By default, the Apple Power Macintosh G4/533 (Digital Audio) features a 533 MHz PowerPC 7410 (G4) processor with the AltiVec "Velocity Engine" vector processing unit and 1 MB of backside cache. It shipped configured with 128 MB of RAM, a 40 GB Ultra ATA/66 hard drive, an 8X CD-RW drive, and a 4X AGP NVIDIA GeForce 2 MX graphics card with 32 MB of SDRAM. AirPort (802.11b) was available by custom configuration.By custom configuration, this model also could be equipped with dual 533 MHz PowerPC 7410 (G4) processors each with the AltiVec "Velocity Engine" vector processing unit and 1 MB of backside cache.In addition to the digital audio sound system with a highly-efficient Tripath "Class T" amplifier that powers USB speakers, for which the series is named, the Power Macintosh G4 (Digital Audio) also introduced a faster system bus (133 MHz supporting "over 1-GBps data throughput"), faster PC133 RAM (but lower capacity than the "Gigabit Ethernet" series that it replaced), and four full-length 64-bit, 33 MHz PCI slots.All Power Macintosh G4 (Digital Audio) models use a case design effectively the same as that introduced with the Power Macintosh G3 (Blue & White) -- complete with a fold down door on the side that makes upgrading very easy -- but is clad in a more conservative "graphite" and white color scheme. Custom configurations also were available.
Manual For Apple Power Mac G4
Download File: https://jinyurl.com/2vGTA7
The G4 (MDD) was one of the loudest PowerMacs ever, and gained the nickname "G4 Windtunnel" for this reason (A fan and power supply replacement plan was subsequently offered by Apple). It shipped in three configurations: a dual 867 MHz model, with 256 MB of RAM, a 60 GB hard drive, a CD-RW/DVD-ROM drive, and a 32 MB NVIDIA GeForce4 MX graphics card was $1699; dual 1 and 1.25 GHz models shipped with 256 and 512 MB of RAM, 80 and 120 GB hard drives, a DVD-R/CD-RW "SuperDrive" and an ATI Radeon 9000 Pro graphics card, for $2499 and $3299, respectively. All models were discontinued in January 2003.
Whether you want to create a flyer, edit a video, or just surf the internet, an Apple Mac PowerPC personal computer can make it possible. The Apple Mac PowerPC provides ample power for users working with graphic design, multimedia creation, or simply surfing the web.
This Mac model was touted by Apple as a personal supercomputer when it debuted in 1999. It was powered by a 400 MHz PPC processor and required at least 64 MB of PC100 SD RAM. In 2002, Apple introduced two new 933 MHz and 800 MHz PowerPC G4 processor models. Many of these PowerPC CPUs can run up to the 10.5.8 Leopard MacOS, with the proper hardware, and the built-in RAM can be expanded to 1 GB for faster operation. The G4 also sports a graphics card containing up to 16 MB of SDRAM. Typical units also include an optical drive, a hard drive, as well as Ethernet, FireWire, and USB ports.
The Apple Mac OS and the PowerPC Mac are designed for multimedia creation, but there are many PowerPC applications available. You can create audio CDs or burn video DVDs with an optional CD-RW drive. It can also play video, powered by its included NVIDIA GeForce2 graphics card. Its FireWire port allows for connecting digital video camcorders and the direct input of raw video for later editing and post-production.
In your case, Mactracker lists 20 models of Power Mac G3/G4/G5 computers. The information includes an overview, software, memory and graphics, connections (Ethernet, USB, Firewire, audio, etc.), history and links to Apple manuals.
The Quicksilver line received criticism in MacWorld's review for removing the "eject" button and the manual eject pinhole, as well as the pass-through monitor power plug, and for the base specification of 128 MB RAM as being insufficient for running Mac OS X.[7]
"I think it's notable that every Apple system app that ships with Jaguar is Cocoa based (except the Finder), whereas a huge number of the apps with 10.1 were Carbon. Pretty much every group inside Apple has now discovered the power of Cocoa (except, maybe, the sound guys, who still are writing Carbon-only APIs and Java code.).
