Configer USB Mac

My mac does not see the USB connection like to my iPhone. What do I do wrong????

Update: It stopped working on my MBP now...after sleep mode. Looks like there are a lot of people with the same issue. Is there a solution for this?

Similar Messages

  • New Two Slot USB Mac Reader for P2 at Panny Booth NAB2006

    Jan Crittenton mentioned that there is a USB Mac reader being developed that will work with the MacBook Pros.
    She indicated it was available for viewing at the Panasonic booth at NAB?
    Just another P2 store, or something different at a different price point?
    Jan didn't mention price or the difference between it and the p2 store.
    Anybody got the skinny on this device?

    The one I had at the booth was a five card reader. It was USB 2 and firewire 800. Currently there already is a 5 card reader that is USB 2.0...but they go for $2000...as will the new ones.
    Jan did say that they are working on a smaller one...a single or dual card reader. But there wasn't a mock up at the booth that I saw.
    Shane

  • How to adapt ps2 keyboard to usb mac

    how to adapt ps2 keyboard to usb mac?

    Hello,
    It doesn't work for some Keyboards & Mice, depends on how they were made, but...
    http://www.neworldit.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=27380008801&gclid=CNjk0L Xt3rQCFWaCQgodKVEAqA

  • MobileSTOR MS2UT + esata + USB + mac pro = never-ending problems

    Hey gang,
    I seemed to have entered a perfect storm here:
    I had purchased the *MobileSTOR MS2UT 2 Bay SATA to eSATA/USB 2.0 RAID 0/1* Enclosure initially for a *dual 800 quicksilver G4* mac that I had, looking for a hardware-based Raid solution for back ups and to not burden the G4 processor. I have replaced the G4 with an early *2008 2.8 dual quad core mac pro*. After two machines and two different PCI sata cards, I've had no luck....
    (website for the above enclosure)
    http://www.sansdigital.com/mobilestor/ms2ut.html
    For starters, in the G4, I had a quality Seritek/1ve2+2 controller that had no problem with two other single drive enclosures, but failed with the MS2UT.
    http://www.firmtek.com/seritek/seritek-1ve2plus2/
    A glib response from Seritek support says that I should use their enclosure. Digging around I find that I need a controller card that can handle a port multiplier enclosure rather than just any serial ata enclosure. Seems silly to me that the user has to dig for this. I mean the USB & FIREWIRE interfaces don't seem to care: it says USB/FIREWIRE on the effing box of both the controller and on the drive, badda-bing, badda boom: it works. Whats with this high maintenance of esata. Well you get roughly 2-3x the performance so Ok, maybe its worth it.
    Well, with the macpro on the horizon,, I give up on the G4, close that unsolved mystery. For the mac pro I figure PCIe, a modern computer, no problem. I get the computer, fish around the internet for an esata PCIe card, then I come across this review of the WiebeTech SilverSATA II which appears to be similar to that of the MobileSTOR:
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/wiebetech/silver2/
    It appears that the unit has specific tastes as far as having the right card to make it bootable, multiport aware, etc... (the Sonnet Tempo 4+4 card works but its a PCIx card, not PCIe)
    Like I said: install a bootable Mac OS on any USB/firewire drive, plug it into any card, and it works... estata... its russian roulette...
    Ok so I round up some vendors, (firmtek, sonnet, Highpoint) send them emails to see what they think: if their latest cards will work with the MS2UT... They are all over the place.. they think it may work, they dunno... it should work, they haven't tested it... then they try to push their own enclosure hardware on me. I mean see an astrologist or have your palm read.. it seems more likely you'll get a more accurate answer from them, rather than vendors... props to Sonnet, though, they list compatibility right on the page with their controller.
    then 10.6 comes out... and you email vendors about compatibility on that OS, and they don't even email you back.
    So I find this review of the highpoint rocket raid for the mac on the great sight: Barefeats.com
    http://www.barefeats.com/hard119.html
    to make a long story short:
    +KEY FEATURES of the "eSATA for Mac"+
    +1. Dual eSATA ports+
    +2. 32 and 64-bit EFI onboard+
    +3. Able to boot Mac OS X+
    +4. Plug and Play for (Oxford and Silicon Image chipset) external storage+
    enclosures
    +5. 4x PCIe rating+
    +6. Support for Direct Attached and Port Multiplied enclosures+
    +7. RAID 0, 1, 5, and JBOD support using browser-based manager+
    +8. Native support for Snow Leopard+
    +9. Compatible with 2006 - 2009 Mac Pro+
    I should be set, right? WRONG!
    I email highpoint, detailing that I planned to mix both Port multiplied (PM) and direct access (DA) enclosures on the same card at the same time. They say maybe (only describing the PM enclosure, not even mentioning the DA enclosure compatibility as I specified), since its a raid card and I intended to use it with an enclosure with its own raid hardware, however they say they see no issues. Well it shows they don't even know their own hardware: Their docks say that the card supports PM enclosures as well as DA (direct access) enclosures. Their web based software even shows the two as separate categories. What is buried in the manual and not cleared up by tech support or their product page is that YOU CAN'T MIX PM AND DA ENCLOSURES ON THE CARD AT THE SAME TIME!!! I explained more in the paragraph above than any tech support from any company. Unbelievable where support has gone these days.
