On 2 Aug 2003 at 19:54, Simon Vallet wrote: > On 02 Aug 2003 16:11:52 +0200 > Michel Dänzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Not hardware per se, but the firmware is a problem. IIRC only the tdfx > > driver(s) can initialize a card from the ground up, for others you > > should pick a 'Mac' card. Do you have any particular card(s) in mind? > > I was thinking about ATI, as I have some experience with those cards, > but if there is a "better" (or cheaper ;) choice, why not ? > > If I got it right, I may be able to get a working tdfx card (what is the > chipset -- tdfx ?), even if it is a PC-BIOS enabled card, but I'll have to > choose a Mac-specific card otherwise (which is perfectly fine for me, as long > as I know why -- and now I think I do) ?
You want a Mac-specific card because otherwise, the system will not recognise the card as a graphics device, will not initialise the card, and you will not see anything on the screen until Linux (hopefully) initialises the card. I don't know if beige G3's have OpenFirmware, in which case you might still get into the system's boot prompt through a serial connection. If you keep using the original graphics device alongside the new add-on card or instead of it, this won't be a problem: Linux will recognise the card by its PCI vendor:device string, so you can still bring up X. Jeroen Roovers