Please !!!!!

I Need Driver CD For Motherboard For Example VGA Sound Card Etc..

CD SETUP Motherboard

FOR POWERBOOK G4 A1104 Aluminum 12

u understand me VirgilTracy?

 
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Your Mac OS X installation disc should cover the hardware for your Mac. As a matter of fact, most every Mac OS X release should cover the hardware support for the Macs that can run it. Your PBG4 should be able to run Tiger just fine with all the hardware supported, and the same should be with Leopard if your PowerBook is at least 867 MHz.

If you want to know what hardware you have inside your PowerBook, then open the System Profiler by going to the Apple menu at the top left, selecting "About This Mac", and then clicking on the "More Info" button.
 


L2 Cache (per cpu) 512 MB

Memory 512 MB

cpu speed 167 MHz

but i need CD SETUP Motherboard ( VGA Card, Sound Card, USB, Wireless etc...)

any body understand me
 
Milano, nixgeek explained it quite well.

Other than using System Profiler, download "Mactracker". It will describe all facets of your Mac.
 
Google is your soulmate (it's the first entry). ;)

Remember that you're not dealing with your stock PC and Windows here. There is no "CD SETUP MOTHERBOARD" disc with drivers. Apple makes both the hardware and the software, so everything is already supported both in the discs that come with the Macs or the retail versions of OS X that you purchase separately. The only exception would be any third-party hardware, that which is usually supported by the manufacturer of the hardware with drivers for OS X.

What is it EXACTLY that you're trying to do that you need such a disc? You still have not been very forthcoming with that information, making it very difficult for us to help you properly. :confused:
 
You have a G4 Powerbook. Unless you find a version of XP compiled to run on PPC processors you are out of luck. If you do find, let me know since I've never seen one.

The only way you can run Windows on your PPC based Mac is with Q or with VirtualPC.
 
i.e. emulated. It'll be dog slow, so I'd stick with OS X, it's fast enough on that machine.
 
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