    I discover the above because I found the card at Fry's believe it not and since they have a generous return policy I tried it out and learned the above the hard way. No dice on the MS2UT with what is perhaps the most forgiving esata card for the mac.
    So more hunting on the web, this time the enclosure's manufacture site: sans digital.
    http://www.sansdigital.com/mobilestor/ms2ut.html
    ...clicking on the accessories tab I find several esata adapter cards... funny that they include ones that don't appear to support PM enclosures... Anyway, I study two that state they supports port multipliers:
    http://www.sansdigital.com/adapters/ha-san-4espcix2.html:
    http://www.sansdigital.com/adapters/ha-dat-4espcie.html
    Ok, I may not get a bootable enclosure.. I just want to get this thing working in esata since cloning my internal raid on the mac pro takes 8 hours using usb, and my main purpose is to maintain a clone so I make my compromise.
    I should be set, right? WRONG!
    reading the fine print on both cards it says:
    *(Please note that the host adapter card is based on Silicon Image chipset, which currently only support up to MAC OS 10.5.1 by Silicon Image.)*
    I do more research, it seems any manufacturer using chips by Silicon Image will have an issue with 10.6 macs! On some websites it says Silicon Image will never release a driver. On firmtek it says they make their own driver and swears that it works. At the Silicon Image website they say they are an OEM provider so don't bother them, and that its up to the vendor to make a compatible driver. Sheesh!!
    I don't get it.. whats the point in having an esata sticker if it appears to come in more flavors than an ice cream shop!
    Oh and it gets better: I go to the sonnet site, thinking they have to have something that works, looking at their latest tempo SATA E4P:
    http://www.sonnettech.com/product/temposatae4p.html
    well, the fine print is EXHAUSTIVE, but again props to Sonnet for making it crystal clear:
    (4) Sonnet Tempo cards are compatible with most external SATA storage. However, external hard drives with USB 2.0/eSATA dual interface based on the Oxford Semiconductor OXU931DS storage controller chip may not be compatible with Mac OS X when connected via SATA. Known issues are kernel panics occurring when the drive is connected, or the drive not being recognized by the operating system.
    +Summary of external SATA storage+
    +• Storage with eSATA alone +
    Compatible
    +• Storage with triple interfaces +
    Compatible
    +• Storage with eSATA plus Firewire 400 and/or 800 +
    Compatible
    +• Storage with port multiplier support (multiple drives) +
    Compatible
    +• Storage with RAID 0, 1, or 5 (multiple drives) +
    Compatible
    +• Storage with eSATA plus USB (based on JMicron 20366) +
    Compatible
    + these compatible drives include, but are not limited to:+
    +- OWC Mercury On-the-Go USB 2.0/eSATA 2.5" portable+
    +• Storage with eSATA plus USB (based on Oxford OXU931DS) +
    +not compatible+
    + these incompatible drives include, but are not limited to:+
    +- Western Digital My Book™ Premium ES Edition™+
    +- Seagate Technology FreeAgent™ Pro+
    +Advanced users note that this card is not yet compatible in full 64-bit boot. Snow Leopard default boots in 32-bit mode, except in an Xserve.+
    So in short: if you have an enclosure that has both USB and esata, but does not use the JMicron 20366, then it will not be recognized by the card. If you have an enclosure with three interfaes: USB, FW and esata, you're fine. Keep in mind too: most manufacturers don't put the source manufacturer of their chipsets on the box. So I ask..
    *HOW IS THE CONSUMER SUPPOSED TO KNOW!*
    I swear, a perfect analogy is if I go to best buy, buy a toshiba DVD player only to discover it doesn't play DVD's that contain movies produced by Sony Pictures..because its not a a Sony/columbia House movie. You think consumers would put up with that crap? UNBELIEVABLE...
    So now I have this really versatile enclosure that apparently can't run on Mac 10.6 with ANY esata controller for the mac. I really like the design of the enclosure, with its hardware based raid that is hot swappable and has a small footprint. However there seems to be no way to get a controller card for this device that will work on a 10.6 mac.
    I guess whats inferred is that you should get an enclosure with the fewest variety of ports, i.e. esata/fw/usb... ironically if it has all three, you are ok, but not if it has usb/esata. Being that USB is the most popular, thats not easy. I'm looking to contact Sans Digital to see if they will exchange it for me, possible for a model with esata/fw800 or an esata only model, if it exists. My last resort is to just use it as a USB drive (my intention was to use it as a clone of my system, with the added security that the enclosure makes a copy of a copy in raid 1), however its like 3x as time consuming than esata.
    If anyone has a working MobileSTOR MS2UT/wiebetech SilverSATA II in a 10.5 mac pro, please respond to me with your config. Thanks for reading!

