Is phonenet not an opton? you could use these old adapters to connect to a
more modern Mac that has an ethernet adapter and is connected to a network.
You would need a software bridge as the old Faralon localtalk bridges can be
hard to locate. i believe that Lem has a few articles about this along with
sites like macwindows and twomacsandaprinter(?). There is a lot of info on
the net about connecting classic and even compact macs to a network.

-----Original Message-----
From: Antonio Rodr�guez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2003 2:29 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Networking in the poor man's way


Hi, compact lovers!

I'd want to connect my Classic to my home's Ethernet network. Of course, I
have few options. Because the Classic doesn't have any expansion slots, I
can't add a Ethernet controller right into it. I could get an
SCSI-to-Ethernet adapter and plug it into the hub, but there are two
reasons against that: 1) it is almost impossible to get such hardware piece
in Spain and I don't think making an international buy in eBay is a good
idea (S&H costs, payment options, possible fraud, etc.). And 2) it isn't
very fun to just plug in a device and start networking without problems,
right? So I need to try something a little more challenging ;-) .

If network connection with the Classic must be made adding external
hardware, and the SCSI port is eliminated, what remains? The serial ports.
Here comes to mind the SLIP and PPP protocols, used ages ago to connect
mainframes using a simple serial lines, and still used nowadays to create
Internet connections throught a modem. In the PC side, there are a number
of posibilities of providing SLIP/PPP services, either using Linux or
Windows. In the Mac side, I'm not very sure. Is there a TCP-IP stack for
the Macintosh that runs in a 68k under System 6 and provides SLIP or PPP
support? If there is a stack that supports dial-up networking, it probably
will also support direct serial connections with the right configuration.

In the case I'm able to get this thing working, could I use AppleShare
under IP? It would allow me to access shared folders on other computers,
but it isn't neccessary because if TCP-IP is working, I'll be able to FTP
to my local server and transfer files in both directions.

This can be a very convenient way of networking all those old Macs without
Ethernet adapters. Because OS X is Unix-based, it shouldn't be very
difficult to make it provide SLIP or PPP, and then bridging the PPP service
with the main network adapter would allow the compact Mac to access the
entire local network, and even the Internet... without adding any aditional
hardware!

Greetings,

Antonio Rodr�guez (Grijan)



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