I spilled water on mine around 2003, and I literally heard it sizzle. Took the whole thing apart to dry it out, and put it back together. I swore I'd never do that again. That Mac was still working a decade later.
@@RilaGaems unfortunately, I sold it about a decade ago when I needed money (which I regret doing!!). It still had the original hard drive in it at the time, and despite heavy use 2001-2004, was in mint condition.
I swear those things are on par with Nokia 3310 in terms of durability, I've bought a 2011 Mac Mini a couple of months back and it's super durable too (although I haven't really done anything extreme with it)
Trying to change an optical drive or hard drive on an apple laptop from 1998 - 2009 ends up changing you as a person... I've never seen this sort of excessive overengineering on any other laptop of that era.
@@ch.illmatic I took my 2004 14" iBook G4 apart not long before I sold it, and added Bluetooth to it internally. I had no idea what I was getting into. I ended up snapping the magnesium chassis and had to replace that. I also replaced the top case, bottom case, and lid cover. That thing looked brand new by the time I was done, and sold appropriately (I sold it in 2009 so I only got a couple hundred for it).
I did a similar upgrade on my Graphite 466 clamshell last year, but after maxing out the RAM and adding the SSD there was really nothing much it could do as it was way too slow for a modern browser. So I designed a replacement logic board that hosts a raspberry Pi compute module (CM3) and runs the original display, and uses the keyboard and trackpad. It's a straight swap, being the same dimensions as the original (it looks pretty empty though!) Benefits are that it has full Wifi, bluetooth, and is much faster, so I can actually use it in coffee shops (my main reason for doing it :) ). Thinking of selling the logic board so others can do the same, but unsure it'll work out to be worthwhile! Cheers!
Man, I remember using SSDs to bring new life to my old stuff, and how it took awhile for my brain to adjust from the subconscious expectation that there had to be some hard drive noises to know it was running.
Silly enough I stuck to a spinning Samsung 2009 ide in my Mac mini G4 Becuase I didn’t trust the IDE to mSATA adapters from china. And it’s plenty fast for an OS optimized and designed to run on spinning rust. It’s 5400RPM and an 8mb cache
This upgrade process is crazy, but with Apple it's honestly not all that unheard of. I can personally only think of two different Apple products where the hard drive upgrade/replacement process isn't an absolute nightmare and those would be a few years of Macbook and the Mac Pro line. Everything else is just like this, which is crazy considering that hard drives are usually some of the most common upgrades you might want to make to a system...
Your videos are so good... Great job... You got a great voice, great pace, background music is very nice and fitting... Awesome, keep up the good work...
I hope I can find one of these to buy at a decent price one day. This was a fantasy computer for my wife back when she was a child and I'd love to salvage one for her. I think she liked the purple one best? I donno maybe one day lol. Love the content man!
You can use any IDE SlimDrive, they all have the same mounting points for the faceplate and that slim ide port on the back, even modern sata slimdrives use the same faceplates but would oviously be incompatible on the backside.
Heh - all of the iBooks were a challenge when trying to replace the hard drive - tons of different screws and stuff to disassemble. The TiBooks were a bit easier - but still serious surgery. The one small plus on the iBooks was the ease in upgrading memory - it was fairly easy to get to under the keyboard. (Even the TiBooks required more disassembly to do that). As always - great video - thanks!
I've got one of these -- it still works, sort of. I was trying to change out the hard drive for a sd to ide adapter. Went ok until I managed to break the trackpad cable. Those ribbon cables in ALL mac products get very brittle over the years...
The great thing about these old Macs is they don't care if the SSD is slow or lower end. The bus speeds are so limited that even the slowest SSD and adapter will still likely max it out
Okay, so I have to say this for those who worked on blueberry iBook G3s like mine. Mine absolutely would not take any burned media, but the second I gave it proper pressed OS9 install media it was fine. Even games only worked if they weren't burned, even when they were scratched. Old drives not playing nicely with CD-Rs is an annoyingly common issue.