    Thank you hatter for your reply.
    I'm familiar with OWC, as I've done business with them since 2001, as well as XLR8.
    I have a 2008 mac pro so the 2009 model related problems are not an issue in my situation
    As I stated above I go to reputable vendors for my hardware who have specific mac experience. I look specifically for hardened compatibility so that there is support for things like deep sleep. The Sans Digital enclosure was over $200..it was not cheap. The USB/Esata combo is the most common interface for the enclosure storage market. Having a compatibility issue is a vendor fault, not the buyer. Having minutiae flavors of esata compatability based on chipsets roulette wheel is inexcusable. The enclosure needs that I have is for the medium to be removable and be able to be rebuilt at the hardware level, i.e. at the enclosure's control panel. To the mac its just a drive. The hotswap and back up is transparent to the OS and mac hardware, and allows me to change from raid 0/1 and do back up right from the enclosure interface.
    So far I haven't had problems with USB/Firewire. Meanwhile Esata to me has been nothing but beta testing for vendors and seeing how the chipset manufacturers have gone loosey-goosey on following spec and just dump cheap chinese crap into the market with no pride.
    for comparison:
    USB/FW, PATA, SATA, SCSI
    1) industry standard
    2) native drivers
    3) bootable. Period.
    4) buy a controller card/raid card, plug it in, format, it works even through major OS upgrades.
    5) USB/FW: Hot-swapable. Yes it really does work.
    Esata:
    1) Multiple standards (again, look at the Sonnet website to see the minefield one has to walk through to mate a controller card to an enclosure)
    2) non native drivers. Buying an esata card is like marrying into the vendors family. Plus if you manage to get things working and do an OS upgrade, you are playing russian roulette. If you system boots off it, then get life insurance because you may kill yourself.
    3)Not bootable and no one seems to care to explain why. Whats odd is that some earlier PCIx cards were bootable (like sonnet Temp 4x4) but their PCIe successors aren't. Not sure if this has to do with the host computer BIOS and/or the current chipsets from SI which rely on custom drivers from the vendors. Another lovely example of this are the ODD_SATA ports on the Mac pro: storage only, not bootable. Sure it makes sense now that I've learned it the hard way, however to users of FW/USB and even IDE, one would think that motherboard ports are bootable. Yes I know this is a mac bios thing and its not even considered as part of the feature set of the computer
    4) As I've shown, each controller card seems to be unique, even if its from the same vendor. Even the drivers vary from card to card! Heck even the vendors are unsure as to how compatible their controller cards are with various enclosures. That is proprietary, not industry standard. OS upgrades doesn't seem to provide native driver support for Direct access and/or port multiplying interfaces. The problem with this is that film/video users like myself like to build bullet proof systems, and with raids that I've built from IDE, FW, or USB, I've never had the minutiae of compatibility issues as I've had with esata. I installed an Acard raid controller in my dual 800 back in 2001, installed the drives and forgot about it. it just worked through multiple OS upgrades. Not sure whats gong on with esata.
    5) Can't call it hot swappable if I can't get the **** thing to wok in the first place.
    My analysis is this: Esata is basically a proprietary format to the vendor that sells the hardware, while USB/FW is an industry standard. I bought a quality enclosure that said "esata", I bought a quality controller that said "esata", it didn't work. I had to learn the hard way about DA and PM enclosures and now about chipset conflicts. I've built computers since the late 80's amiga days, hot-rodding that computer well beyond spec and with custom cooling. SCSI terminators and IDE master/slave issues were easy-cheesey because they followed straightforward rules. This esata stuff is just plain sloppy work on the part of vendors and as Danny Glover said I'm getting to old for this **** as far as being a beta tester for hardware.

