>I use the AppleTalk tab in Network to turn AT off and on when I print to 
>my HP LaserJet 4M. 

Why not just leave AppleTalk on?!?

>Also, the statement was made earlier that Classic is part of the default 
>install with X. That is not correct for 10.4 and probably is not correct 
>for 10.3. I'm using 10.3.9 right now and way back when I installed 
>10.3.0, I remember having to retain OS9.2.2 from my 10.2 installation 
>because no OS9 disc came with Panther. Classic won't run unless there is 
>a full OS9 for it to run with. I just installed OS 10.4.1 on another 
>volume for testing and it didn't have Classic. In fact, when I tried to 
>start Classic with the Classic pane in System Prefs., it went to my OS9 
>System Folder on my boot drive (the one that still runs 10.3.9) to find 
>OS9.

For the love of freaking god... Classic and OS 9 are NOT THE SAME THING.

What you have just pointed out here, is something that I have been 
saying... OS 9 IS NOT INSTALLED AS PART OF OS X ANYMORE... but CLASSIC is 
installed.

You even confirm that above... you say you installed 10.4.1, attempted to 
start Classic, and it used the OS 9 folder from a previous install. Guess 
what... that means CLASSIC, the little freaking application that lets OS 
9 run... WAS IN FACT INSTALLED. If Classic was not installed, then it 
would not have been able to look for your OS 9 install and start it. 
Classic handles that task. It had to be there if it happened.

CLASSIC is NOT OS 9. Classic is just a freaking Application in OS X that 
OS 9 runs inside. They are TWO TOTALLY DIFFERENT THINGS.

Why do people not grasp this?!?

-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>

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