Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Orphan date November 2006 The Maxbus is a system Computer bus bus used with the PowerPC G4 central processing unit processor s in PowerMac s. Category Macintosh computers Mac stub ... more details
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The HDI 45 was one of Apple Computer Apple Computer s proprietary cable to onboard video connectors. These connectors were used only in the first generation Power Macintosh computers the Power Macintosh Power Macintosh 6100 6100 , Power Macintosh 7100 7100 and Power Macintosh 8100 8100 specifically for the Apple AudioVision 14 Display . No other display uses this connector. Other various Apple displays and third party displays could be used with a special adapter that converts this unusual port to a standard D subminiature DA 15 connector. External links http www.kan.org 6100 graphicshardware.html PowerMac 6100 Graphics Hardware See also Apple AudioVision 14 Display Category Analog video connectors Category Electrical signal connectors ... more details
Multiple issues orphan February 2009 notability August 2010 context October 2009 The G5Jam is a replacement baffle and associated accessories for Apple Computer s Powermac G5 computer, allowing a maximum of four internal hard drive s to be installed instead of the usual two, expanding the possible internal storage of the G5 to up to 5 terabyte s. It is manufactured by Wiebetech . However, installing the G5Jam removes the ability to put full length Peripheral Component Interconnect PCI cards in the first three Peripheral Component Interconnect PCI slots. The fourth Peripheral Component Interconnect PCI Accelerated Graphics Port AGP slot is still left open. It gives the possibility of a 2 terabyte volume with speeds up to 200 millibit? mb per second . Citation needed date March 2008 External links http www.wiebetech.com products G5Jam.php G5Jam Website with pricing Category PowerPC Macintosh computers mac stub ... more details
Mac specs Image pm7600 01.jpg Introduced April 22, 1996 MSRP 2700, 3000 CPU PowerPC 604 CPUspeed 120, 132 and 200 MHz OS System 7 Macintosh System 7.5.3 , Mac OS 8 , Mac OS 9 RAM 16  MiB , expandable to 1  GiB RAMtype 70 ns 168 pin DIMM Discontinued November 17, 1997 The Power Macintosh 7600 was a PowerPC 604 based desktop computer sold by Apple Computer Apple in three speeds 120MHz, 132MHz and 200MHz the last model was not available in North America between April 1996 and November 1997. The 7600 was essentially a Power Macintosh 7500 with a different CPU card, the change in model number occurring because of the move from the 7500 s PowerPC 601 PPC601 to the 7600 s PowerPC 604 PPC604 . Like the 7500, it included advanced Audio Video ports including RCA connector RCA audio in and out, S Video in, composite video in and standard Apple video ports. It was eventually replaced by the Power Macintosh 7300 , one of the very few times that Apple updated a computer but gave it a lower model number the reason is that the 7300 was a joint replacement for the 7600 and the Power Macintosh 7200 . The 7600 features the easy access Outrigger Macintosh outrigger desktop case first introduced with the Power Macintosh 7200. See also List of Macintosh models grouped by CPU type List of products discontinued by Apple Computer References reflist Power Macintosh http docs.info.apple.com article.html?artnum 112358 7600 120 , http docs.info.apple.com article.html?artnum 112367 7600 132 and http docs.info.apple.com article.html?artnum 112398 7600 200 specifications at AppleSpec http lowendmac.com ppc 7600.shtml The Power Macintosh 7600 at lowendmac.com http everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 7600 120.html 7600 120 , http everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 7600 132.html 7600 132 and http everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 7600 200.html 7600 200 at everymac.com http web.archive.org web 19961023020806 www.apple.ca doc ds 7600 120.html Offi ... more details
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thumb left 200px IMS IXMICRO TwinTurbo 128 br video card Unlike the 8600, the PowerMac 9600 has ... PowerMac 9500 http lowendmac.com ppc 9500.shtml Low End Mac s Power Macintosh 9500 page http web.archive.org ... systems apple powermac stats powermac 9600 200.html 9600 200 , http www.everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 9600 200mp.html 9600 200MP , http www.everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 9600 233.html 9600 233 , http www.everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 9600 300.html 9600 300 and http www.everymac.com systems apple powermac stats powermac 9600 350.html ... more details