  • Windows 7 No bootable device (Win7 on usb, Mac mini md387)

    Hello.
    I want to install Windows 7 to my Mac mini MD387 (2012). I don't have an external disk drive (dvd), but i have an usb-drive (Transcend 32GB).
    I tried creating bootable usb using Boot Camp, Windows 7 (using cmd). But when mac mini restart I always get message "No bootable device...". And i can't install Win7.
    Can you help me?

    this is in the bootcamp manual: restart and when the grey screen appears, start tapping your spacebar rapidly until it boots up. I know it sounds crazy but it works
    It doesn't work...

  • USB Mac drive FileVault encrypted - does not accepted the Password

    Hello,
    I've got the following problem:
    I bought an external USB hard disk (Seagate GoFlex 320GB) and configured it on my iMac (3.4GHZ, 16 GB Ram) with  Mac OS Extended (Journaled, encrypted), formatted it & did a partition layout.
    This hard disk worked without any problems on iMac, MBP and MB Air. I could copy data onto it and access it without problems. Unfortunately, last week, I connected this USB hard disk to my MBP (Generation 2012 with Mac OS Lion 10.4.7) - and the MBP crashed totally and I had to fully reboot it.  Since this coincident I can't access my USB hard disk  --> it does not accept/ take my password anymore - no matter where I connect & try (iMac, MBP, MB Air…)
    In short words - the MAC's recognize the USB disk & the "enter password" sign appears on the screen - I then enter the correct password (no doubt!)  - but the USB hard disk does not accept it & in the disk utilities program I can't make any changes either (no removal of the password, no changes of the password, no decryption,…etc.)
    As the data on this USB hard drive are extremely important (I need them more than urgent!) - could you please help me with a solution to this issue?
    thanks

    This knowledge base article gives info on resetting the password.

  • USB MAC 10.9.1 serial console help

    i boaught a usb to serial cable
    installed driver
    got zterm
    com port USBSERIAL1
    but all i get is grabage
    9600 8 bit no parity 1 stop bit
    help.
    what m i doing wrong?
    UPDATE: using GoSerial with 115200 8 bit no parity 1 stop bit it worked

    I have a MAc boock air with OS x 10.7.5,
    I bought the adapter usb to serial port, but the drivers that come with it are for Windos , I am stuck .
    No idea what to do for using the mack for connect to the console port of my cisco labs routers.
    Please any idea of what to do would be graet .
    Thanks

  • I have an IBook dual USB Mac OS x laptop. What should I do with it?

    I got this laptop from my aunt. It's an old IBook G3 Dual USB laptop with Mac OS x. It was very lightly used. I bought an airport card for it and downloaded a browser for it called Classila. Now I'm wondering: What should I do with it? Are there any games I can buy for it? I can't play any modern games like Minecraft or any others I've tried. I have an Xbox 360 so I dont rely on this iBook for gaming. Any tips? 5 point to best answer. Thanks

    I would suggest maximizing the RAM with a 512 MB module.
    http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/100SO512328L/
    We need to know how much space is on the hard drive. See if Macintosh HD > Applications > Utilities > Disk Utility gives you the information on the hard drive (its capacity and available space).
    Mac OS X 10.1 is available from Amazon.
    http://www.amazon.com/Mac-OS-10-1-OLD-VERSION/dp/B00005QVGV
    Once you have installed Mac OS X 10.1, you can then download the update here:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1226
    Note this:
    If updating from Mac OS X 10.1, you must install Security Update 7-18-02 for v10.1 prior to installing this update.
    However, this is still a 10-year-old version of the OS and is not very good, so be forewarned.
    If the iBook has a drive which is capable of reading DVDs and has enough available space on it, then it would probably run best with Mac OS X 10.4.11 (once you have maximized the RAM with the 512 MB module).
    Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) Requirements:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1514

  • USB 10 key pad and USB Mac Keyboard- 10 key barely works

    Where in settings can I go to try and solve the problem of my Targus 10 key usb pad not working on the Mac OS??
    There is no driver from Targus. I'm a Mac newb so I need some direction on how to hardware troubleshoot.
    FYI.. the 10 key works just fine on the Windows XP side.

