I think I killed my Mac!

Ok, first you need to know that I am “Not” a Mac guy, (I want to be though) and my Boss gave me a G4 Imac PowerPC to take home and learn on. Here at the office he gave me a G5 with 10.4.11 on it. Anyway to make a long story short, I took the little Imac home and was playing around with it and I noticed that even though I had an admin account on the computer I did not have ownership. So I decided to just reinstall the computer and have a clean start. Now you have to understand that I have been an IT engineer for 17 years and never really had much to do with Mac’s other than networking them into the Windows environment. So there I was thinking “well how hard could this be” and I attempted to wipe the drive using the disk sets Matt (my boss) gave me. He had given me 2 sets one box has a big blue X on it and reads version 10.0 the other box has another big X on it but the X has a Leopard skin on it and reads 10.2.3. So I put the blue X disk in thinking (from what I read) that you should use the original disk to wipe the computer. We it would not boot to the disk (yes I held the C key) I tried several times with both disk sets to get it to boot. Finally I decided that this was stupid and I was just wasting time, so I took the computer apart and pulled the drive out and connected to my big PC and formatted the drive. I was thinking that the Mac disk would see a clean drive and boot right into the OS so I could reinstall. This was not the case, in fact it did nothing but flash a little folder and a question mark. By now I am sure you all are laughing pretty hard but please try to understand that I am only now learning how a Mac works and believe me when I say they are very different from PC’s. Can someone please tell me how to fix this?
Thanks for your time, I am really impressed how well Mac’s work and wish I had started using them years ago. (but that’s another story)
Have a great day,
Mike,
Message was edited by: Eagle77

Wow, you really have to let go of some of those IT engineer habits. You don't have to rip the disk out to get a new OS on it. But I know the feeling when you're trying to get something done and things don't work as expected, and you're trying to use you acquired PC skills on the Mac.
The question mark simply means that the Mac can't find a bootable partition, so it's no indication that you killed it! Mac and PC use different partitioning schemes, so repartitioning on the PC (which I assume you did to be able to format the disk) will not work.
As an alternative to the c key, try d (for dvd), or alt (which brings up the boot menu, takes some time though). Also, you have to press that key as soon as you hear the chime, and keep it pressed until you see a reaction. The Mac won't start beeping at you for doing that.
Those disks are ancient, btw. The current version is 10.5.2, that's three major OS versions more recent. To get started, those should work, but I wouldn't try to do any development on such an old system.

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