Well, let us see if the abilities of the community here are as spectacular as the show describes.
I have a 1st Gen, Rev B, iMac G3 233MHz 96MB RAM. I also have the System Install and Restore disks that came with the machine when I bought it way back in the 90's.
The machine had a working 4GB hard drive in it. For those of you who remember or have ever used the classic Mac OS, it is not fast, it has never been fast, and that machine is no exception. My goal is to turn it into a thin client, or a lightweight install of Linux. However, I wanted to retain a copy of the Mac OS, as the primary users of this machine would be somewhat computer inept, shall we say. To do such an install I would need a bigger hard drive, so I pulled the 4GB out, and slapped in an old 10GB I had lying around.
Every guide I had read said install Mac OS first. Having installed linux systems on my PC before, I thought no big deal, I'll do a clean install, run the updates, and then shrink the drive and install Debian on this thing.
So, I booted up off of the Mac OS 8. 5 iMac System Install CD, and used the "Disk Setup" tool to partition the drive, and then the installer on the CD to install the operating system. No errors come up, no problems occur. After the install still in the live cd mode, I can see files on the disk, I can read and write to the disk no problem.
However, when I remove the disk and reboot, I get the blinking question mark of DOOM! I've tried a clean install of JUST debian all default settings, and I get the same problem as I do with the Mac OS. The problem as I believe it is that something is being partitioned incorrectly, or something in OpenFirmware is being missconfigured.
Now, suggestions, ideas, solutions, anything. I have an x86PC running Linux (Not Windows), if anyone has tools that only offer x86 builds.
-Siriusfox
[Edit; I didn't see the Water Cooler Questions area. Can someone move me over there please?]