    If you plug in a USB 10 key keypad and the system tells you it does not recognize your keyboard, you may need to change your keyboard layout.
    system preferences > international > input menu > US Extended
    I check the box to show the input menu in the menu bar and check both the US and US Extended keyboards, then I can switch between them. The input menu will show up as a flag to the right of the volume. Many foreign language fonts require different keyboard layouts to access all the special characters associated with that language.

  • Resettare driver usb mac retina 10.8.2

    Ciao a tutti,è un po di tempo che ho un problema con il mio nuovo retina 15".
    Ho un proiettore Picopix 1020 che quando avevo la versione 10.8.0 funzionava tranquillamente
    all'aggiornamento 10.8.1 ha iniziato a dar un po di problemi e a 10.8.2 non funziona proprio piu.
    Quando collego questo proiettore al mac apro il programma esce una schermata blu e si riavvia
    in continuazione fin quando non stacchi la porta usb..
    Vi chiedo c'è un modo per portare solo i driver usb allo stato 10.8.0?
    Grazie in anticipo.

    It looks like it has PowerPC drivers:
    Software Requirements
    -Pentium II 300MHz 128Mb RAM or better, USB socket, Windows 98/ME/2000/XP, approved MME or ASIO compliant soundcard.
    -iMac, Power Mac G3 or better with USB running OS9/OSX.
    -Keyboard powered by USB (cable included) or 9V DC, 250-300mA centre positive power
    Unless you can find updated drivers it may not be compatible.

  • USB, MAC, PC, and Password

    Hello,
    I need to protect my usb flashdrive.  But, I am using with a MAC and the computer that I would be using away from home is a PC.  If I set the password on the MAC, would the usb flashdrive be compatible with the PC when I insert it?

    It depends on how you encrypt the data on the disk.
    Apple & Microsoft have their own systems for encrypting data Filevault & Bitlocker (I think).
    Neither one is compatable with the other OS!
    You will need to use a cross platform solution, it used to be easy to recommend Truecrypt, but now the project looks like it has come to an end…
    http://truecrypt.sourceforge.net
    Some people claim version 7.1.a of Truecrypt is OK, that is your call.
    See if any of the suggestions meet your needs…
    http://superuser.com/questions/381849/cross-platform-file-encryption-tool
    Whatever you decide to use ensure you have a backup before you format the disk or create an encrypted container.

  • Soundblaster recon3d usb mac issues.

    Hi, i m having a major issue updating the firmware of the soundblaster recon3d usb for mac, tried everything still no avail, also when i installed this external sound card on my mac, there was a major high pitch sound from my headphones that was constant till i disconnected & connected the sound card to the mac, hope i didn't damage my bose headphones is this sound normal to come first? i m trying to update the firmware to the latest one they released for mac, it downloads the firmware on to the mac but gets stuck in the intalising process half way & says to try the install again Any help would be great.
    Thanks..

    Have you tried resetting the SMC and PRAM?
    Intel-based Macs: Resetting the System Management Controller (SMC)
    About NVRAM and PRAM

  • 5800, iSync, USB, Mac

    Hello,
    I've been successfully synching my calendar and address book between a Nokia 5800 and a MacBook running Mac OS 10.4.11 using iSync over a Bluetooth connection. I've also been using Nokia Multimedia Transfer over a USB connection to transfer audio and image files from one to the other; again, basically without problems.
    But I can't get iSync to recognise the phone over a USB cable! Why is this? I've tried connecting in all the available modes, and unless I choose 'PC Suite' I get a warning that iSync can't use it, which implies that it can otherwise... except it seems it can't!
    Has anyone got any ideas? 

    I'm thinking maybe iSync only allows one connection type per device?  Try removing the existing 5800 device from iSync first.  Select it then choose Devices -> Remove Device.  After that add a new device in iSync while the phone is connected via USB in PC Suite mode (with bluetooth off to make sure it doesn't try to find the 5800 over bluetooth).
    Ravi

  • USB Mac-compatible gaming controllers

    Are there any USB gaming controllers (especially anything similar to Playstation controller) that are Mac-compatible that I can use to play my emulator games?