I really want another computer to look like this in a more standard rectangle shape, IDK if it's nostalgia or weird taste. Complete with an OS that doesn't have oversimplified and flat visuals, something shiny like Vista or OS X.
It is best to pre-install the OS from another Mac (a Pismo for exemple). You can partition it and create a dual boot OS9/OSX. My 6 clamshell have a Dual Boot OS 9/Mac OS X Tiger, and one for fun have OS 9/Jaguar/Panther/Tiger with 4 partitions.
Boy am I glad I didn't have to service these laptops when i did that kind of work. That's a huge amount of work just to swap a HDD. A hard disk replacement shouldn't take more than 5 minutes.
It was definitely a revelation when the white MacBook arrived - the hard drive just slid out from a shield in the battery compartment with just a few screws. Apple no doubt had feedback from their service people.
No matter how envoved or hard or old the laptop i always ALWAYS like to try to put in an SSD as I don't really like having a hard disk drive in a portable device such as a laptop as if you drop it not only do you risk breaking the laptop but worse all of your data would get destroyed where as with an ssd at least your data is less likely to be destroyed from dropping
I just swapped the HD for an SSD on a 12inch G4 Powerbook not as cray as this but it was a challenge, Now it won't boot from a usb installer waiting for OSX 10.5 install media to arrive and hopefully i didn't brick it... I give you props for this project.
@@goclunker I covered my bases and I installed via a osx 10.5 retail DVD. I have a 128gb USB drive with leopard through big sur installers. She didn't like that even with the terminal commands
I know it sounds crazy but i just had a brainstorm. What if you had a WiFi to lan adapter then connected it to a network switch and a router. Here's the plot the wifi connected to the adapter is an portable Hotspot. Is it possible. Can you have a portable lan party?
@@RIGID. depending on what kind of lan party you want to do, if you want to do a modern lan party all you would need to so is connect the computers and or game consoles like the Nintendo switch directly to the Hotspot wifi but, if you want to do say a retro lan party you would need to have something like a jackery and connect a wifi repeater to your Hotspot and connect an ethernet switch to the repeater and then you would have your lan for retro machines at least that's how I would do it, I never have so I can't say exactly if this would actually work
@@everyonesloopy I was talking about retro lan parties. Imagine like a whole 5 or 6 computers connected to that. No need for lan subscriptions (if hotspots and wifi existed then)
I have the last model...high end graphite... and had the HD replaced with an SSD. Awesome deal for this classic. Oh, the DVD drive catch was broken...so I had it repaired...and as long it was going under the knife... I had it done. LOL
I've had to replace a hard drive in one of these more than once. The third time I gave up, and learned that you can just boot off of a USB flash drive that's HFS formatted... very, very slowly. And I was still more okay with that than replacing the HDD again.
@@kirishima638 They sorta do! I had an iBook non-SE (the one with no Firewire) and for some flash drives, you could just boot with it already plugged in. Open Firmware defaulted to the USB drive since the internal HDD was dead. I believe newer iBooks required you to drop into the OF shell and enter in some commands to boot from USB, but it was still possible!
Awesome! Anyone here ever replace older laptop internals with other OEM/custom/SBC/SOC/IOT hardware? So as to keep outer exterior, but with better hardware.
How is the performance after the upgrade? I just got a 466 SE Firewire and am going to do it. Were there any tricky parts to be careful of? Did you watch a video of it, or did you have a guide? Wonderful job.
A silent PC or mobile device is what I prefer the most. If I don't need something very powerful I can use a Mini PC with passive cooling and SSD or M.2 storage drive
Yoo could you make a video on the IBM's strongest rocks, the ThinkPad T Series? I've got a T23 with a Pentium III and 1gb of ram from 2001 and I really love it since it runs perfectly like the day it was first made.
It was a necessary ill trashing that CD drive in the first part of the video. The rest went smoothly, so it wouldn't have been an MJD video without that!
Hey man.. I got an IMac G4 that I dearly love, but unfortunately because it’s so old, a part in it failed and it no longer boots, it only shows the Apple symbol and loading icon. Any idea what failed? I’m guessing the Hard-drive, but I’m not sure.
