmla.org/bb/index.php?thr...-booting-from-usb-from-the-boot-picker.48601/
Thanks, that's interesting. Off house-sitting somewhere else for three weeks on Monday, and will be taking both machines along.

Managed to clone the 12 to the 17 via TDM, after three attempts.
 
Over the course of the day yesterday, I managed to upgrade an external eSATA 500GB drive to a 2TB external eSATA drive, on my Power Mac G5 (Air) Quad.

Since both drives are G-Tech Q-Drives (support four external interfaces: eSATA, FW400, FW800, USB2.0) I plugged the new 2TB drive in initially via FW800, so that I could copy the content of the 500GB drive to the 2TB drive. I would then swap them out, with the 2TB drive moving to the faster eSATA interface and the 500GB drive going to the FW800 interface.

This may be of some interest to this community because I used the last version of the Forklift file manager that runs on PPC (3.91 I *think*, but I am not at my machine right now) to facilitate the transfer. There was one particularly large folder, weighing in at 1.86GB. Forklift faithfully copied over the entire thing until the very end, at which point it seemed to lose its mind. It started telling me that I had thousands of GB left to copy and the progress bar went wild. I watched it for a few seconds and then, scared of what it might actually be doing, I killed it.

What it actually was doing, it would seem, was deleting what it had just copied! After I killed it, four of the copied folders, among them the large one mentioned above, had been deleted irretrievably - they did not go to the Trash; they were just gone!

SO... the moral of this story is: if you are doing really large copies, you might want to avoid Forklift PPC!
 
I.... don't know why you wouldn't just dd the old drive onto the new drive.

Or like, Disk Utility? It's there for this exact purpose?

I don't know what Forklift is so for that reason I wouldn't've trusted it with my data anyway.
 
I don't know what Forklift is so for that reason I wouldn't've trusted it with my data anyway.

Some archaic FTP client. Didn’t hear something particularly bad about it, but I think Transmit was considered “the reference” one (of proprietary ones).
 
Well folks (@barracuda156, @Doq ), Forklift is anything but ancient, and it is a whole lot more than an FTP Client. I have been using it for twenty years, and it remains current and evolving to this day. I use it pretty much every day.

What is it? Forklift is a full featured, dual pane file manager that happens to also support FTP, SMB and much more. Do yourself a favor and have a look at it.
 
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What is it? Forklift is a full featured, dual pane file manager that happens to also support FTP, SMB and much more. Do yourself a favor and have a look at it.

I try to avoid anything non-open-source which is reasonably avoidable. Thankfully, FileZilla exists, so I do not need a proprietary alternative.
 
I'm good, I've had my fair share of midnight commander clones. My weapon of choice is Krusader.

I should see if it'll build on Ports.

From KDE4? Very likely it can build, if it does not already, but whether it gonna work correctly is a question. Large part of KDE4 is broken due to being poisoned by nepomuk/akonadi LOL
 
Looks like I got FastAnime working. Quite likely some functionality is missing, but search, downloading and apparently streaming work. (On G4 you will probably want to download rather than stream, or otherwise tweak settings to pick a lower resolution. On G5 defaults work fine.)

Works even in the ugly Apple terminal LOL:

View attachment 2537997

`mlterm` is neater, unsurprisingly.

View attachment 2537998

Tested on 10.6, but I think on 10.5 it will work fine. (You are welcome to try on Tiger. Notice, all dependencies are runtime and mostly optional, so you may throw away mpv etc., that will just drop streaming support, but downloading will still work.)

Port is installable via PPCPorts, as usual. (If you try to pull that over into a standard MacPorts, make sure to borrow dependencies which are missing there as well.)

UPD. A bit newer version is available as `viu` port (rename by the upstream, it is the same developer). Either should work at the moment.
 
It is certainly not as easy to get into as the 17, if iFixit instructions are to be believed...
I have this model, it's more of a PITA than difficult... the best bet is to upgrade it all in one go so you don't have to tear it apart every time. It's stacked like a sub sandwich, everything is on top of each other like layers.
 
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I have this model, it's more of a PITA than difficult... the best bet is to upgrade it all in one go so you don't have to tear it apart every time. It's stacked like a sub sandwich, everything is on top of each other like layers.
Indeed, I have that same plan for a 2017 4K iMac. But are there any upgrades beyond HDD to SSD? RAM already maxed.
 
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