PCMCIA CD-ROM support for Pre-G3 Powerbooks

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See above. Curious on if there’s any support for booting off of these from the PowerBook 500 Series to the 2400C. If so, are there any specifics that should be known or will any work?
 
Those PowerBooks have all got the SCSI standard as external CD-ROM/general purpose interface. Why would anyone in the Mac arena want to run an Optical off that half@$$ed ISA slot? Love it for memory/modem/NIC, but for peripherals?

In the SCSI deprived PC Laptop World, PCMCIA makes a lot of sense in that use case.
 
Those PowerBooks have all got the SCSI standard as external CD-ROM interface. Why would anyone in the Mac arena want to run on Optical off that half@$$ed ISA slot? Love it for memory/modem/NIC, but for peripherals?

In the SCSI deprived PC Laptop World, PCMCIA makes a lot of sense in that use case.
Fair point, but I feel like during portable use you’d want the PCMCIA slot CD drive over the giant bulky SCSI cable and the big drive.
 
I've never run into a PCMCIA CD-ROM that wasn't just a SCSI device to start with. Lots of them have the high-density 68-pin clip connector, which is easy enough to adapt to HDI30. The usual issues with actually getting Mac OS to play nice with third-party CD drives apply, but the physical connection is usually pretty straightforward.

If you really wanted to use a PC Card, Adaptec's PowerDomain series were mac-specific and would probably work as a replacement for the original controller card.
 
PowerCD was a "portable" battery operated drive that did a bunch on really neat stuff without a 'Book attached. Had its own CPU in the base unit, The removable flying saucer had a DB25 interface to the base on the back, but it is decidedly NOT a SCSI interface. Without the base unit the flying saucers you see on eBay are useless.

ISTR others, very much more portable as well. I'd like to see some examples of PCMCIA/Optical and general peripheral hookups.
 
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