For some reason I was watching a iBook clamshell repair and I was thinking about putting an SSD into one and coincidentally this comes up on my recommended
And I thought swapping my mom's laptop's HDD for an SSD was complicated... (A Lenovo E41. You have to take out the keyboard to take out the lower plate to take the drive. It's nuts)
I just find it amusing that this was the generation when the Mac was made to be so effortlessly upgradeable with its single-point open case and hinge...but the iBook is last generation, designed never to be touched by human hands, engineering. I can't believe no one at Apple thought being able to upgrade the hard drive was going to be important. I'm glad they ended this practice in the later Macbook models where you had just eight screws on the bottom and you could have access to everything you wanted to upgrade.
Hey MJD! Do you ever use Dial up on the old Computers before the Ethernet or Wifi (or something) Because it might be me who hasn’t seen you use a Modem.
My silent iBook doesn't even make noise from the optical drive, as I replaced the CD-ROM drive with an SD card reader (running through a PATA-to-SATA adapter). This technically gives me two SSDs in the iBook. :D My 366 MHz iBook also has a 128 GB short SATA SSD and 576 MB of RAM.
If I'm not mistaken. That drive has a standard connector that's just adapted to whatever the heck they're using in the iBook. So that means you could have used any drive.
Exactly that. The connector pulls off and under it you got the standard IDE drive connector. Thats how I put a DVD drive into mine. Any IDE drive will work in the iBook.
Hi, I have a question for you Michael, if you take your iBook G3 modified on an airport? They're not going to check you on customs if you modified you G3 before?
the drive just doesnt show up. i ordered the exact same parts. even three different ssd adaptors and ssd cards to make sure. even an ide 44 pin adaptor to usb to connect to my modern imac. it's like nothing's connected... any ideas?! 😢
Okay so on new world powerpc mac there are two different question marks the blinking system folder means that OpenFirmware cannot find any drive or bootable OS the blinking floppy means that the OpenFirmware can find the drive but after loading the Mac OS ROM the ROM can't find the classic Mac OS boot folder.
A floppy disk with a blinking question mark means it can't find a bootable disk. A system folder blinking or with a question mark blinking means it found a disk, but can't find a proper System Folder to boot off of. Sometimes it can mean the System Folder is corrupted or the folder needs to be "blessed". (Open up the System Folder, pull the System file out of the folder, then put it back in and close the folder.)
@@minty_Joe Naw I actually own one of these Macs the new world macs use the system folder when there is no disk or bootable OS. I literally just checked.
@@themacintoshnerd I did some checking on my old notes (I used to service Macs back in the day). The System startup sequence is as follows: (1) P.O.S.T. instructions within the ROM, then (2) Mac OS ROM and then finally (3) System File search on disk (HDD, floppy, Optical, etc.). The ROM (2) contains Open Firmware, QuickDraw Toolbox, Window Manager and Menu Manager. Essentially, about half of the OS is contained within the ROM, which will be on the ROM chip(s) and as a file on the physical disk. QuickDraw makes lines and colors on your screen; Window Manager draws and controls the Macintosh windows; Menu Manager creates the menus at the top of the screen. #3 is the remainder of the support files for the OS; the System File, Finder File, System Enablers (if applicable), Extension files, Preference files, Control Panel files, etc. A blinking question-mark/disk icon happens when it can't find a System Folder.
If you were to install an operating system on this ibook clamshell would you be able to say watch RUclips videos if it was small enough like if you use puppy linux or is there just nothing that you can actually use these computers for any more?
I hate working with ribbon cables so much. Nintendo LOVES fragile ribbon cables just as much as Apple. The original Game Boy has a killer ribbon cable that will self destruct if you breathe on it wrong, and they carried that design philosophy with them when they designed the Switch Joycons.
The worst one of those is on Apple displays. There are several electronics embedded into the flat flex cable and, even with people that are crazy enough to try to repair it, there's a 50% chance you're gonna damage the flex cable either attempting to de-solder it from where it's connected or putting it back in.
