imac G3 and ethernet

mddublin

Registered
Hello,

I have an imac G3 Bondi Blue upon which I've just installed OS9. For some reason, I can't get it hooked up to my cable modem via the ethernet port, what steps should I take to configure my mac for the internet?

Thanks,

Mdublin
 
Have you set the iMac to receive an IP address using DHCP (assuming that is how your ISP is giving you the IP)?

Click on the Apple menu (top left of menubar) and go to Control Panels-->TCP/IP. Once that's loaded, make sure that you have "Ethernet" and "DHCP" selected in the drop down lists. Close the window and confirm any dialog boxes that come up. You should then be able to get out to the Internet.

Post back with the results.
 
Thanks for the help, but I'm still having trouble. Do I need an older ethernet cable than the one I have from my digital cable box to my iBook G4? Now I'm wondering if the ethernet port is somehow damaged or something.
 
Please Help! I cannot get this bondi blue imac G3 to connect to the internet, if in internet Assistant, it already has ISP info that I manually entered, could that be affecting it?

Would the same type of ethernet cable work with an ibook G4 and an old bondi blue?
 
Did you perform the above steps I mentioned? Did you close out of it when you finished configuring it and did you confirm to save the changes?

If you haven't done that, then it's not going to work.

As for the ethernet cable, it should work unless the cable is bad. Ethernet is an industry standard so any ethernet cable will work on any ethernet port. It doesn't matter if the computers are different, ethernet is the same standard no matter what.

Try testing with another ethernet cable. I don't think that the ethernet port itself is bad, but there's always the possibility. Try with another ethernet cable and see if things get fixed.

Also, in the TCP/IP settings you might need to include the DNS nameservers that your ISP uses in the "Nameservers" section. I've never had any luck with Mac OS 9 or below ever detecting the DNS servers automatically even through DHCP, but I could be wrong.

Hope this helps.
 
... I've never had any luck with Mac OS 9 or below ever detecting the DNS servers automatically even through DHCP, but I could be wrong.

...
Interesting. I have never had a moment's difficulty with DHCP and any version of MacOS X or MacOS 8/9. And I work in a Microsoft shop.
 
Interesting. I have never had a moment's difficulty with DHCP and any version of MacOS X or MacOS 8/9. And I work in a Microsoft shop.

Well, not so much with DHCP but with the DNS servers supplied by the DHCP server being read on the Macs running Mac OS 9 or less. I've usually had to include the DNS servers manually, but that could have been to a poorly configured DHCP (one not including DNS servers). I haven't had that problem with OS X.

But like I said, I could be wrong. ;)
 
Yes, I did follow your steps to the letter, but still no dice. When I intially installed this operating system, I copied the ISP information that came up in the network preferences in my iBook G4 using the same cable box. I think this was a mistake. I have a feeling this is what is messing everything up, because when I open up the TCP/IP settings on the imac to do the DHCP set-up, all the info is already entered in all the fields. How can I reset this? I'd like to do a clean install on this but I know that, for OS9, that involves clicking and draggin files to a new systems folder, right? Before I trash this seemingly prefectly good imac, I'd like to be able to reset everything from scratch and try one more time, anybody have any good pointers on how to do a "clean install" with OS9? I've tried reinstalling from the disc, but all the same ISP info is already in the TCP/IP fields, so it must not be clearing everything out.
 
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