On Feb 26, 2:42 pm, Bruce Johnson john...@pharmacy.arizona.edu
wrote:
On Feb 26, 2010, at 11:47 AM, Clark Martin wrote:
What's happening, I think, is that your router and your Mac aren't
properly establishing connections.
Which is odd as this part of networking has gotten pretty
On Feb 27, 2010, at 2:34 PM, Goody2 wrote:
Then plugged the G5 in again and decided to jiggle the cable around.
Sure enough, when the plug is pulled outward (but still seated) it
disconnects.When pushed inward as far as possible there is no problem.
I tried the same maneuver with the second
On Feb 27, 2010, at 1:34 PM, Goody2 wrote:
Any further comments welcome, and many thanks for all the help.
Could be a cable problem? Normally the little catches on the plug
prevent the cable from having much play, and since you say you can
pull the plug outward while connected, this
On Feb 25, 9:56 pm, Kris Tilford ktilfo...@cox.net wrote:
On Feb 25, 2010, at 7:17 PM, Eric Volker wrote:
I'm a bit confused - does your Powermac G5 actually have two
ethernet ports? To the best of my knowledge they normally only
shipped with one.
I was confused too. The Late 2005 G5 is
On Feb 25, 2010, at 6:17 PM, Eric Volker wrote:
The problem occurs with both Ethernet ports, and when I created a
New Location.
I'm a bit confused - does your Powermac G5 actually have two
ethernet ports? To the best of my knowledge they normally only
shipped with one. Unless, of
On Feb 26, 2010, at 8:09 AM, Goody2 wrote:
The console.log shows (quotation marks added):
WirelessAttach: getInterfaceWithName failedThis line repeats
about twenty times, then
It's polling for a WiFi adapter.
mDNSResponder: Repeated transitions for interface en0
(192.168.1.46);
On 2/26/10 8:09 AM, Bruce Johnson wrote:
mDNSResponder: NOTE: Wide-Area Service Discovery disabled to avoid
crashing defective DNS relay 192.168.1.1.
Bonjour has been turned off.
Only a part of Bonjour. Originally Bonjour (Rendezvous) only located
machines on the IP subnet it was on.
On Feb 26, 2010, at 11:47 AM, Clark Martin wrote:
What's happening, I think, is that your router and your Mac aren't
properly establishing connections.
Which is odd as this part of networking has gotten pretty stable.
In my experience this only happens nowadays with a failing switch port
On Feb 24, 2010, at 10:40 PM, Richard Gerome wrote:
Uninstall the driver for the ethernet card then shut the computer
down and remove the card clean the pins off with a pencil eraser and
reinstall the card, boot the computer back up and reinstall the
drivers
He said he had a Mac G5,
not recognized in PowerMac G5
On Feb 24, 2010, at 10:40 PM, Richard Gerome wrote:
Uninstall the driver for the ethernet card then shut the computer
down and remove the card clean the pins off with a pencil eraser and
reinstall the card, boot the computer back up and reinstall the
drivers
On Feb 24, 2010, at 7:59 PM, Herbert Goodfriend wrote:
I recently bought a PowerMac G5 Dual 2.3GHz (late 2005). It is
running OS 10.4.11.
It is connected directly to DSL modem via Ethernet cable.
When I start up the computer or wake it from sleep, I cannot connect
to the Internet. The
On Feb 25, 2010, at 7:17 PM, Eric Volker wrote:
I'm a bit confused - does your Powermac G5 actually have two
ethernet ports? To the best of my knowledge they normally only
shipped with one.
I was confused too. The Late 2005 G5 is very different than my Early
2005. The Late 2005 came with
I recently bought a PowerMac G5 Dual 2.3GHz (late 2005). It is
running OS 10.4.11.
It is connected directly to DSL modem via Ethernet cable.
When I start up the computer or wake it from sleep, I cannot connect
to the Internet. The Ethernet connection is not recognized in the
Network Status
it a try... If that
doesn't work maybe someone else can help here???
-Original Message-
From: Herbert Goodfriend bon...@mailforce.net
Sent: Feb 24, 2010 8:59 PM
To: g3-5-list@googlegroups.com
Subject: Ethernet connection not recognized in PowerMac G5
I recently bought a PowerMac G5 Dual
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