Hi folks, I've recently acquired a beautiful B&W G3 from a friend when I was at the Everything Electric Show!
Naturally it's one with the dodgy IDE controller (I checked)! I tried replacing the 80pin cable with a standard 40 pin cable, but the only 3.5" IDE HD I had was a 40GB one that supports fast DMA so it's not reliable at all (though it appeared to be reliable enough to install Mac OS X Panther). I've ordered a Sil3112-based PCI SATA card so eventually it'll be, hopefully, usable.
In the meantime I had a really mad idea! Why not boot the B&W from Mac OS 9.1 on a CD!!!! And yes it can work in a manner of speaking..

So, this is a version of 9.1 I had installed on a bootable Flash drive which I worked out how to boot on an iMac G3/400 DV using open firmware. That was an enjoyable saga! This time I have a different adventure. The B&W is too old to boot from USB, but I had a Macintosh Garden generic install of 9.2.2 (and ROM 10.1 or something like that) on a CD-R. I found that I could boot from that on the G3, but it's an install CD with only a minimal 9.2.2 and I can't use it to install 9.2.2 on my Mac Mini G4, because it's running Leopard, which I think doesn't support even Classic mode properly (though I could be wrong here).
However, I can mount the CD-R; make a .dmg of it; then mount the 9.1 USB flash drive; trash the 9.2.2 install on the .dmg and copy the contents of the System Folder to the .dmg. Then it should be bootable, but booting 9.1! And why would I do that? Because I can persuade myself that my 9.1 (which was a 9.0 retail CD I bought, with 9.04 and 9.1 upgrades) is totally legit after I've wrestled with all the pointless moral ambiguity of installing a 25 year-old obsolete OS!
And yes it works. It does take.. 10s to start looking for a disk, another 14 seconds before it stops flashing the folder icon and sees the CD; then another 18s to get to the happy Mac and then another astounding 4:38 minutes to complete the boot with an oddly familiar Network error, error message. 5:21 minutes in total!
After all that it's stuck at 832x624 video and the monitor control panel won't run, so I can't use it to change the resolution. Fortunately, the control strip's monitor resolution thingy works so I can get to that.
I guess the next steps are to see what I can usefully install on the CD-RW (AppleWorks 5, will that run from CD?) and also store on the massive 1GB Flash disk! (which is usable on the B&W G3, but doesn't seem to be on the Mac Mini G4. Odd). I'm also going to risk a Zip disk at some point in the ZIP drive, once I've properly archived it.
Saturday Fun!
Naturally it's one with the dodgy IDE controller (I checked)! I tried replacing the 80pin cable with a standard 40 pin cable, but the only 3.5" IDE HD I had was a 40GB one that supports fast DMA so it's not reliable at all (though it appeared to be reliable enough to install Mac OS X Panther). I've ordered a Sil3112-based PCI SATA card so eventually it'll be, hopefully, usable.
In the meantime I had a really mad idea! Why not boot the B&W from Mac OS 9.1 on a CD!!!! And yes it can work in a manner of speaking..

So, this is a version of 9.1 I had installed on a bootable Flash drive which I worked out how to boot on an iMac G3/400 DV using open firmware. That was an enjoyable saga! This time I have a different adventure. The B&W is too old to boot from USB, but I had a Macintosh Garden generic install of 9.2.2 (and ROM 10.1 or something like that) on a CD-R. I found that I could boot from that on the G3, but it's an install CD with only a minimal 9.2.2 and I can't use it to install 9.2.2 on my Mac Mini G4, because it's running Leopard, which I think doesn't support even Classic mode properly (though I could be wrong here).
However, I can mount the CD-R; make a .dmg of it; then mount the 9.1 USB flash drive; trash the 9.2.2 install on the .dmg and copy the contents of the System Folder to the .dmg. Then it should be bootable, but booting 9.1! And why would I do that? Because I can persuade myself that my 9.1 (which was a 9.0 retail CD I bought, with 9.04 and 9.1 upgrades) is totally legit after I've wrestled with all the pointless moral ambiguity of installing a 25 year-old obsolete OS!
And yes it works. It does take.. 10s to start looking for a disk, another 14 seconds before it stops flashing the folder icon and sees the CD; then another 18s to get to the happy Mac and then another astounding 4:38 minutes to complete the boot with an oddly familiar Network error, error message. 5:21 minutes in total!
After all that it's stuck at 832x624 video and the monitor control panel won't run, so I can't use it to change the resolution. Fortunately, the control strip's monitor resolution thingy works so I can get to that.
I guess the next steps are to see what I can usefully install on the CD-RW (AppleWorks 5, will that run from CD?) and also store on the massive 1GB Flash disk! (which is usable on the B&W G3, but doesn't seem to be on the Mac Mini G4. Odd). I'm also going to risk a Zip disk at some point in the ZIP drive, once I've properly archived it.
Saturday Fun!