Dumb question, is there DVD drive which would fit in this shell? Short of changing the entire motherboard, how high an operating system can this handle? Were they using Intel chips at this point and it can handle Windows of some sort?
The ultimate Clamshell revisions (made between September 2000 and May 2001), model name M6411 (FireWire SE) could be ordered and shipped with an optional 4x DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive (Sony CD-RW CRX820E). But they were equipped with PowerPC processors only, so they couldn't handle Windows at all. The first Intel Macs supporting another OS appeared in 2006.
You found a seller for the white ide bridge that came with a drive? huh.. i've been buying them blank and putting drives in.. and the drives i got cheap have a picture of a shark on them and the labels are printed with a laser printer and so poor quality they are illegible.. 2 of the 3 of them have already failed on me.. skipping those moving forward!
Nice video like always, Micheal! I never thought what you did was possible, great work. :) (i got 87th comment and i'm the 4.4kth person to view this! nice, sorry for bragging tho)
Just curious why didn't you just buy a regular 2.5 ssd to me I thought it would be simpler to buy a regular 2.5 ssd instead of what you bought. I'm not sure where you are from but I have a MicroCenter here in Minnesota about 15 minutes from where I live and you can get a great deal on a 2.5 ssd
I spilled water on mine around 2003, and I literally heard it sizzle. Took the whole thing apart to dry it out, and put it back together. I swore I'd never do that again. That Mac was still working a decade later.
does it still work?
@@RilaGaems unfortunately, I sold it about a decade ago when I needed money (which I regret doing!!). It still had the original hard drive in it at the time, and despite heavy use 2001-2004, was in mint condition.
💀💀
I swear those things are on par with Nokia 3310 in terms of durability, I've bought a 2011 Mac Mini a couple of months back and it's super durable too (although I haven't really done anything extreme with it)
I know you make mistakes, but i was probably never spill on my laptop again.
Trying to change an optical drive or hard drive on an apple laptop from 1998 - 2009 ends up changing you as a person... I've never seen this sort of excessive overengineering on any other laptop of that era.
iBook G4 was the worst imo, along with 12” PowerBook G4.
@@sjgrall I opened up my 2005 14" ibook g4... Never turned on again🤣it was a nightmare
@@ch.illmatic I took my 2004 14" iBook G4 apart not long before I sold it, and added Bluetooth to it internally. I had no idea what I was getting into. I ended up snapping the magnesium chassis and had to replace that. I also replaced the top case, bottom case, and lid cover. That thing looked brand new by the time I was done, and sold appropriately (I sold it in 2009 so I only got a couple hundred for it).
@@sjgrall No this is just Jony Ive designs lmfao.
Just Jony's designs.
"Last seen: 9 years and 2 months" uff, those were the best times.. glad you fixed it
I did a similar upgrade on my Graphite 466 clamshell last year, but after maxing out the RAM and adding the SSD there was really nothing much it could do as it was way too slow for a modern browser. So I designed a replacement logic board that hosts a raspberry Pi compute module (CM3) and runs the original display, and uses the keyboard and trackpad. It's a straight swap, being the same dimensions as the original (it looks pretty empty though!) Benefits are that it has full Wifi, bluetooth, and is much faster, so I can actually use it in coffee shops (my main reason for doing it :) ). Thinking of selling the logic board so others can do the same, but unsure it'll work out to be worthwhile! Cheers!
Please do! That sounds amazing!
If that's true then why haven't you posted any pictures or video of it anywhere?
@@kyle8952it took me 5 seconds of googling to verify he indeed did this including pics of the PCB
that’s so awesome
Man, I remember using SSDs to bring new life to my old stuff, and how it took awhile for my brain to adjust from the subconscious expectation that there had to be some hard drive noises to know it was running.
Silly enough I stuck to a spinning Samsung 2009 ide in my Mac mini G4 Becuase I didn’t trust the IDE to mSATA adapters from china. And it’s plenty fast for an OS optimized and designed to run on spinning rust. It’s 5400RPM and an 8mb cache
@@joshj88they are good tho upgrading to an SSD would be an huge upgrade in terms of speeds
This upgrade process is crazy, but with Apple it's honestly not all that unheard of. I can personally only think of two different Apple products where the hard drive upgrade/replacement process isn't an absolute nightmare and those would be a few years of Macbook and the Mac Pro line. Everything else is just like this, which is crazy considering that hard drives are usually some of the most common upgrades you might want to make to a system...