NOTOC lowercase ppc64 is an identifier commonly used within the Linux and GNU Compiler Collection GCC open source software communities to refer to the target computer architecture architecture for applications optimized for 64 bit PowerPC and Power Architecture processors, frequently used when compiling source code . Image PPC 970fx.jpg thumb The PowerPC 970 was released in 2003 and was one of the first 64 bit processors developed for consumer type computers, PowerMac G5 in this case. 64 bit PowerPC processors PowerPC 600 PowerPC 620 PowerPC 620 RS64 Apache, RS64 II Northstar, RS64 III Pulsar Istar, and RS64 IV Sstar POWER3 and POWER3 II POWER4 and POWER4 PowerPC 970 , PowerPC 970FX, PowerPC 970MP and PowerPC 970GX POWER5 and POWER5 Cell microprocessor Power Processor Element PPE PPE in Cell microprocessor Cell BE , PowerXCell 8i and Xenon processor Xenon . PWRficient POWER6 and POWER6 POWER7 Future 64 bit PowerPC processors PowerPC A2 PowerPC e5500 e5500 Defunct 64 bit PowerPC processors Motorola G5 project Motorola G5 PowerPC e700 External links http www.power.org Power.org http www.linux foundation.org spec refspecs LSB 1.3.0 PPC64 spec book1.html Linux Standard Base Specification for the PPC64 Architecture Category Power Architecture pt Ppc64 ... more details
Mac specs Image Power Macintosh 7100 66.jpg Introduced March, 1994 66  MHz January, 1995 80  MHz MSRP 2900, 3300, 3500 CPU PowerPC 601 CPUspeed 66 and 80  MHz OS System 7 Macintosh System 7.1.2 , Mac OS 8 , Mac OS 9 RAM 8 MiB , expandable to 136 MiB RAMtype 80 ns 72 pin SIMM Discontinued January 1995 66  MHz January, 1996 80  MHz The Power Macintosh 7100 was a mid range Apple Macintosh personal computer that was designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer from March 1994 to January 1996. The PowerMac 7100 was faster and more expandable than the Power Macintosh 6100 , and was a part of the original Power Macintosh line along with the 6100 and the Power Macintosh 8100 . It came in a slightly restyled Macintosh IIvx case, and received a speed increase to 80  MHz from its original 66  MHz in January 1995. When it was discontinued it was succeeded by two new models, the Power Macintosh 7200 and the Power Macintosh 7500 . A higher priced audio visual variant the 7100AV included a 2 MB VRAM card with s video in out. Non AV 7100s had a video card containing 1 MB VRAM and no s video in out capability. Codename Lawsuit The Power Macintosh 7100 s internal code name was Carl Sagan , the in joke being that the mid range PowerMac 7100 would make Apple billions and billions. ref An account of this lawsuit is given in Carl Sagan A Life in the Cosmos , pages 363 364 and 374 375. ref Though the project name was strictly internal and never used in public marketing, when Sagan learned of this internal usage he sued Apple Computer to force the use of a different project name. Other models released conjointly were codenamed Cold fusion and Piltdown Man , and he was displeased at being associated with what he considered pseudoscience . Though Sagan lost the suit, Apple engineers complied with his demands anyway, renaming the project BHA for Notable litigation of Apple Computer Libel dispute with Carl Sagan Butt Head Astronomer . Sagan promptly sued Apple ... more details
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PPC . Apple iMac PowerMac Eyetech AmigaOne Genesi Pegasos Open Desktop Workstation ODW . EFIKA IBM ... on 1100 Xserve s PowerPC 970 running Mac OS X . First built using stock PowerMac G5 s making it one ... more details
engineering vehicles combat engineering vehicle s, etc. Electronics File Apple PowerMac G4 M8570 MDD sideopen.jpg thumb PowerMac G4 chassis opened to expose computer components A chassis in a television ... more details
s, which arrived at the beginning of the 2006 2007 school year. There are 3 PowerMac G4 s and 1 PowerMac G5 , which enable students to create documentaries and video yearbooks using movie software ... more details
Other uses Land disambiguation A LAND Local Area Network Denial attack is a Denial of service attack DoS Denial of Service attack that consists of sending a special poison Spoofing attack spoofed packet information technology packet to a computer, causing it to lock up. The security flaw was actually first discovered in 1997 by someone using the alias m3lt , and has resurfaced many years later in operating system s such as Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP SP2. How it works The attack involves sending a spoofed Transmission Control Protocol TCP SYN TCP SYN packet connection initiation with the target host s IP address to an open port as both source and destination. The reason a LAND attack works is because it causes the machine to reply to itself