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Nov 25, 2010 4:18 AM in response to limsilasby Jan Hedlund,Yes. Though the originally installed drive had been manufactured by a third party, there should be information on the label indicating that it is an Apple unit.
However, even with an Apple unit, a subsequent reformatting through a third-party utility could possibly make it difficult for Apple HD SC Setup to recognise the drive. If so, another program would be needed (Mt. Everything may be of interest to begin with).
Jan -
Nov 25, 2010 1:28 PM in response to Jan Hedlundby limsilas,thank you, jan.
now, sorry to switch back to the topic of the powerbook 150 - but as you'll recall, that's the drive that i pulled out and attempted to read (via an IDE-USB adapter) on a modern mac, but to no avail.
however, i re-installed the hard drive, and was able to power it on!! and even log into the system!
but of course, i've reached another hurdle - for some odd reason, my floppy disk drive is not working properly. when i try to insert a disk, it stops about 1/3 of the way in. i've inspected the drive and there appears to be nothing obstructing the disk, but for whatever reason i simply cannot insert it fully... -
Nov 28, 2010 1:11 PM in response to limsilasby Jan Hedlund,If you cannot repair the floppy drive, and if the PowerBook 150 otherwise is starting/operating OK from the hard disk, you would have to find another file transfer method via existing software.
If ClarisWorks is on the computer, it is possible to use the program's communications section (a standard serial modem could be used for transfers over the public telephone network; or you could connect a null-modem cable between the PowerBook and the serial port of a PC for a local transfer).
Jan