I think you are the best youtuber that i seen making these old-hardware videos
Your videos are so good... Great job... You got a great voice, great pace, background music is very nice and fitting... Awesome, keep up the good work...
Great video as always. Almost at 100 million views now, congrats! You've earned it over the last 13 years!
100 Million views?
@@thecomputergeek101old total views on every single video on the channel
Thanks!
I gotta say I love see the amount of storage that was excellent for older technology.
Congrats for your Patreon Page. You did it good for making PC, Mac and Linux related videos!
I hope I can find one of these to buy at a decent price one day. This was a fantasy computer for my wife back when she was a child and I'd love to salvage one for her. I think she liked the purple one best? I donno maybe one day lol. Love the content man!
You can use any IDE SlimDrive, they all have the same mounting points for the faceplate and that slim ide port on the back, even modern sata slimdrives use the same faceplates but would oviously be incompatible on the backside.
Heh - all of the iBooks were a challenge when trying to replace the hard drive - tons of different screws and stuff to disassemble. The TiBooks were a bit easier - but still serious surgery. The one small plus on the iBooks was the ease in upgrading memory - it was fairly easy to get to under the keyboard. (Even the TiBooks required more disassembly to do that). As always - great video - thanks!
I've got one of these -- it still works, sort of. I was trying to change out the hard drive for a sd to ide adapter. Went ok until I managed to break the trackpad cable. Those ribbon cables in ALL mac products get very brittle over the years...
2:35 - they weren’t talking about CD-R compatibility. Burned discs last a very short time compared to pressed discs.
As I always say, my go-to for all my geek needs. Nice one Michael
Wow, awesome work. I really missed seeing this one. I had it back in the day. It's awesome.
I will be tackling my g3 clamshell this weekend. Looking forward to it all working.
The great thing about these old Macs is they don't care if the SSD is slow or lower end. The bus speeds are so limited that even the slowest SSD and adapter will still likely max it out
Okay, so I have to say this for those who worked on blueberry iBook G3s like mine. Mine absolutely would not take any burned media, but the second I gave it proper pressed OS9 install media it was fine. Even games only worked if they weren't burned, even when they were scratched. Old drives not playing nicely with CD-Rs is an annoyingly common issue.
Polycarbonate, silent, and toilet seat-shaped. Not a common combination, but a good one.
I really want another computer to look like this in a more standard rectangle shape, IDK if it's nostalgia or weird taste. Complete with an OS that doesn't have oversimplified and flat visuals, something shiny like Vista or OS X.
It is best to pre-install the OS from another Mac (a Pismo for exemple). You can partition it and create a dual boot OS9/OSX. My 6 clamshell have a Dual Boot OS 9/Mac OS X Tiger, and one for fun have OS 9/Jaguar/Panther/Tiger with 4 partitions.
Used the same drive setup to upgrade my Compaq Presario 17XL360 to SSD.
10GB slow to 120GB fast :)
Nice! More of such stuff please 🙂
The AlmightyConicalFlask approves.
No way the AlmightyConicalFlask approves
guys The AlmightyConicalFlask approves
It's true - the AlmightyConicalFlask approves!
@@TheAmethystAurora They don't want you to know that the AlmightyConicalFlask approves but it's true!
I’d never think that the AlmightyConicalFlask would approve! It’s a miracle!
I was gonna go to bed. But MJD uploaded. Sleep can wait!
Druaga1 vibes 😂 loved the video as always, thank you!
Boy am I glad I didn't have to service these laptops when i did that kind of work. That's a huge amount of work just to swap a HDD. A hard disk replacement shouldn't take more than 5 minutes.
Putting an SSD in an old Apple product? Druaga1 would be proud!
