Gorka writes,

<I have an old 233MHz beige G3 desktop I workin with at a hobby.

last week I installed a trio of 128Mb SIMMs I bought through LEM Swap. I 
exchanged the old memory for the new one following the Apple 
instructions per the manual (and after checking through the net) and 
restarted the computer. hardware started, but got the bomb dialog 
telling me there was a prolem with some app and asking me for a secure 
reboot through the keyboard.

At that time I had only an USB keyboard as my ADB one was at home. Today 
I finally got my old ADB keyboard, opnened the case again, reseated the 
memory and hit the power up buttom in the keyboard.....

... to no avail. I got the three lights in the keyboard, the PSU started 
t whirl... and after a couple seconds the machie shut down.

Opened it again, checked everything was OK, all the connections 
secure,put back the old memory SIMMs, closed and tried again to boot, 
getting the same results.

The machine is a beige desktop, 233MHz G3, 128 + 64 + 32Mb SIMMs , one 
PCI slot with 2xUSB 1.1 and 2xFirewire 400, one 10Gb and one 40Gb HD and 
running Mac OS 9.1. The machine was recently resurrected after being 
unused for five years and it ran smoothly until the memory swapt.

Any ideas? Maybe the PSU failed? Besides the memory SIMMs nothing else 
have been touched....>

Ooooh, a Beige G3/233 Desktop! I had one of those! OK, down to business. 
Here's what I'd do if I still had my Beige and was in your position:

You don't mention if you pressed the CUDA button when you installed the 
new memory, so I'd recommend reseating the RAM yet again and pressing 
the CUDA button.

If that doesn't work, I'd zap the PRAM (hold down the cmd-opt-P-R keys 
while pressing the startup button.

If that doesn't work, I'd go for an open firmware reset. To do this, 
hold down the cmd-opt-O-F keys while starting up. When you get the 
command line, type:

1. reset-nvram  (hit enter)
2. set-defaults  (hit enter)
3. resett-all   (hit enter)

If none of these things work, and, since you also mention that the Mac 
had worked fine but had also been unused for a long time -- I was just 
in this situation with another PPC Mac (the fact that it hadn't been 
used in a while), a Mini, and when the PRAM battery was replaced, it 
worked fine. So if none of the above work for you, your Beige's PRAM 
battery may need to be replaced.

Also, older Macs like that sometimes act wonky if you don't rebuild 
theier desktops. If you get this Beige to boot again, I'd suggest a 
desktop rebuild too. (hold down apple-opt keys while booting, then tell 
it yes when it asks to rebuild the desktop).

Good luck!

~Yersinia.

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