    Yup,
    I use a Logitech one.
    Works great.
    -FTIWL

  • Getting online with a G3 iBook (Dual USB) & Mac OS X 10.2.8

    Hi everyone,
    I recently inherited the aforementioned iBook from my sister - it's in great condition and will suit my wife well for internet, word processing, etc. It isn't equipped with either Bluetooth or an AirPort card - the former I've fixed with a USB dongle, the latter I'll (eventually) fix with an AirPort card.
    In the interim, I'd love to just plug its Ethernet port into my ADSL router to get it onto the internet. I have done this and can't figure out how to get the internet "working". I was Mac prior to OS X and then again Tiger and beyond, so I don't have any experience with Jaguar. Can anyone help?
    Kind regards,
    Aaron.

    Been awhile now since I last used Jaguar 10.2.8, and the fact the Dual USB iBook G3 12"
    with 500MHz processor and RAM upgrade capacity of either 576MB or 640 MB, with a
    10GB hard disk drive or larger, and CD-ROM optical drive can run Panther 10.3.9 adequately
    but a little slow, may give you an option if you can get the Panther retail install set on CD.
    Panther has better internet tools and some other interface details are extremely improved.
    And it is a stable system with a minimal of preventative maintenance. Frankly, I am not
    sure how valid Jaguar is online; it is two full systems behind the leading edge now, and
    will not have any security updates or support. Panther bits are still online, and if you get
    a retail installer for 10.3.5 or later, the 10.3.9 and security updates and other bits are
    still there at Apple Support Downloads, for free. Newer browsers are compatible with 10.3.x
    and the last version of Panther is recommended. It is stable. The HDD can be zeroed;
    the OS X can write zeros on there and then you can reformat it with HFS+ on Disk Utility
    on the booted OSX installer (should be retail installer, not one from another Mac.) An
    advantage is doing all that can fix low-level errors; and it also defragments the whole HDD.
    If you were to keepsake anything on the computer, you'd want to archive it off; and then
    consider if you'd need OS 9.2.2 to look at anything found there, in the future. I no longer
    use pre-X applications, though I have some in a box. That's another story.
    {If you have no attachment to the OS9.2.2 system probably shipped with the iBook G3
    white dual-USB, you do not have to worry about it. On the other hand, if you do keep
    9.2.2, it is fast on that hardware. It should connect to the internet, but there are almost
    no browsers available -- maybe old downloads of iCab and odd builds of old Mozilla --
    secure software? Probably not available; but the odds of an attack should be way down!}
    With Jaguar you should be able to plug the Ethernet cable into the iBook, look into
    the System Preferences and find the equivalent of the Network panel. You can
    more easily do most everything in Panther compared to Jaguar; so I won't even
    try to remember details on that OS X version. I do remember Panther since I ran
    it up to about six months ago on one of my G4 Macs. I still have a bootable clone
    of the entire computer from just before I went to Tiger. (There's alot of deadwood
    between Panther utilities and addons and Tiger, depending on how it was set up.)
    Jaguar and Tiger are universes apart. I had an iBook G3 white dual USB May
    2001 build, it was fun, nice, and I used an AirPort Extreme Base Station to
    go online with it; the unit had the original AirPort Card and my AEBS has a
    built-in 56k dialup modem; so before I got DSL, my iBook was wireless online.
    When I sold the iBook to an 85 y/o guy some miles away, I upgraded it to
    Panther only and set up two user accounts with passwords; so he would not
    have to learn all the basics - it has been over two years - he's still a Mac user.
    And that's his first computer. I call and say hi and ask if it still is working OK;
    and included a pile of stuff with the machine, and had it repaired before I sold it.
    Well, I have said a bit -- too much. The System Preference panels have one
    for Network access and you should be able to choose what sources you need
    to get the internet through; these would be 1- dialup modem 2- airport wi-fi
    and 3- Ethernet. There should be some control panel and checkboxes; and
    the setup should be relatively easy. The only catch may be if the ISP does
    not support that old an OSX system. It should work, if not, go wireless
    and set up the base station so it can see and share 802.11/b, for this iBook.
    Good luck & happy computing!

Maybe you are looking for