iBook G3 and Tiger
2 Macbooks 1gig ram, Mac OS X (10.4.8), Mac Mini, G5 Tower, G4 Tower
2 Macbooks 1gig ram, Mac OS X (10.4.8), Mac Mini, G5 Tower, G4 Tower
With the standard 10 GB hard drive that came on a
2001 iBook, I don't recommend installing Tiger, even
with a RAM upgrade. You can do it, but whether it is
desirable is another matter.
If you don't care about using iTunes or iPhoto, and
all you want to use it for is internet browsing and
e-mail, you can maybe squeak by with Tiger, but I
believe you will see optimal performance with Panther
(OS X 10.3). Upgrade the RAM with a 512 MB RAM module
if you want to upgrade the OS. If you want to do
anything more than internet browsing and e-mail,
upgrade the hard drive, too, to 40 GB or more.
Usually, it makes more sense to buy a newer computer
than to spend nearly as much money on upgrading an
older one with a new OS, more RAM, and bigger hard
drive.
Apple does not consider the hard drive in an iBook to
be a customer-installable part. It's not an easy
thing to do.
Check out the procedure, and see if you think you are
up to it:
http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/50.12.0.html
http://www.powerbooktech.com/knowledge,name-Hard-Drive
,type-6.htm
Make sure in the System Profiler that burning is
supported on your iBook before going to the trouble
of changing out the drive.
Why not go for a tray-loading combo drive instead? It
will be a better fit for the iBook.
Obviously, your experience (and many others) shows
that it is possible, but I decided that it was not
what I wanted for my iBook G3 800 MHz, which had been
back for the logic board repair three times.
iBook G3 and Tiger