Radius Rocket
Rocket II (68040) in Mac II
David Emmons reports:
A Rocket only works on a Mac with full
size NuBus slots, and is running at least system 7 but no system
later then 7.1 (I use 7.1.3 which has the scriptable finder). It is
ideal for a Mac II or IIx/cx whose processors are barely usable with
todays software (though I did get the II's 68020 to run MS Office 4.2
).
If you can install memory and a video card then you can install the
Rocket. You will also need to install the Rocket's Software,
RocketWare, which you can get at Radius's site on the web. If your
Mac's ROMs are 32-bit dirty you need Mode32
(Mac II, IIx, IIcx, and SE/30).
Compatibility: The Rocket hates sound.* The system tricks it
uses to run make handling sounds a pain (if not impossible). Do not
install Sound Manager 3.0 or later! It can handle SM 2.0 for some
programs, and I never have had problems with Finder Sounds, but many
games will not work, most notably Ambrosia games, but you can still use
the mother board processor for those.
The Rocket also dislikes fax software. Again run off the
motherboard.
Install MacsBug. It seems to make the system fairly stable and I
even can get Escape Velocity to play but none of the sounds work. But
this game needs a fast processor.
Install at least 12 megs on the Rocket (I have 20). It's barely
usable at 8.
Remember this machine is a Jekyll and Hyde kind of thing. Your
motherboard is fully compatible with most things but is slow. The
Rocket is very fast but also very temperamental.
I've been using this Rocket II for almost 2 years now and it has
served me very well.
Here is what I run:
- Netscape 3.02
- FirstClass 3.5 (with all sound resources removed)
- Excel 5.0a and Word 6.0a (these actually work great)
- Escape Velocity (just hit cmd+G when the debugger comes up)
- Marathon (all versions...sound is spotty)
- Kaleidoscope 1.7
- Text to Speech (works great)
- Many shareware games (most though need to run on the
motherboard)
- More extensions then you can shake a stick at.
What you can't run
- Anything that requires System 7.5 or a PowerPC.
But the thing to remember is that this Mac is 10 years old and it's
system software is almost 5, yet I'm running some things that are
brand new (Netscape for one).
Experiment. It's still fundamentally a Mac so you can always
recover without extensions.
My final view is that the Rocket is not for everyone. In some
ways it's more like a PC then a Mac, but if you keep in mind it's
limitations you will have a very fast and very cheap system.
I am always willing to help or answer questions.
Support? What support? This is a Mac! I don't need
support. :-)
Dave
P.S. The Rocket sound it makes at launch is very cool.
:-)
* The Radius Rocket doesn't have any sound hardware. It relies on
the main CPU to handle all sound. dk
Go to Mac II profile or
Radius Rocket page.
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