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This site shows pics of a ST-NIC-VF, but a Rev C2 that has a more usual complement of ports:
http://www.recycledgoods.com/products/Asante-MC3NB-Mac-Ethernet-Card-%28ST-NIC-VF%29.html
Looking at the documentation and promotional material for the Asante MacCon cards, I can only find mention of...
My guess would be that this card is definetely an oddball model, for I too have never seen a card like this. Perhaps it was a card made for "OEM" purposes, where you'd get a machine with eternet but only in the form of AAUI, to appease Apple by not adding additional functionality and...
For the 6500 at least, working out the wattage for the PSU is easy because it doesn't have a screen!
Apple's docs suggest 220W. http://support.apple.com/kb/SP329
Of course, looking at the sticker on the PSU itself would be a more definitive answer!
Pardon my vague memory, but does anyone know if this is actually supported or just a theoretical, physical maximum? I seem to remember that only two devices at a time are physically supported by the controller in the Mac.
However, I could definitely be wrong about this. :)
That's a really good writeup on the LC series, Scott, thanks for that.
In Australia at least though, the LC475/575/630 were sold directly to consumers.
GPU power is a big one if HDD access doesn't count. :D
G5s went up to 7800GTs, with slightly better models than that flashable too.
The mini only goes up to an integrated 9400 even in the brand new models.
You would need to solder the SCSI ribbon cable to a connector on the back, possibly reusing the connecter on the 9500 mobo itself.
Unless you wanted to just have the ribbon trailing out of the PCI slots and into the back of the host computer?
Woah, that is a crazy amount of OSes. I like the trick of having two per partition to avoid having an unmanageable number of them.
My PC has 10.5, 10.6 and Win XP all installed to seperate hard disks. When I get a new hard disk I will probably install Windows 7, too.
It's definitely possible, I actually used a 9500 case for this exact purpose.
In mine, I had a FireWire bridge board, a DVD drive and hard disk mounted in the case as normal, and a 6100 PSU at the bottom. Connected it all up, and then plugging the '9500' into a Mac via firewire you would have a...
Hah, since when does the US Government (specifically the DOD) need a particularly good reason for anything?
Here's a longish excerpt from an article written by a forensic data recovery expert. The full thing is at http://shsc.info/DataRecovery
Well you can't prove a negative in general, but you can say things like "any residual tracesof previously overwritten data is immeasurable with current technology if it exists at all".
If you wipe a drive with one pass of zeroes then all the data is gone for good, whether you have a clean room and electron microscope or not.
The common misconception comes from a single paper written decades ago that iteself only theorised such an attack on particularly MFM disks.
I had some of the Apple "Pro" Speakers and they originally came with removable transparent covers to complete the roudness of the sphere, and had the three holes that you remember form the Cube's speakers.
The device from Griffin was called the iFire, I believe.
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