Mac Os 9 Manual
2021年5月7日Download here: http://gg.gg/uiom7
To initalize your new FireWire drive under Mac OS X, simply plug your drive into your computer. Upon mounting the new drive, you will see this dialog box. Click on Initialize to proceed.Type in the name for your new drive, choose either Mac OS 9 standard or extended file system (HFS or HFS+) and click initialize. Your new drive will mount on the desktop.Mac Os 9 Manual User
For others, there’s SheepShaver, a PowerPC emulator capable of running Mac OS 9.0.4 down to Mac OS 7.5.2 and there’s Basilisk II, a 68k emulator, capable of running Mac OS (8.1 to 7.0). For everything older than System 7, you will need a Mac Plus emulator like Mini vMac NEW!If you need to erase your drive in the future, simply highlight the drive you wish to erase and select ’Erase Disk’ from the special menu in the finder. Any other partitioning, or reformatting of the drive must be done using a 3rd party drive formatting software, such as Intech Hard Disk SpeedTools or using Disk Utility under Mac OS X.
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Someone in our Facebook group asked an interesting question: “Anyone know the maximum size flash drive that can be used in OS 9.2 on a 300 MHz iBook G3?”
I have to admit, he had me stumped. Someone quickly chimed in that Apple’s HFS+ supports up to 2 exabytes (an exabyte is a million terabytes, and the biggest drives at present are in the 8 TB range), but that didn’t seem realistic. So I did what anyone with an Internet connection would do, I asked Google how big a drive Mac OS 9 supports.Mac Os 9 The Missing Manual
*As far as the Mac OS revision, you will be stuck with Mac OS 9.2.2 only, as it contains Apple Drive Setup V2.1 that will be needed to format and partition drives greater than 128GB. We also recommend that you keep your partitions to sizes of 190GB or less or OS 9 will not boot and Norton Speed Disk V6.03 will not be able to defrag it.
*Needless to say, the Mac OS does a lot more than before, but it has become far more complex and confusing. For a guide to the new operating system, I turned to the much-hyped Mac OS 9: The Missing Manual, by David Pogue (Pogue Press/O’Reilly, 2000, $19.95). (David also worked with TidBITS publisher Adam Engst on Crossing Platforms: A Macintosh/Windows Phrasebook; see ’Macintosh-Windows Translation Dictionary’ in TidBITS-509.).
As expected, it was a whole lot less than 2 exabytes. But I got conflicting information from Apple. Mac OS 8, 9: Mac OS Extended Format – Volume and File Limits says it supports 2 TB volumes. Mac OS 9 Booting: Hard Disk Size Limit? puts the limit at “about 190 GB” and Macintosh: Using 128 GB or Larger ATA Hard Drives says for use with Mac OS 9.2.2, each partition must be no larger than 200 GB.
As covered in How Big a Hard Drive Can I Put in My PowerPC Mac?, most G4 Macs – especially those introduced before 2002 – do not support UltraATA* drives over 128 GB capacity, and with the G5, Apple moved to SATA drives, where that’s not an issue. This is a hardware issue, not an operating system issue or file system issue.
For G3 Macs, there is no native support for “big” (over 128 GB) IDE hard drives, so hitting the 190-200 GB ceiling isn’t even possible.What About USB?
SCSI and FireWire don’t have maximum drive size restrictions, although hardware that bridges an IDE drive to FireWire may have such restrictions. For instance, most early FireWire enclosures for UltraATA drives do not support “big” drives.
As with SCSI and FireWire, USB drive capacity is limited only by the file system used, so any Mac running OS 9 should have no trouble using USB flash drives up to 200 GB capacity – and higher than that if the user wants to partition the drive. (Mac OS 9 allows up to 21 partitions, so in theory you could use a 4 TB drive.)
The only drawback flash drives have is the speed of USB, and older Macs such as the first two clamshell iBooks and tray-load iMacs only have USB 1.1 ports for expansion. That’s horribly slow by modern standards. It was slow compared to SCSI and IDE when that first USB-only iMac arrived in 1998. USB 2.0 is 40x as fast, FireWire is faster than that, and USB 3.1 is almost 100x as fast as USB 1.1.Mac Os 9 Manual
Download skype for business for mac at wsu student. So while you can have a 200 GB USB flash drive on one of those old Macs with USB 1.1, you are going to have to be patient. It will take a long time to write anywhere close to that much data to them, so maybe you’ll want to let it run overnight.
Still, you can do it. Any flash drive below 200 GB should be no problem at all with any Mac running OS 9. (Tthis should apply equally to Mac OS 8.1 and later as well. We will investigate further.)
Update: We’ve already heard from someone successfully using a 500 GB SATA drive with a SATA PCI card and running OS 9 with one partition. If you have results to share, please use the comments. Thanks!
* We use the labels IDE and UltraATA interchangeably.
