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On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 1:43 PM, Dan Palka turboda...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 23, 2010, at 9:52 PM, Illirik Smirnov wrote:
I like my G5 tower more than my computer lab's Mac Minis.
That exact G5 is far
On Aug 24, 2010, at 1:14 AM, Illirik Smirnov wrote:
So, all of the G5-optimized 64-bit code was never used? I sure do use it.
There's exponentially more on Intels running Snow Leopard, and more every day.
On Aug 24, 2010, at 1:14 AM, Illirik Smirnov wrote:
And if I'm not running multi-core,
On Aug 24, 1:14 am, Illirik Smirnov illir...@gmail.com wrote:
We are not all
old cooks who don't want to buy a new computer. I just recently bought a PC
tower, but still use my Mac, and actually like it more.
We're Kooks. We may also be cooks, but us old farts who prefer out of
date
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my feed.
http://hints.macworld.com/article.php?story=20060509180914879
So if it
On Aug 23, 2010, at 6:53 AM, MnDel wrote:
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my feed.
On Aug 23, 2010, at 6:53 AM, MnDel wrote:
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my feed.
On Aug 23, 6:53 am, MnDel dsmn...@gmail.com wrote:
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my
On Aug 23, 2010, at 4:53 AM, MnDel wrote:
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my feed.
Appleworks works in 10.5
On Aug 23, 2010, at 4:53 AM, MnDel wrote:
I'd love jumping to 10.5 or 10.6 - but I have enough docs in Pagemill
and Appleworks that the jump looks like a bloomin big mountain to
climb. Reading this guide to using OS9 apps on Intel macs puts me
right off my feed.
On Aug 23, 2010, at 8:22 AM, Dan Palka wrote:
it really is time to move on. Snow Leopard on an Intel Mac is an
amazing, highly-refined, ultra-powerful combination. I wouldn't
downgrade for anything.
Great, I think we all know this already, but most either already own
PPC Macs or can't
On Aug 23, 2010, at 12:43 PM, Kris Tilford wrote:
However, I disagree with the idea that Snow Leopard offers any substantial
improvements over Leopard, after all, the ONLY thing Snow Leopard is doing is
converting Leopard from 32-bit Universal Intel/PPC code over to 64-bit
Intel-only
On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Kris Tilford ktilfo...@cox.net wrote:
On Aug 23, 2010, at 8:22 AM, Dan Palka wrote:
it really is time to move on. Snow Leopard on an Intel Mac is an amazing,
highly-refined, ultra-powerful combination. I wouldn't downgrade for
anything.
Great, I think we
I like my G5 tower more than my computer lab's Mac Minis. It is faster, has
more RAM and hard disk space, runs PPC apps natively, resulting in huge
speed boosts, is more servicable, can use VGA and ADC monitors natively with
the right video card(s), more reliable, uses slightly more standard and
On Aug 23, 2010, at 9:52 PM, Illirik Smirnov wrote:
I like my G5 tower more than my computer lab's Mac Minis.
That exact G5 is far slower than even the base-model Mac Mini of today in
Geekbench scores, and you're not even considering that only with Snow Leopard
has 64-bit software been
I am thinking to move on from my fearless old sawtooth to a mini, but
I'm not ready for the jump to 10.5.
From what I read on this Apple page the latest models that are fully
compatible with 10.4.11 are the mid 2007 models
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1159 (versions no later than
MB139xx/A)
On Aug 22, 2010, at 9:21 AM, MnDel dsmn...@gmail.com wrote:
I am thinking to move on from my fearless old sawtooth to a mini, but
I'm not ready for the jump to 10.5.
Why?
From what I read on this Apple page the latest models that are fully
compatible with 10.4.11 are the mid 2007 models
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:07 AM, Chance Reecher wrote:
Your CD set is not compatible with any intel Mac. It only has PPC
code on it and won't even boot let alone install. The only 10.4
disc with Intel code (I think) is a later release of 10.4 Server.
10.4.8 was made as Intel. Possibly also as
On Aug 22, 2010, at 10:55 AM, Peter Haas wrote:
10.4.8 was made as Intel. Possibly also as Universal.
My understanding is that Intel Macs are not installable from any retail Mac OS
X Tiger install set, and especially not from a PowerPC Mac mini restore set.
Regards,
Dan Palka
Info-Mac
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:58 AM, Dan Palka wrote:
... and especially not from a PowerPC Mac mini restore set.
Well, that is definitely a given (a PPC-only install DVD).
But there exist 10.4.x universal installers. I am pretty sure I have
one, somewhere.
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You received this message because
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:07 AM, Chance Reecher wrote:
Your CD set is not compatible with any intel Mac. It only has PPC code on it
and won't even boot let alone install. The only 10.4 disc with Intel code (I
think) is a later release of 10.4 Server.
Where can I find a copy of 10.4 server?
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:27 AM, John Carmonne wrote:
Where can I find a copy of 10.4 server?
LEM is the best place.
ePay is always a possibility.
Even with 10.5 Server, the installation DVDs were Universal. At least
the one I bought is Universal.
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You received this message because
On Aug 22, 2010, at 11:24 AM, Peter Haas wrote:
Even with 10.5 Server, the installation DVDs were Universal. At least the one
I bought is Universal.
All retail Leopard sets are universal. This was not the case for Tiger because
upon Tiger's initial release Intels didn't exist. Since every
At 8:55 AM -0700 8/22/2010, Peter Haas wrote:
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:07 AM, Chance Reecher wrote:
Your CD set is not compatible with any intel Mac. It only has PPC
code on it and won't even boot let alone install. The only 10.4
disc with Intel code (I think) is a later release of 10.4 Server.
On Aug 22, 2010, at 9:13 AM, Peter Haas wrote:
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:58 AM, Dan Palka wrote:
... and especially not from a PowerPC Mac mini restore set.
Well, that is definitely a given (a PPC-only install DVD).
But there exist 10.4.x universal installers. I am pretty sure I have
On Aug 22, 2010, at 11:51 AM, John Carmonne wrote:
I have 10.4 Universal but it will not install on a Mini.
That's because 10.4 was never released as a Universal. It had a Retail disc,
but it was PPC ONLY. Intel versions shipped with the machines they were
intended to run on and
Del,
Save Tiger for the fearless Sawtooth. Close your eyes and jump all the
way to Snow Leopard. You'll never regret it.
Tiger is still a superb OS, but Snow Leopard is not only superior,
it's breathtakingly beautiful. As an added advantage, if you know your
way around in Tiger, you won't feel
On retail disc? As far as I knew no retail 10.4 was intel/universal.
There were, of course, 10.4 Intel discs included with Intel Macs, if
that's what you're referencing.
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 22, 2010, at 11:55 AM, Peter Haas peterh...@cruzio.com wrote:
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:07 AM,
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