Is there a link or something for that? I checked this thread, and the other thread linked above, and all either one said was "it's for sale" (and the price). I've never used Tindie. Heck, I'm not sure I'd ever HEARD of Tindie before this. I'm assuming it's a dot-com rather than a .biz or...
The only complicating factor would be whether ot not any larger data structures are defined to incorporate a 32-bit date. You'd have to track down and redefine ALL of them as part of the first item on that list I just gave.
I've been thinking about this, and in my opinion the "general case" solution would have to be something like what Apple had to do when moving beyond 4GiB disk volumes: Implement a larger data structure that can handle wider values (say, 48 or 64 bits); implement a Gestalt selector to indicate...
When you write MAC in all caps while discussing low-level components, I keep thinking you mean a Media Access Controller chip or similar, but from context you appear to be talking about the Macintosh as a whole? That’s needlessly unclear.
One easy possibility could be “EveryTalk”? Luckily, English has looted unsecured vocabulary from so many root languages over the centuries that we have a LOT of synonyms for “all”!
Sounds to me like it crashed in the middle of an HFS operation, such that the space was marked as allocated on the disk but never actually recorded as part of a specific file. A disk-repair utility _should_ sort that out for you.
You're right about the names. I was a bit less precise there than I meant to be. I didn't know about Sun's SMB implementation - I'd have thought they went out of business before that, but apparently not. :¬)
The mini-DIN-8 connection (the hardware interface) is "LocalTalk". When you activate AppleTalk in the Chooser, that is a protocol stack (implemented in software) called "AppleTalk". AppleTalk can be transported over LocalTalk; in more recent machines, it is usually transported over Ethernet...
That's certainly an... interesting interpretation. What I mentioned above about continuous SYN characters is also RS-232 (what I called "traditional serial signalling") and doesn't really apply to anything else.
Correct. I suppose you could say that LocalTalk is synchronous within each...
What exactly do you mean by "synchronous", here? The term refers to communication where both ends are working from the same clock signal. In traditional serial signalling, this is achieved by continuously sending ASCII SYN ("synchronous idle") characters when nothing else is being sent, so...
Alas, it no longer works at lower resolutions either, at least not as far as I can tell. It WAS working, at full resolution even – it just died after a while. That I was, for a time, forced to hot-plug that DVI socket to get the system to boot at all undoubtedly did not help matters...
In this case I can be confident that the GPU core is (probably) OK, because the secondary display output (the one with the lower maximum size in pixels) still works just fine. It’s only the _useful_ output, the one with enough pixels to drive my modern monitor, that has died. Strangely, this...
Eh, I'll just try each type I have on a solder-filled through-hole (there are several) until I get one that mixes properly, then I'll know. (My replacement caps won't all arrive until April because some were on backorder, so it will be a while before I report back on this for anyone in the...
@Byrd, do you know whether the GeForce 6600 would have used lead-free solder? I don't want to try to apply fresh stuff to loosen the old and get the type of it wrong – that makes a horrible mess.
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