continuously. Definition A LAND attack involves IP packets where the source and destination address are set to address the same device. Other land attacks have since been found in services like SNMP and Windows 88 tcp kerberos global services which were caused by design flaws where the devices accepted requests on the wire appearing to be from themselves and causing replies repeatedly. Vulnerable systems Below is a list of vulnerable operating systems discovered by testing on various machines AIX operating system AIX 3.0 AmigaOS AmiTCP 4.2 Kickstart 3.0 BeOS Preview release 2 PowerMac BSD OS BSDi 2.0 and 2.1 OpenVMS Digital VMS FreeBSD 2.2.5 RELEASE and 3.0 Fixed after required updates HP External JetDirect Print Servers IBM AS 400 OS7400 3.7 Irix 5.2 and 5.3 Mac OS MacTCP, 7.6.1 OpenTransport 1.1.2 and 8.0 NetApp NFS server 4.1d and 4.3 NetBSD 1.1 to 1.3 Fixed after required updates NeXTSTEP 3.0 and 3.1 Novell 4.11 OpenVMS 7.1 with UCX 4.1 7 QNX 4.24 Rhapsody operating system Rhapsody Developer Release SCO Group SCO OpenServer 5.0.2 SMP, 5.0.4 SCO Group SCO Unixware 2.1.1 and 2.1.2 SunOS 4.1.3 and 4.1.4 Microsoft Windows Windows 95, NT and XP SP2, How to avoid being attacked Most Firewall networking firewalls should inter ... more details
for the W3 standard XML Transition Network Definition XTND was a document import export system developed by Claris for their products on the Apple Macintosh . Products supporting XTND placed an additional popup menu in the open and save dialogs, allowing users to read and write documents from any supported format. The name is a four letter contraction of extend , the Mac using four letter identifiers in its resource fork system resource files. XTND was first introduced on some of Claris II releases MacWrite MacWrite II , FileMaker FileMaker II and MacDraw MacDraw II . The system proved popular, and became a major selling point for Claris products, which were otherwise considered somewhat low end . The system was soon used by a number of other products as well, and became fairly common during the early 1990s. Around 1990 91 Claris gave the system to Apple, who eventually re branded it as a basic part of the Mac OS known as the Translation Manager . They also added Macintosh Easy Open which offered to open unknown documents using software installed on the machine and converting it using XTND. A developer s guide, XTND Programmer s Guide , was published in 1991 along with the XTND Developer s Kit 1.3 , which was placed on their ftp site. XTND broke on the PowerMac s, but an extension to the extension released in 1993 fixed that for a time. By the 1995 96 time frame it appears Apple had already abandoned the entire system. XTND consisted of a simple runtime engine that listed, loaded and managed a series of translators . The translators were stored in resource files placed in the Mac s System folder, allowing them to be found and used by any program supporting the XTND system. Almost all of the actual logic was located in the translators, the runtime simply handed off filenames and parameters to code stored inside. The only technical problem with XTND was that the conversion process was opaque . The system ran code in the translators which had no way to provide feedback ... more details
refimprove date November 2009 about the computer software Cthugha the mythical demon of this name Cthugha Cthugha is a music visualization computer program . It was written in the mid 90 s by Kevin Zaph Burfitt , originally for the Personal Computer PC , and was later porting ported to other platforms. It was freely distributed. Image Cthugha1.jpg thumb right Blue fire Image Cthugha2.gif thumb right Metallic Lightning Image Cthugha3.jpg thumb right Solar Flare Image Cthugha4.gif thumb right Oil Shimmer History Cthugha was started by Australian coder Kevin Zaph Burfitt ref name hotwired in September 1993 under DOS for the PC ref http groups.google.co.uk group comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard browse thread thread e4d6b2ec9f16915 1baef551acc87032 SBpro sampling stereo directly not DMA comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard Google Groups ref , but not released to the public until version 2.0 in March 1994 ref http groups.google.co.uk group comp.sys.ibm.pc.demos browse thread thread 9a44f34b905d6487 8216dbd8fb95521c CTHUGHA 2.0 1 1 comp.sys.ibm.pc.demos Google Groups ref . It wasn t until release 5.1p in October 1994 ref http groups.google.co.uk group comp.sys.ibm.pc.demos browse thread thread 38f211f102c06755 e78c29c7c0e2a851 Cthugha 5.1 released comp.sys.ibm.pc.demos Google Groups ref that popularity of the program took off this coinciding with the relatively new availability of cheap sound cards for PCs, such as the Soundblaster . Cthugha was released for Linux Cthugha L in May 1995 ref http groups.google.co.uk group comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.misc browse thread thread ed6f79eafb270129 61a28e2b83f05ddb Cthugha available for Linux comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.misc Google Groups ref , and for the Macintosh MaCthugha in January 1996 ref http groups.google.co.uk group alt.graphics.cthugha browse thread thread d56ed6a0a0dfcf71 ANNOUNCE PowerMac version of CTHUGHA now available alt.graphics.cthugha Google Groups ref In 1994 Cthugha was used heavily in the music video for the top 40 song Dead Eyes ... more details
