Easy Peezy and quite cool. Now this 6,5 G4 iBook boots OS 9 like a rocket.Thanks Ross!
[Wonder if there would be any advantage to using Drive Setup 2.1 over DS 1.9.2?]
Anyway…
Almost every machine here is a dual-boot. So I began (backwards) formatting the original internal 30 GB spinner Toshiba HD with a retail Leopard installer disc and two-partitioning it. (1st partition = 10 GB for OS 9 and the remainder 2nd partition for Leopard.) Then I installed Leopard. [Big dummy.] Had to scratch that and begin again by partitioning and installing OS 9 first, with the downloaded OS 9 from Ross. Then I reinstalled Leopard. (Still not so smart.) Every attempted boot with Leopard froze after revealing some problem loading the Dock. Regroup.
Then instead, I installed Tiger 10.4 on that second larger partition and it booted fine. Maybe I’ll have to “sneak up” on Leopard? (I prefer Tiger anyway.) BUT, partition and install OS 9 from Ross’s DL first.
Biggest pain is the need to dim the screen when booting from (or into) OS 9 in order to “see” the desktop and the brightness controls are thus reversed. You can choose to reboot into Tiger from OS 9 but in order to then boot back into OS 9 from Tiger, I use the Option-boot (and remember to “dim” the brightness when the screen appears to be blank / black). It will remind you.
No trackpad problems freezing and I have yet to attach a mouse to the thing. Initially I did my normal Extension Manager culling of control panels & extensions in OS 9… and I disabled Sleeper. Then I reactivated it and set screensaver delay to 30 minutes. Everything else I left alone as you do not want this thing to go to sleep because it will not wake… until after a reboot. (And then you’re reminded to reset the brightness!)
I wonder if that brightness inversion is only on the 6.5’s and not the 6.3’s?
This is a 1.07 GHz iBook G4 with 1.25 GB of RAM.
Just a bit speedier than my normal upstairs “desk compliment” 800 MHz G3 iBook (Mini “Moby Dick”).
Will begin loading other software on this G4 as time allows.
Oh… and a Happy Birthday to old man Greystash!
Thirty-one? Gawd that’s old.
Have a G4 iBook? Give this a try!