350 MHz iMac (Late 1999)
A Limited Mac At 350 MHz, it may not seem a whole lot faster than the Revision D iMac, but the new “Kihei” iMac uses a 100 MHz system bus – plus RAGE 128 graphics and 2X AGP for superior video...
View Article350 MHz iMac (Summer 2000)
A Limited Mac The indigo iMac 350 replaced a virtually identical model that came in blueberry – but at US$200 less. The 350 MHz indigo iMac ships with the Apple Pro Mouse and Apple Pro Keyboard. It is...
View ArticleWiFi Cards for PowerBooks with PC Card Slots
The purpose of this page is to identify which PC Card (formerly PCMCIA) WiFi cards work in the PC Card slot of a PowerBook – pre-G3, G3, and G4. This quest started when I first bought my Lombard...
View ArticleHacking a WiFi PC Card to Work in Apple’s AirPort Card Slot
I first started looking into the AirPort (802.11b) alternatives when a friend of mine had a slot-load iMac G3 and the original AirPort Card was the only option – other than USB dongles – to go...
View ArticleAirPort Works!
“It takes a deaf man to hear.” – Thomas Edison Ignore All of My Insults, Apple Before Macworld San Francisco, I’d given up all hope of being able to have a wireless AirPort connection with anything...
View ArticleAirPort
1999: According to a recent Low End Mac poll, over half those surveyed believe wireless networking is the iBook’s best feature. Other Mac webmasters seem to agree – AirPort is the most important...
View ArticleAirPort Support for Older Macs
1999: While Apple’s new AirPort wireless LAN system is only directly supported so far by Apple on the iBook and G4 Power Macs, that doesn’t mean that owners of earlier Macs are shut out. Apple...
View ArticleAirPort Beats Wires
2000: When wireless networking first starting coming on the scene, I was very against it. All sorts of bizarre ways were coming out to make my PC access my network wirelessly. I remember the idea of...
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