Thursday, October 04, 2007
'New' Mac G4 Power Mac acquired!
I've not posted in QUITE awhile. Not that I've been idle, but I've been more active in my Slackware blog, documenting mostly security-oriented material, but 2 weeks ago, I got a surprise.
A friend of mine has purchased a sailboat with the intention of living in it, which means that everything in his current home has to be trashed, sold, or given away. He had a Macintosh G4 Power Mac that he needed to get rid of, so I took it off his hands! The image to the upper left is a spitting image of the machine that I now have.
The machine itself isn't particularly powerful, but it appears to be cutting-edge for its day: dual 550MHz PowerPC processors (!!), 30GB hard disk (this is the original disk), 768MB of RAM, a CD-RW drive, and a ZIP drive. I did not know that this was a dual processor system until I checked while typing this post...this is quite a surprise.
Now, I got the Mac and it was running Mac OS X 10.3.9 Panther Server, but the drive immediately began to make noises and I got fed up and replaced it with a 100GB Seagate IDE drive, which was only $50. I could've went bigger, but these machines only recognize 120GB or so, due to BIOS limitations. There are workarounds to avoid this limitation, but I'm not going to spend a lot of money on a 7-year-old system if I can help it. I went out and bought the latest Mac OS X Tiger and installed it on the new drive without issues. The system runs very well. I think I'd much rather run Panther (Server) but my friend didn't provide me with the disks.
The stats of this system are below:
Machine Name: Power Mac G4
Machine Model: PowerMac3,4
CPU Type: PowerPC G4 (11.3)
Number Of CPUs: 2
CPU Speed: 533 MHz
L2 Cache (per CPU): 1 MB
Memory: 768 MB
Bus Speed: 133 MHz
Boot ROM Version: 4.1.8f5
This box is going to be a riot! Hopefully, I can even upgrade the CPU to something more substantial, but for now, I can probably get away with adding more RAM. [EDIT 03/17/2010: Not! CPUs for this machine are EXPENSIVE! I've also added more RAM and the system now has 1GB of PC133-333 (1x512MB and 2x256MB)...one slot is still empty. It'll take 2GB of RAM when using OS X, but only 1.5GB if using OS 9.]
This system will most likely end up serving web pages and serving MySQL content.
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