Keywords: #os9drivesize #maximumusbvolumeMac Os 9 Manual Pdf
Short link: http://goo.gl/11EWSH
searchword: os9drivesize
Download here: http://gg.gg/uiom7
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
To initalize your new FireWire drive under Mac OS X, simply plug your drive into your computer. Upon mounting the new drive, you will see this dialog box. Click on Initialize to proceed.Type in the name for your new drive, choose either Mac OS 9 standard or extended file system (HFS or HFS+) and click initialize. Your new drive will mount on the desktop.Mac Os 9 Manual User
For others, there’s SheepShaver, a PowerPC emulator capable of running Mac OS 9.0.4 down to Mac OS 7.5.2 and there’s Basilisk II, a 68k emulator, capable of running Mac OS (8.1 to 7.0). For everything older than System 7, you will need a Mac Plus emulator like Mini vMac NEW!If you need to erase your drive in the future, simply highlight the drive you wish to erase and select ’Erase Disk’ from the special menu in the finder. Any other partitioning, or reformatting of the drive must be done using a 3rd party drive formatting software, such as Intech Hard Disk SpeedTools or using Disk Utility under Mac OS X.
We use cookies to provide you with a full shopping experience, including personalized content, and to help us improve your experience. To learn more, click here.
By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of Cookies, Privacy Policy.
Someone in our Facebook group asked an interesting question: “Anyone know the maximum size flash drive that can be used in OS 9.2 on a 300 MHz iBook G3?”
I have to admit, he had me stumped. Someone quickly chimed in that Apple’s HFS+ supports up to 2 exabytes (an exabyte is a million terabytes, and the biggest drives at present are in the 8 TB range), but that didn’t seem realistic. So I did what anyone with an Internet connection would do, I asked Google how big a drive Mac OS 9 supports.Mac Os 9 The Missing Manual
*As far as the Mac OS revision, you will be stuck with Mac OS 9.2.2 only, as it contains Apple Drive Setup V2.1 that will be needed to format and partition drives greater than 128GB. We also recommend that you keep your partitions to sizes of 190GB or less or OS 9 will not boot and Norton Speed Disk V6.03 will not be able to defrag it.
*Needless to say, the Mac OS does a lot more than before, but it has become far more complex and confusing. For a guide to the new operating system, I turned to the much-hyped Mac OS 9: The Missing Manual, by David Pogue (Pogue Press/O’Reilly, 2000, $19.95). (David also worked with TidBITS publisher Adam Engst on Crossing Platforms: A Macintosh/Windows Phrasebook; see ’Macintosh-Windows Translation Dictionary’ in TidBITS-509.).
As expected, it was a whole lot less than 2 exabytes. But I got conflicting information from Apple. Mac OS 8, 9: Mac OS Extended Format – Volume and File Limits says it supports 2 TB volumes. Mac OS 9 Booting: Hard Disk Size Limit? puts the limit at “about 190 GB” and Macintosh: Using 128 GB or Larger ATA Hard Drives says for use with Mac OS 9.2.2, each partition must be no larger than 200 GB.
As covered in How Big a Hard Drive Can I Put in My PowerPC Mac?, most G4 Macs – especially those introduced before 2002 – do not support UltraATA* drives over 128 GB capacity, and with the G5, Apple moved to SATA drives, where that’s not an issue. This is a hardware issue, not an operating system issue or file system issue.
For G3 Macs, there is no native support for “big” (over 128 GB) IDE hard drives, so hitting the 190-200 GB ceiling isn’t even possible.What About USB?
SCSI and FireWire don’t have maximum drive size restrictions, although hardware that bridges an IDE drive to FireWire may have such restrictions. For instance, most early FireWire enclosures for UltraATA drives do not support “big” drives.
As with SCSI and FireWire, USB drive capacity is limited only by the file system used, so any Mac running OS 9 should have no trouble using USB flash drives up to 200 GB capacity – and higher than that if the user wants to partition the drive. (Mac OS 9 allows up to 21 partitions, so in theory you could use a 4 TB drive.)
The only drawback flash drives have is the speed of USB, and older Macs such as the first two clamshell iBooks and tray-load iMacs only have USB 1.1 ports for expansion. That’s horribly slow by modern standards. It was slow compared to SCSI and IDE when that first USB-only iMac arrived in 1998. USB 2.0 is 40x as fast, FireWire is faster than that, and USB 3.1 is almost 100x as fast as USB 1.1.Mac Os 9 Manual
Download skype for business for mac at wsu student. So while you can have a 200 GB USB flash drive on one of those old Macs with USB 1.1, you are going to have to be patient. It will take a long time to write anywhere close to that much data to them, so maybe you’ll want to let it run overnight.
Still, you can do it. Any flash drive below 200 GB should be no problem at all with any Mac running OS 9. (Tthis should apply equally to Mac OS 8.1 and later as well. We will investigate further.)
Update: We’ve already heard from someone successfully using a 500 GB SATA drive with a SATA PCI card and running OS 9 with one partition. If you have results to share, please use the comments. Thanks!
* We use the labels IDE and UltraATA interchangeably.
Keywords: #os9drivesize #maximumusbvolumeMac Os 9 Manual Pdf
Short link: http://goo.gl/11EWSH
searchword: os9drivesize
Download here: http://gg.gg/uiom7
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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