It feels more tedious to disassemble than modern Macs (though admittedly there's less things you could swap on those). It's nuts :O
It was definitely a revelation when the white MacBook arrived - the hard drive just slid out from a shield in the battery compartment with just a few screws. Apple no doubt had feedback from their service people.
I feel that with PC laptops as well
@@AverageMichaelJordans ever heard of business laptops and Framework?
@@AverageMichaelJordans *windows laptops. a mac is also a pc
He assured us before nothing goes right in Michael MJD video.
No matter how envoved or hard or old the laptop i always ALWAYS like to try to put in an SSD as I don't really like having a hard disk drive in a portable device such as a laptop as if you drop it not only do you risk breaking the laptop but worse all of your data would get destroyed where as with an ssd at least your data is less likely to be destroyed from dropping
I just swapped the HD for an SSD on a 12inch G4 Powerbook not as cray as this but it was a challenge, Now it won't boot from a usb installer waiting for OSX 10.5 install media to arrive and hopefully i didn't brick it... I give you props for this project.
It won’t boot from usb. Google how to do it in open firmware. Its NOT native. You have to go into OF and type in a few commands to get usb boot 🙃
@@goclunker I covered my bases and I installed via a osx 10.5 retail DVD.
I have a 128gb USB drive with leopard through big sur installers. She didn't like that even with the terminal commands
@@cesarespinozaspain the only way it works through usb is a virgin osx dmg made via disk utility
I know it sounds crazy but i just had a brainstorm. What if you had a WiFi to lan adapter then connected it to a network switch and a router. Here's the plot the wifi connected to the adapter is an portable Hotspot. Is it possible. Can you have a portable lan party?
You can kind of do this with a WiFi repeater and your smartphone/hotspot so in theory, yes?
Just imagine a lan party in a van or something. My question is would the router connected to the switch work?
@@RIGID. depending on what kind of lan party you want to do, if you want to do a modern lan party all you would need to so is connect the computers and or game consoles like the Nintendo switch directly to the Hotspot wifi but, if you want to do say a retro lan party you would need to have something like a jackery and connect a wifi repeater to your Hotspot and connect an ethernet switch to the repeater and then you would have your lan for retro machines at least that's how I would do it, I never have so I can't say exactly if this would actually work
@@everyonesloopy I was talking about retro lan parties. Imagine like a whole 5 or 6 computers connected to that. No need for lan subscriptions (if hotspots and wifi existed then)
Amazing video bro.. love this stuff.. imagine it being scilent 🤯
Awesome video, Michael!
I have the last model...high end graphite... and had the HD replaced with an SSD. Awesome deal for this classic. Oh, the DVD drive catch was broken...so I had it repaired...and as long it was going under the knife... I had it done. LOL
I love your content, you’re the best tech RUclipsr! ❤
yez
I've had to replace a hard drive in one of these more than once. The third time I gave up, and learned that you can just boot off of a USB flash drive that's HFS formatted... very, very slowly. And I was still more okay with that than replacing the HDD again.
I didn’t think these machines supported USB booting?
@@kirishima638 They sorta do! I had an iBook non-SE (the one with no Firewire) and for some flash drives, you could just boot with it already plugged in. Open Firmware defaulted to the USB drive since the internal HDD was dead.
I believe newer iBooks required you to drop into the OF shell and enter in some commands to boot from USB, but it was still possible!
Awesome! Anyone here ever replace older laptop internals with other OEM/custom/SBC/SOC/IOT hardware? So as to keep outer exterior, but with better hardware.
$69 is a *NICE* price, shocked that you don't feel the same Michael!
10:13 literally mjd complaining while doing it then when the adhesive is off he stops 😂😂😂😂
The old hard drive noise is part of the charm tho 😢
Is it possible that there is an adjustment pot for the disc drive to adjust the gain of the laser?
I so want this laptop LOL. Such a wonderful example of the Tangerine iBook.
I've thoght, changing harddisk on my 17 inch - MacBook Pro from 2008 is the screw-hell, but iBook G3 Clamshell hits everything!
Try an ibook g3/g4
Damn, I wan't one now! Too expensive in France though, to put a SSD in the eMac is a more reasonable thing to do, great video!
