You obviously don't know what you are talking about.... I can't connect to it using the iMac it's too fast.
1. I would personally not bother with the hinge fix unless and until you start using the machine more intensively than most people tend to do. If the machine is going to sit around on a desk most of the time, just leave it open, and most machines in any case will go on indefinitely with the stock hinge. If you read around about it, the fix becomes necessary when the machine is opened and shut a lot, so that the spring gets deformed. If yours came new in the box, you do not have that problem. You can, furthermore, buy replacement ribbons these days from an online seller should you get into trouble further down the line.Perform the hinge fix on it.
I tried doing it to mine, but the display cable was wedged under the hinge. It worked fine before, but after removing it (CAREFULLY), the touch portion did not work anymore, but the actual display does.
Try and find the memory card for it too, it seems to make a helluva difference. Doubled RAM and flash storage, plus expanded data bus. Just a matter of finding one.
Don't remember the exact number, I think it was around $20. This is definitely my most fascinating Apple conquest, aside from the QuickTake 200 (coming next week, new thread on that one too!)...My mom thinks this, in addition to the Mac SE, is the cutest little device. :lol:How much did you pay?



Haha, for sure!Go to Harper College and take notes.![]()
Haha, for sure!Go to Harper College and take notes.![]()
(BTW, I haven't seen an Ameritech logo in about 10 years.)
You obviously don't know what you are talking about.... I can't connect to it using the iMac it's too fast.
Southwestern Bell changed their name to SBC, then proceeded to purchase Ameritech and several other former Bell companies, then proceeded to purchase former parent AT&T.Haha, for sure!Go to Harper College and take notes.![]()
(BTW, I haven't seen an Ameritech logo in about 10 years.)
You can connect to your iMac unless its running Snow Leopard. If your Mac has AppleTalk, then using http://homepage.mac.com/simonbell/connection/ can get you to sync with OSX. Also, I see about seeding the UNNA torrent again for you guys.Welcome to the world of Newton ... I have a 2100 sitting on my desk at home it gets the occasional use (criminal I know) I would probably use it more if my Powerbook 1400 was not broken as I can't connect to it using the iMac it's too fast.
I would like to download the unna archive but their torrent seems to be very slow
if anyone has this on disk I would love to get a copy.
A little off topic, but does Apple Internet Router allow you to create zones, or do you use something else for that? Right now I use LocalTalk Bridge in combination with Apple IP Gateway (a very lightweight, simple app that encapsulates TCP/IP into AppleTalk (for localtalk use, especially)). I use Novell NetWare to create zones, but it's a bit of a hassle. I'd be interested in finding out what the differences are between Apple IP Gateway and Apple Internet Router.... is to have an Appletalk Router running on your network (even Localtalk Bridge should work, but I use the much more robust Apple Internet Router program running on MacOS 7.1 on an LC475 - I have Zones!).