G3 memory
Pat
Power Mac G4, Mac OS X (10.4.7)
Power Mac G4, Mac OS X (10.4.7)
If your G3 has the original hard drive of 4 or 6 GB you will find that OS X will be very cramped, if it will fit at all. If you replace the stock drive with a larger drive on the built-in on-board ATA interface, you must have the first partition smaller than 8GB for the OSX installation and booting to work. A PCI expansion ATA interface card of any kind will be much faster than the built-in ATA interface where the original drive is connected, and the PCI ATA drives do not have the 8GB partition requirement.
Up to Mac OS 10.2 is supported on the Beige G3, but if you want to install 10.3 or 10.4, either being more stable than 10.2, you must use a free software utility called XPostFacto to perform the installation and set your boot drive instead of using the Mac OS Startup Disk.
http://eshop.macsales.com/OSXCenter/XPostFacto/
To share a single high-speed internet connection (either DSL or Cable) in your home with multiple computers, you need a router/hub. These also provide a hardware firewall which can provide additional security. You configure the router by a web-based interface, just make sure it is Mac-browser friendly. That would not only allow you to share the internet connection, but also to share files, hard disks for backups, and a printer, (and I think with the latest version of Toast a CD/DVD burner) between the Macs. The built-in Ethernet port on the G3 is rated at a much slower speed than a fiber-optic line is capable of, but it should be adequate for normal home use.
Good luck.
Did your ISP provide the router or did you buy it? Do you know what your rated Ethernet speeds are on the router and the G4? What speed is your Fiber Optic Service rated?
Glad you were able to get things working. I hope the Tiger install goes well for you. I could not get the Setup Assistant to run unless I booted with the Shift Key into Safe Mode. Then, I never got the On-line Registration to work, but that is after the computer set up is completed. Apple has a web-page where you can complete the registration. Also, upon the first boot you may notice some sluggishness as the computer is creating searchable indexes of you hard drives. You can see the work the computer is doing by running /Applications/Utilities/Activity Monitor. Or you can click on the magnifying lens in the top right to see that Spotlight is indexing. Wait until that finishes before you start trying to use the machine.
I don't think that you have to have all the same size memory installed, but it may help if they are all the same rated speed. So, you might be able to add one of your original RAM chips back in the empty slot, but if its an older slower type it might not work reliably with the new RAM. Not totally sure about that. If you decide to fill the third slot later, get the same type as the other two.
G3 memory