ahem, might not the board have seemed to be important enough to include in
the package?
On Sun, 2 Jul 2006, Gabriel Vega wrote:
nic. network card.
On Jul 2, 2006, at 3:32 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
You sold him an extra mic, but no apple keyboard?
On Sun, 2 Jul 2006, Gabriel Vega wrote:
> I sold him the g3. its a g3, 333mhz model with 320 megs of ram.
>
> included was a "Supported" usb card, a firewire card and an extra nic in
> the pci sloots.
>
> the motherboard also has I think an exerternal scsi, to geoport serial
> ports, a adb port and a dvd rom. he bought it for fifty five dollars.
>
> On Jul 2, 2006, at 4:59 AM, Access Curmudgeon wrote:
>
> > > I am not sure if this was added or not it just has one.
> > > how do I find out what model of beige I have?
> > System Profiler? Is whoever sold this to you totally unavailable?
> > > also, out of curiousity, what happened when your friend
> > > plug the monitor in to the joy stick port?
> > Lots of smoke and stink. The cable from the port to the motherboard
> > melted, thin little wires in that couldn't handle the power the
> > monitor pumping out. Somewhat surprisingly, no permanent damage.
> > > there are 2 ports on this machine one that looks like a printer port
> > That is almost certainly be SCSI.
> > > and a smaller one
> > There should be three or four small round ones, kind of like PS/2 but
> > the pin outs are different. One or two with four pins is ADB, Apple
> > Desktop Bus. Two with eight pins is serial which Macs also used for
> > networking.
> > > those are the only 2 ports on the back besides the
> > > usual sound usb firewire etc etc.
> > Firewire was not standard on this vintage Macs either! According to
> > that page I sent, there would be also be RJ45 Ether net and a weird
> > port called AAUI which used a dongle to adapt to token ring or other
> > network jack.
>