It is the first Apple portable to ship with Nvidia GeForce 4 420 Go graphics, and unlike the similar 12″ iBook, the 12″ PowerBook G4 supports monitor spanning.Īt 867 MHz, this just meets the minimum installation requirements for Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. New features include built-in Bluetooth and support for “five times faster” 802.11g AirPort Extreme. In some respects, it’s more like an aluminum-clad 12″ iBook upgraded with a G4 than a low-end PowerBook. It supports 10 and 100 Mbps ethernet, but not gigabit ethernet.
It’s also the only current model without DVI support and an official memory ceiling of 640 MB. The 12″ PowerBook G4 is the first PowerBook in years without a PC Card slot. Then boot from that DVD and do all file copying from within that OS9 system because only then will the resource files be copied as well.Just two months after Apple boosted the 15.2″ PowerBook to 1 GHz, they surprised a lot of people by rolling out both the largest and the smallest PowerBooks ever, including the first 12″ PowerBook G4. toast file because this will also copy files that OSX will ignore. Better try to burn a DVD directly from the. ResEdit should be included in your OS9 installation and can be used to study and change resource forks once you get the system up and running.ĭragging files on OSX dives will not produce a bootable disk. That was a clever way of preserving precious disk space because many UI elements could be shared by all programs and read from the operating system files. The original Mac OS held data in two forks, the data fork and the resource fork. The blinking folder with the question mark tells you that while the file system can be read, no bootable operating system is present. Also, unstuffing on an OSX file system will not add the resource fork which is essential for OS9. OS9 needs a HFS+ file system without journaling. While it can be read by OS9, the journal block will be ignored. Mac OS Extended (Journaled) is an OSX extension to the older HFS+ file system. Here are the files as they appear on the disk. But from what I've read you just drag and drop the files? I'm used to having to setup boot partitions or some kind of a bootloader. Simply formatting a disk and then copying files to it is really strange to me. The folder has the appearance of OS 9 but does not boot. I get a little face in a folded that blinks to a question mark. I installed the disk I to the PowerBook and achieved only a partial success. toast file and copied the files by dragging them onto a disk newly formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled). sit file using Stuffit Expander on a newer Mac running OSX. Unstuffed, this should result in a bootable OS 9 toast image.
This is very foreign to me as I'm used to genetic OS disk/discs and then installing a selection of compatible drivers.ĭownload #4: Mac OS 9.2.2 system folders extracted from the PowerBook G4 Titanium (DVI) A1025 (867MHz/1.0GHz) Software Install and Restore DVD.
They seem to have a lot of disparate drivers that are very specific and shipped on install discs with those machines only.
I am knowledgeable with Windows and Linux but I have no experience on how to setup these older Macs. I am having trouble getting Mac OS 9.2.2 installed on my PowerBook G4 Titanium (867mhz).