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PowerBook duo file transfer

Newton serial cable? You mean the 9 pin connector? Well, unless you cut one of the pins... It won't even fit. You need the 8 pin connector.

 
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As mentioned before, use the Apple Printer cable (The Imaginewriter II cable) and set up LocalTalk / AppleTalk on the two machines.

The Apple printer cable will have a tiny printer icon on it, the serial cable would just have a blank area.

 
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As mentioned before, use the Apple Printer cable (The Imaginewriter II cable) and set up LocalTalk / AppleTalk on the two machines.

The Apple printer cable will have a tiny printer icon on it, the serial cable would just have a blank area.
Unfortunately I don't have a serial cable so.... oh well
 
One (straight thru) serial cable and one printer cable (Null Modem serial communications) would be basics you'll need to get your hands on eventually.

We need a basic hardware resource/tool kit listing somewhere. Deciding what goes in it might be a good discussion topic for the Peripherals Forum. Software discussion might be good to do as well.

 
As has been said I use SCSI disk mode on my duos when I transfer large quantity of files.. The transfer rate is a lot faster through SCSI disk mode than Appletalk... I generally don't treat the laptop as just an external hdd.. I only do the SCSI disk mode to transfer let's say for the entire hard drive's contents.. (minus they OS).. I have done even an entire OS install on the duo with this method too.. 

 
Let's say hypothetically I needed to reinstall the OS on duo 210 could I just take the hard drive out and put it in my PowerBook 145b

And install

 
I believe the answer to your question is yes. Just be sure that you click customize and have it do a Universal System Install :) ... and that the OS is mutually supported by both the 145B and the Duo you are using.

 
Sounds right to me. You can play musical CPUs to get applications that won't install on one computer installed by placing its HDD in one that's supported and then moving it back.

 
Well perhaps instead of spending money on more hardware, you could budget a small amount of cash for necessities like serial cables?
This can't be emphasized enough.

Heck, I've been proclaimed a "hero" at work more than once for coming up with the right combination of cables and dongles to make two things talk to each other.

If you're working with 68K and early PPC Macs, you should, IMO, have a few serial cables, a few ADB cables, different types of SCSI cables, an AAUI-Ethernet dongle and at least one SCSI dongle. If you're crossing over into NWR PPC Macs, a good collection of Firewire cables is also a lifesaver. 

 
Accessories do make life a lot easier.

In addition to what bunnspecial said, a Zip 100 SCSI drive and a few 100mb disks are never a bad thing either, as they make for great bootable backups. Bonus points for also having a USB Zip 100 or 250 drive to help transfer data from modern computers, as a fall back plan for when network communications can't be setup (for whatever reason).

 
I'll third that suggestion to one and all. A full set of SCSI cables/sdapters/terminators fo Mac and PowerBook alike are well worth the time and money it takes to amass such treasures. These too shall pass and a lot more quickly than the CPUs.

Back when I was collecting 50s/60s era Rangefinders and early Nikon F gear, I went far out of my way to buy the lens hood for anything I could ever imagine wanting to own. I was a few short and one left over for a future purchase of the 50/1.2 Cannon FlareMonster in Leica Screw Mount. Prices are just stupid high today for these trinkets.

Same was true of PDS, NuBus and Accelerator Cards for this hobby. It's always the accessories that become the true collectibles over time. I bought up several lots of cards or cables/junk I saw go up for auction on eBay after bidding on almost all of them. Excellent investments should I decide to sell.

Get 'em while you can, even if you think eBay prices are too high now, accessories will be headed there and beyond in the future!

edit: forgot to mention PB Video Cables and that accursed thing for NuBus PowerMacs.

 
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Back when I was collecting 50s/60s era Rangefinders and early Nikon F gear, I went far out of my way to buy the lens hood for anything I could ever imagine wanting to own. I was a few short and one left over for a future purchase of the 50/1.2 Cannon FlareMonster in Leica Screw Mount. Prices are just stupid high today for these trinkets.
You make me less worried about the box full of Canon F-1and F-1N focusing screens I have stashed back in the closet.

I'm also kicking myself for passing on a bunch of F&H branded bayonet filters and lens hoods at an auction years ago-I think I checked out at $30 or so. I bought a Rolleiflex not even 3 months later that I proceeded to use the snot out of, and it took me a long time to fill out my collection of filters.

I've been buying up 4x5 gear lately, and have been visiting a local used camera store. On my first trip there, I asked about film holders. He told me at first that they were $8 each and asked the other guy in the shop about that "box of 100 Graflex branded ones we came across the other day." I asked him if he wanted to make me a price on the box-he declined but said he'd sell me 20 of them for $100...overall not a bad price. Before I knew it, I was getting some expired boxes of film and the like dumped on me for free while I picked through film holders. Some Graflex-specific flash sync cables followed also. I walked out with a LOT more than film holders for the $100 I spent that day.

A lot of my Mac interest is in NWR G4s, and I go nuts at times over buying things like video cards, PCI cards, and CPU upgrades. Some of them have gone right into use, while others are there "for a rainy day." I don't limit myself to just that, though-more than once I've been called locally about buying a specific Mac. I end up visiting and see piles of parts and peripheral, and usually try to negotiate a "lot price" rather than just the thing  was called to look at. I've found a LOT of great stuff that way, and often times useful stuff like cables will come out of it.

 
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Accessories have always been one of the more expensive things for old Macs. It was pretty difficult to find accessofies on what my budget was in the early 2000s and late '90s, but it's been easier to find things like the EZ-135, serial cables, etc more recently.

The thing I would suggest is that not only does having these accessories make things easier--They also make things plain more fun.

Transfering data when you can set up a network or use bigger storage technologies like Bernoulli/Zip/EZ135/whatever (and although Zip is very common, it really doesn't matter what you end up using.)

Also, building up a small collection of things like this would make it so you don't need to dedicate an entire functional PowerBook to some kind of task like "being an external hard disk."

 
OK, here's the perfect example of snagging as much loot as possible for niche applications whenever the fancy strikes. About five years ago, I became obsessed with setting a tiny Intel D525MW gifted by the ex-grlf as an ATOM based GIMPbox running under ubuntu. So naturally I picked up several quarter scale dual head VidCards for its single PCI slot.

This weekend, when an XP infested HP Pavilion Slimline, quarter the noise level, quarter scale tower fell off of craigslist anddelivered straight into my grubby little paws at work for the princely sum of $32.50 (extra SATA HDD included!) the dialup(FAX?) MoDem in its single quarter scale PCI slot was immediately replaced with one of those cards pulled from stock!

Quarter_Scale_Tower-00.jpg

Lovin' it, just as I loved having a few cards for a board for the SE I've intently avoided buying were in wait for the Logic Board when I finally gave up the fight and snagged it  .  .  .

.  .  .  really, it's only just another logic board. ::)

 
Now that 56k modems are generally not particularly relevant, it makes sense to replace them with something better for the machine, if you've got something that takes cards and is in need of something. I've never personally been a super huge user of expansion cards on Macs. The one time I tried, my blue-and-white G3 kept having trouble with the USB 2.0 card I put in. The 7300 was okay with it though.

As a sidenote on the issue of external bootable media -- I installed a bare system 8.0 setup onto a SyQuest EZ-135 cartridge. It's really great having a cartridge system like that. It's a great addition to a network.

 
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