I have no idea where this thread would actually fit on the Mac Rumors forum so im just going to stick it in here since I know yall appreciate a vintage mac
so I have a MacBook2,1 (Late 2006 Core 2 Duo T7200) which had a broken screen so I removed the LCD assembly to make a Mac "Pancake" as @AphoticD likes to call them
now this mac is one of my expendable ones for messing around with Firmware hacking etc (it was the first Mac I hacked new microcode into in this thread: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/updating-a-mac-pro-s-cpu-microcode.2114187/ )
and well I was expermanting with it yesterday when I managed to flash MacMini1,1 Firmware onto it and much to my surprise it actually booted up with pretty much no issues
I tried flashing the MacMini1,1 firmware as a sort of sh*ts and giggles thing, since I knew the MacMini1,1 used the same chipset as the MacBook2,1 I was curious what it would do. (and if I did properly brick the machine I could just re-program its BootROM using an external programmer)
I was not expecting it to work as well as it did, it actually solved a couple issues in respect to this specific MacBook as im running it with no LCD, but with stock firmware OS X would always think there was an internal display plugged in still, and BIOS emulation would not work properly when running via an external screen
however flashing the MacMini1,1 Firmware disables the internal LVDS connector completely. allowing OS X and BootCamp to function properly when running with Just an external screen plugged in via mini DVI
I plan to run benchmarks soon to see if the CPU is now running at the full 2Ghz as before due to no battery it would be stuck at 1Ghz
(curiously flashing the Mac Mini 2,1 Firmware disables all video out completely, and for those wondering I was also able to flash the MacBook1,1 FIrmware too)
I Just wanted to document this mad case of going off the Firmware deep-end so to speak, turning MacBooks into Mac minis
so I have a MacBook2,1 (Late 2006 Core 2 Duo T7200) which had a broken screen so I removed the LCD assembly to make a Mac "Pancake" as @AphoticD likes to call them
now this mac is one of my expendable ones for messing around with Firmware hacking etc (it was the first Mac I hacked new microcode into in this thread: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/updating-a-mac-pro-s-cpu-microcode.2114187/ )
and well I was expermanting with it yesterday when I managed to flash MacMini1,1 Firmware onto it and much to my surprise it actually booted up with pretty much no issues
I tried flashing the MacMini1,1 firmware as a sort of sh*ts and giggles thing, since I knew the MacMini1,1 used the same chipset as the MacBook2,1 I was curious what it would do. (and if I did properly brick the machine I could just re-program its BootROM using an external programmer)
I was not expecting it to work as well as it did, it actually solved a couple issues in respect to this specific MacBook as im running it with no LCD, but with stock firmware OS X would always think there was an internal display plugged in still, and BIOS emulation would not work properly when running via an external screen
however flashing the MacMini1,1 Firmware disables the internal LVDS connector completely. allowing OS X and BootCamp to function properly when running with Just an external screen plugged in via mini DVI
I plan to run benchmarks soon to see if the CPU is now running at the full 2Ghz as before due to no battery it would be stuck at 1Ghz
(curiously flashing the Mac Mini 2,1 Firmware disables all video out completely, and for those wondering I was also able to flash the MacBook1,1 FIrmware too)
I Just wanted to document this mad case of going off the Firmware deep-end so to speak, turning MacBooks into Mac minis