Image PowerMac Cube.jpg thumb 300px An Apple Studio Display used with a Power Mac G4 Cube . The Apple Studio Displays were a series of displays manufactured by Apple Inc. Apple Computer Inc. now Apple Inc. that both used LCD and Cathode ray tube CRT as their displays. The Apple Studio Displays used DB 15, Video Graphics Array VGA , Digital Visual Interface DVI , and Apple Display Connector ADC as their display output. Some inputs Apple Studio Displays used were USB , Composite video , S Video , Apple Desktop Bus ADB , RCA connector RCA audio connectors , and TRS connector headphone jacks . 15 inch flat panel 1998&ndash 2003 The first Apple display using LCD technology was known as the Apple Studio Display 15 inch flat panel . It had D subminiature DA 15 as its connector, with 2 Apple Desktop Bus ADB ports, an S Video and Composite video Composite video port, as well as RCA audio connectors and a headphone jack. It was dark blue and transparent. Although it was made for the Power Macintosh G3 , it didn t match as the G3s at this time were beige. It had two stands you could place it on. It required System 7 System 7.5 System 7.5 or later. Released in March 1998, it was the first translucent Apple product since the eMate , predating the iMac G3 by a few months. It was replaced with a newer revision in January 1999 with white and blueberry styling and a brighter display. In August 1999 it was replaced with model featuring Digital Visual Interface DVI and USB ports with white and graphite exterior styling. In July 2000 it was replaced with a model featuring an Apple Display Connector ADC port and a clear plastic three legged stand based on the 22 Apple Cinema Display . It was discontinued in January 2003. All 15 Studio Displays had native resolutions of 1024x768 pixels. CRT models 1999&ndash 2001 Cathode ray tube CRT Apple Studio Displays in 17 and 21 sizes were introduced in January 1999 with VGA connector VGA DE 15 connectors and blueberry and white exterior styling. In August ... more details
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No footnotes date April 2009 Image SRM loading aboot.png thumb right A screenshot of SRM loading aboot a Linux bootloader The SRM firmware also called the SRM console is the boot firmware written by Digital Equipment Corporation DEC for computer systems based on the Alpha AXP microprocessor . The acronym SRM is derived from the phrase Alpha System Reference Manual , the publication detailing the Alpha AXP architecture and which specified various features of the SRM firmware. The SRM console was initially designed to boot DEC s OSF 1 AXP later called Digital UNIX and finally Tru64 UNIX and OpenVMS operating systems, although various other operating systems such as Linux , NetBSD , OpenBSD , and FreeBSD , for example were also written to boot from the SRM console. The third proprietary operating system published for the Alpha AXP architecture Microsoft Windows NT did not boot from SRM instead, Windows booted from the Advanced RISC Computing ARC boot firmware. ARC is also known as AlphaBIOS. On many Alpha computer systems for example, the Digital Personal Workstation both SRM and ARC could be loaded onto the EEPROM which held the boot firmware. However, on some smaller systems or large systems which were never intended to boot Windows , only one of the two boot firmwares could fit onto the EEPROM at one time. For example, the flash EEPROM of the DEC Multia , which was a small, personal Alpha AXP workstation designed to run Windows NT, was only large enough to hold a single firmware. The SRM console is capable of display on either a graphical adapter such as a Peripheral Component Interconnect PCI Video graphics array VGA card or, if no graphical console and or local keyboard is detected, on a serial connection to a VT100 compatible terminal. In this way the SRM console is similar to the Open Firmware used in SPARC and Apple Computer Apple PowerMac computers, for example. Upon system initialization, an Alpha AXP computer set to boot from the SRM console displays a short ... more details