Well, I got myself my first clone today: a Power Computing PowerWave, originally with a 604/132 inside but now with an early G3 upgrade, along with two sizable 50-pin scsis and a Rage Orion 128 installed. I absolutely loathe the peecee inspired/ inspirational design, but the internal extras are a definite plus.
Also, I picked up a b&w Apple portrait monitor WITH the unfindable cable; a 16" Apple Color Monitor; an external 4GB scsi; lots of cabling, including some of the BNC variety, which I rather badly needed but could not find easily available anywhere; a few aaui ethernet tranceivers; a copy of ClarisWorks3 on CD (the one version I didn't have media for, as it happens); and a few odds and ends, like a couple of phonenet terminators.
The nicest thing about it all is that the monitors are pristine; the portrait monitor especially is noteworthy in that it has no discernable yellowing at all, and I suspect that one in this condition is fairly rare. I had been going to pass it on to a friend of mine, now now I wonder!
Anyone know whether specific graphics cards are needed to run it? Mind you, I can easily find that out myself by plugging it in and firing it up....
Price was $40 to a local charity hospital fund. As my daughter was almost killed early this year and spent three months in hospital, I could hardly complain about that. (She's doing well, thank God, miraculously well, really - read all about it at: www.itheology.ca/hannah )
Also, I picked up a b&w Apple portrait monitor WITH the unfindable cable; a 16" Apple Color Monitor; an external 4GB scsi; lots of cabling, including some of the BNC variety, which I rather badly needed but could not find easily available anywhere; a few aaui ethernet tranceivers; a copy of ClarisWorks3 on CD (the one version I didn't have media for, as it happens); and a few odds and ends, like a couple of phonenet terminators.
The nicest thing about it all is that the monitors are pristine; the portrait monitor especially is noteworthy in that it has no discernable yellowing at all, and I suspect that one in this condition is fairly rare. I had been going to pass it on to a friend of mine, now now I wonder!
Anyone know whether specific graphics cards are needed to run it? Mind you, I can easily find that out myself by plugging it in and firing it up....
Price was $40 to a local charity hospital fund. As my daughter was almost killed early this year and spent three months in hospital, I could hardly complain about that. (She's doing well, thank God, miraculously well, really - read all about it at: www.itheology.ca/hannah )