16:57 why didn’t you do that anyway?
Let’s go he’s back!!
great video
How is the performance after the upgrade? I just got a 466 SE Firewire and am going to do it. Were there any tricky parts to be careful of? Did you watch a video of it, or did you have a guide? Wonderful job.
A silent PC or mobile device is what I prefer the most. If I don't need something very powerful I can use a Mini PC with passive cooling and SSD or M.2 storage drive
Druaga1 approves of this video, my fellow smoker 👍🏻
Yoo could you make a video on the IBM's strongest rocks, the ThinkPad T Series? I've got a T23 with a Pentium III and 1gb of ram from 2001 and I really love it since it runs perfectly like the day it was first made.
Michael catching up to Linus's segue style quickly!
It was a necessary ill trashing that CD drive in the first part of the video. The rest went smoothly, so it wouldn't have been an MJD video without that!
Hey man.. I got an IMac G4 that I dearly love, but unfortunately because it’s so old, a part in it failed and it no longer boots, it only shows the Apple symbol and loading icon. Any idea what failed? I’m guessing the Hard-drive, but I’m not sure.
For some reason I was watching a iBook clamshell repair and I was thinking about putting an SSD into one and coincidentally this comes up on my recommended
Silent. It surprised me too. No proc fan?
An M.2 to IDE adapter? Color me and my old IBM Thinkpads intrigued...
I absolutely love your channel.❤
And I thought swapping my mom's laptop's HDD for an SSD was complicated... (A Lenovo E41. You have to take out the keyboard to take out the lower plate to take the drive. It's nuts)
I just find it amusing that this was the generation when the Mac was made to be so effortlessly upgradeable with its single-point open case and hinge...but the iBook is last generation, designed never to be touched by human hands, engineering. I can't believe no one at Apple thought being able to upgrade the hard drive was going to be important. I'm glad they ended this practice in the later Macbook models where you had just eight screws on the bottom and you could have access to everything you wanted to upgrade.
Hey MJD! Do you ever use Dial up on the old Computers before the Ethernet or Wifi (or something)
Because it might be me who hasn’t seen you use a Modem.
Pretty damn cool to be honest
Can you make a similar video for the Dual USB white iBook? I have a 700mhz model.
My silent iBook doesn't even make noise from the optical drive, as I replaced the CD-ROM drive with an SD card reader (running through a PATA-to-SATA adapter). This technically gives me two SSDs in the iBook. :D
My 366 MHz iBook also has a 128 GB short SATA SSD and 576 MB of RAM.
18:37 damn, my childhood game
If I'm not mistaken. That drive has a standard connector that's just adapted to whatever the heck they're using in the iBook. So that means you could have used any drive.
Exactly that. The connector pulls off and under it you got the standard IDE drive connector. Thats how I put a DVD drive into mine. Any IDE drive will work in the iBook.
I say this in the video. The problem is the face plate isn’t transferable to just any drive.
@@MichaelMJD there is drives that are that thin. I just don't know any model numbers off the top of my head without doing some research
@@MichaelMJD You could also glue it on as you don’t really need the mechanical eject button.
Not just silent, MUCH more reliable!
Hi, I have a question for you Michael, if you take your iBook G3 modified on an airport? They're not going to check you on customs if you modified you G3 before?
No they don't really care
the drive just doesnt show up. i ordered the exact same parts. even three different ssd adaptors and ssd cards to make sure. even an ide 44 pin adaptor to usb to connect to my modern imac. it's like nothing's connected... any ideas?! 😢
Okay so on new world powerpc mac there are two different question marks
the blinking system folder means that OpenFirmware cannot find any drive or bootable OS
the blinking floppy means that the OpenFirmware can find the drive but after loading the Mac OS ROM the ROM can't find the classic Mac OS boot folder.
A floppy disk with a blinking question mark means it can't find a bootable disk. A system folder blinking or with a question mark blinking means it found a disk, but can't find a proper System Folder to boot off of. Sometimes it can mean the System Folder is corrupted or the folder needs to be "blessed". (Open up the System Folder, pull the System file out of the folder, then put it back in and close the folder.)
