It can run Linux, but you obviously did something wrong. Any OS can only ever be as capable as the user.Amazing to see Linux being supported on PowerPC. Sadly, my G4 Titanum does not run it.
I suck at dancing... but I don't blame dancing.
It can run Linux, but you obviously did something wrong. Any OS can only ever be as capable as the user.Amazing to see Linux being supported on PowerPC. Sadly, my G4 Titanum does not run it.
Amazing to see Linux being supported on PowerPC. Sadly, my G4 Titanum does not run it.
It should run it just fine. What have you tried installing and what was the problem you ran into?
Try this one, Lubuntu remix, and try the 12.04, not the 16.04 version.Ubuntu - while it does load up, it gets stuck on the blue screen of the installer.
Based on what you want out of the G5, it only makes sense to put Tiger or Leopard on it. Tiger if you also want access to older classic software, and Leopard if you're fine with OS X alone.Hi there,
Just wondering what the most suitable OS for a Quad G5 would be.
It is a hobby just to own these G5 machines and love them for just having existed at the time...call me emotionally disturbed.
I do not want to use the quad on a daily basis. The goal is to run a system on it to proof that it is capable of playing 1080p, to surf the net and to write letters. And that there is not so much noise as expected.
Paired with an ssd and lots of RAM.
now to you pros: which os is at the end of the day (!) the most suitable one to achieve a decent experience on those machines?
thanks a lot!
I just run Leopard on anything that will boot it. Pretty much all the info you could ever need is on this forum. There are a couple custom Linux distros on here that are supposedly really great. Debian, and Ubuntu 16.04, and there's a Mint that is in development as well. If you want Linux I'd start there. Getting any of the main distro's from their official repo's will be a pain to set up.Thanks but I also would consider putting some Linux on it. As long as it runs smoothly like a charm.
Linux will only run like that on PowerPC if you already know what you're doing. But virtually every distro for PowerPC will run slower than OS X. This thinking that Linux is always lighter and faster is rarely true anymore.Thanks but I also would consider putting some Linux on it. As long as it runs smoothly like a charm.
This is an area where Linux trounces Tiger or Leopard though, right? More modern and secure browsers.Tiger or Leopard + TenFourFox for modern web support/security
For sure, but most PowerPC hardware now, especially G4 and older, isn't going to be a very good experience on most hardware. The glory days of PowerPC Linux were the late 90's to about 2013. Especially with Debian. But someone that just wants to appreciate an old Mac from time to time isn't really going to get that experience with Linux, unless they have a deep bag of tricks. People without those skills will have a never ending string of roadblocks.This is an area where Linux trounces Tiger or Leopard though, right? More modern and secure browsers.
This is why I don't run Linux on my Macs. I love Linux, but I have a collection of PPC Macs because I like them. I can run Linux on literally anything. In fact, openSUSE is installed on my ThinkPad right now and I use that if I'm not on my 15" PBG4.For sure, but most PowerPC hardware now, especially G4 and older, isn't going to be a very good experience on most hardware. The glory days of PowerPC Linux were the late 90's to about 2013. Especially with Debian. But someone that just wants to appreciate an old Mac from time to time isn't really going to get that experience with Linux, unless they have a deep bag of tricks. People without those skills will have a never ending string of roadblocks.
But Tiger can run well on even a G3.
BSD is what someone who wants an open source OS on Mac PowerPC should be using in 2020 IMO, but that has an even higher learning curve than Linux.
In my opinion it's never been true. It can be, but rarely out of the box. Maybe if you used a distro like DSL.This thinking that Linux is always lighter and faster is rarely true anymore.
The Quad needs at least Tiger 10.4.2. Try a retail 10.4.6 disc/image.No matter what image I tried, even an original disk from G4 will end up in the same kernel error and tons of lines printed over the “please restart your computer” screen.
Help yourselfAre there mor OSX Versions on Macgarden?
30-inch or bust.Thinking about the 23 inch aluminium cinema display.
Im away from my tiger iMac but I use the temp monitor found here:Thanks alot. I begin to love that Quad. Now of course as an oldschool "owner" of retro hardware, I would like to bring up the maximum of this machine. Meaning optional hardware and software that fits well. Just for fun!
Thinking about the 23 inch aluminium cinema display. More important: I dont have WLAN nor BT support. What were the original parts for those two?
Is there a way to configure fan speed? Cann I read the CPU temps in Tiger?
thx