"Make (or get someone to make) a connector adapter: fan socket to standard hard drive power connector. Connect the fan power lead to the 5V HD lead (not the 12 V) and bridge the free fan connector pins at the mother board with a 20 ohm 10 watt (18 watt in the picture) resistor. (From fan data: 12V 600 ma P= IV = 7.2W)) Plug the fan socket into the adapter and the HD socket into one of the available free hard drive connectors inside the Mac. The big fan will now run constantly but the 5V connection runs it at much reduced speed."
The resistor is necessary because the heat sensing circuit needs to see a load when it decides to supply power to the fan. If the load is not there the circuit unceremoniously shuts off the Mac, as a safety feature. This resistor is quite large and needs to be mounted to the metal side wall of the Mac.
A further option is a totally new rear plate for the right hand side that allows you to easily fit a larger variety of power supplies without having to try and cut up the original G3/G4 plastic panels these panels cost 15.
With the power and efficiency of Apple silicon, Mac Studio completely reimagines what a high-performance desktop looks like. Every element inside Mac Studio was designed to optimize the performance of M1 Max and M1 Ultra, producing an unprecedented amount of power and capability in a form factor that can live right on a desk.
Powered by either M1 Max or M1 Ultra, Mac Studio delivers extraordinary CPU and GPU performance, more unified memory than any other Mac, and new capabilities that no other desktop can achieve. With M1 Max, users can take their creative workflows to new levels, and for those requiring even more computing power, M1 Ultra is the next giant leap for Apple silicon, delivering breathtaking performance to Mac Studio. M1 Ultra builds on M1 Max and features the all-new UltraFusion architecture that interconnects the die of two M1 Max chips, creating a system on a chip (SoC) with unprecedented levels of performance and capabilities, and consisting of 114 billion transistors, the most ever in a personal computer chip.
With its ultra-powerful media engine, Mac Studio with M1 Ultra can play back 18 streams of 8K ProRes 422 video, which no other computer in the world can do. Mac Studio also shatters the limits of graphics memory on a desktop, featuring up to 64GB of unified memory on systems with M1 Max and up to 128GB of unified memory on systems with M1 Ultra. Since the most powerful workstation graphics card available today only offers 48GB of video memory, having this massive amount of memory is game changing for pro workloads. And the SSD in Mac Studio delivers up to 7.4GB/s of performance and a capacity of up to 8TB, allowing users to work on massive projects with incredible speed and performance.4
Studio Display has three USB-C ports that deliver speeds up to 10Gb/s to connect high-speed peripherals, storage, and networking right into the display. A Thunderbolt port enables users to connect Studio Display and any connected peripherals to their Mac with a single cable. The same cable also delivers 96W of power to a Mac notebook, allowing Studio Display to even fast-charge a 14-inch MacBook Pro. And up to three Studio Displays can be connected to MacBook Pro, creating a powerful edit bay or animation workspace.
To build gdb-powerpc-linux on Linux, you need the normal build tools such as GCC installed.Download the GDB source code. Version 7.9 is reported to work: -7.9.tar.gzUnpack it and cd into the dir, then build and install with:
Every Mac includes an integrated circuit (IC) or microcontroller chip responsible for all of the power-management functions of the computer. Depending on when your Mac was built, the power-management chip is known by one of the following names:
Most of the AppleCare Knowledge Base documents linked in the table below directly address resetting the power-management chip for a specific Mac model. However, some of the documents include that information as part of other troubleshooting or repair activities covered by the article. Read the relevant document throroughly before proceeding.
HP has a mini desktop, with aHP has a mini desktop, with a socketed CPU, so the user can change the CPU, the HP mini desktop also is easy to take apart, and add memory, it also comes with m.2 slot for an SSD, an M.2 slot for wireless, in addition to a SATA plug for a hard drive, or SSD. Why the Hell PcPer does not review this is beyond me, just because it is advertised as a business computer, does not make it useless. The mini desktop opens with a thumbscrew, and it is user serviceable, its torx screwed together components can be easily accessed and updated, go read the service manual at HP website, you will never see Apple do something like that. After Apple pulled this no quad core crap, that was it for me. You could make a HTPC/server with this mini, it has 6 USB 3.0 ports, gigabit Ethernet port, 2 displayport with multi-stream video ports, etc.
Note the power supply on theNote the power supply on the mac mini (and AppleTV, Airport etc.) is internal. So a direct size comparison to a unit with a power brick is not fair. 2ff7e9595c
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