@@minty_Joe Naw I actually own one of these Macs the new world macs use the system folder when there is no disk or bootable OS. I literally just checked.
@@themacintoshnerd I did some checking on my old notes (I used to service Macs back in the day). The System startup sequence is as follows: (1) P.O.S.T. instructions within the ROM, then (2) Mac OS ROM and then finally (3) System File search on disk (HDD, floppy, Optical, etc.). The ROM (2) contains Open Firmware, QuickDraw Toolbox, Window Manager and Menu Manager. Essentially, about half of the OS is contained within the ROM, which will be on the ROM chip(s) and as a file on the physical disk. QuickDraw makes lines and colors on your screen; Window Manager draws and controls the Macintosh windows; Menu Manager creates the menus at the top of the screen. #3 is the remainder of the support files for the OS; the System File, Finder File, System Enablers (if applicable), Extension files, Preference files, Control Panel files, etc.
A blinking question-mark/disk icon happens when it can't find a System Folder.
why did you not just transfer that ribbion cable adapter to the new drive from the start...
Can you give us a link to the files to install windows 95 on the Wii pls
If you were to install an operating system on this ibook clamshell would you be able to say watch RUclips videos if it was small enough like if you use puppy linux or is there just nothing that you can actually use these computers for any more?
looks fun
I hate working with ribbon cables so much. Nintendo LOVES fragile ribbon cables just as much as Apple. The original Game Boy has a killer ribbon cable that will self destruct if you breathe on it wrong, and they carried that design philosophy with them when they designed the Switch Joycons.
The worst one of those is on Apple displays. There are several electronics embedded into the flat flex cable and, even with people that are crazy enough to try to repair it, there's a 50% chance you're gonna damage the flex cable either attempting to de-solder it from where it's connected or putting it back in.
Totally not trying to get a matching green ibook and imac g3
100% love it 🥰
I was drunk and didn't realise you uploaded lol
Can you share a link to that IDE adapter and flash module you used?
I meant to put those links in the description when I published this, but they're added now. Thanks!
Hi Smokers, MJD here
Hello Smokers... wait wrong channel.
Dumb question, is there DVD drive which would fit in this shell? Short of changing the entire motherboard, how high an operating system can this handle? Were they using Intel chips at this point and it can handle Windows of some sort?
The ultimate Clamshell revisions (made between September 2000 and May 2001), model name M6411 (FireWire SE) could be ordered and shipped with an optional 4x DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive (Sony CD-RW CRX820E). But they were equipped with PowerPC processors only, so they couldn't handle Windows at all. The first Intel Macs supporting another OS appeared in 2006.
nice work!!!! what is the difference in boot time between the two drives?
My 2011 MacBook Pro is loud when you play you 4k videos on RUclips
You found a seller for the white ide bridge that came with a drive? huh.. i've been buying them blank and putting drives in.. and the drives i got cheap have a picture of a shark on them and the labels are printed with a laser printer and so poor quality they are illegible.. 2 of the 3 of them have already failed on me.. skipping those moving forward!
Nice video like always, Micheal! I never thought what you did was possible, great work. :) (i got 87th comment and i'm the 4.4kth person to view this! nice, sorry for bragging tho)
Are you gna finish compaq portable?
I can see a new video series in the making
"Installing windows XP on the iBook G3"
I believe there others laptop that use the same style drive I hp dose too
Just curious why didn't you just buy a regular 2.5 ssd to me I thought it would be simpler to buy a regular 2.5 ssd instead of what you bought. I'm not sure where you are from but I have a MicroCenter here in Minnesota about 15 minutes from where I live and you can get a great deal on a 2.5 ssd
You should make a video on how Microsoft still hosts the download for Windows 8.1
i try replace my cd rom in 2011 MacBook pro from old laptop from pc laptop its does work however its little to big
The CPU in this model can be swapped with an MPC7410 G4... May be a worthwhile upgrade.
No, its junk now.
I’m guessing not, but does it boot any faster?
nice work