>From my point of view I guess it depends on the OS you run and what work you want to do with your 2400c. 80 MB is fine for most traveling work on 8.6. 80 MB is marginal for 9.1 but usable and 112 MB is fine, again for most traveling work unless, perhaps, one is a video/graphics professional. Web surfing, web site maintenance, email, word processing, PowerPoint development and presentations all work very well on a 2400c and a 500-600 MHz G3 CPU would do it all much faster than a 180 MHz 603e or even my 320 MHz G3.
On 3/17/02 2:16 AM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Unless we can get more RAM, greater speed seems not worth the considerable > effort. Did I miss something here? ---------- Duo/2400 List, The friendliest place on the Net! A listserv for users and fans of Mac subportables. FAQ at <http://www.themacintoshguy.com/lists/DuoListFAQ.shtml> Be sure to visit Mac2400! <http://www.sineware.com/mac2400> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Need help from a real person? Try. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ---------- Dr. Bott | 10/100 Ethernet for your 2400 is finally here! MPC-100 | <http://www.drbott.com/prod/mpc100.html> RoadTools $30 PodiumPad available at Apple retail stores, $20 Traveler CoolPad at Staples. Both in white for iBooks at <http://roadtools.com> Midwest Mac Parts ][ <http://www.midwestmac.com> After-market parts for Macs. ][ 888-356-1104 ][ MacResQ Specials: LaCie SCSI CDR From $99! PowerBook 3400/200 Only $879! Norton AntiVirus 6 Only $19! We Stock PARTS! <http://www.macresq.com>
