Low End Mac Reader Specials
TypeStyler For Mac OS X is Now Shipping! Download The Free Fully Functional 60 Day Tryout at www.typestyler.com
OWC: Get the Right Memory for Your Mac Top Quality, Competitive Price, Lifetime Backed Free Expert Support + Installation Videos too! MacBook & mini 8GB, iMac 16GB, Mac Pro up to 32GB. Click here
Don't install Parallels to play poker online! Poker Mac will show you how
to download and install a native Mac poker application such as Full
Tilt Poker Mac.
Laptop Hardware Provided by TechRestore - Overnight Mac & iPod Repairs.
Compare products like desktop computers, apple laptops, apple macs, and LCD Monitors side by side! All the information and reviews to make the best purchasing decision for new mobile phones, sat nav systems, or MP3 players. The Ciao online shopping community makes searching products easy for you.
Mac Daniel's Advice
Better and Safer Surfing with Internet Explorer and the Classic Mac OS
- 2007.11.06
Bookmark in del.icio.us
Suggest to Slashdot
I recently wrote some short articles on running Internet Explorer (IE) 5.1.7 in OS 7.6.1 (with the help of the Appearance Manager 1.0.4 SDK) and ResEditing OS 7.6.1 to believe it is OS 8.1.
That is the way I am doing it myself, but the stuff here could help you, even if you're running a different version of the Mac OS. These should work in OS 8.1 as well, but in some cases 7.6.1 needs the aforementioned mods - and with System 7.5.5, you're on your own, as I have not done any testing with it.
Should You Be Running IE 5.1.7?
Here is a simple answer: Yes, from System 7.5.5 through 8.1 - but in OS 8.6 go for WaMCom (download WaMCom here), in OS 8.5 use iCab 3.0.3, and if you are running 7.1 through 7.5.3, use iCab 2.9.9b. (iCab 2.9.9 is nearly as compatible as IE 5.1.7, but the CSS is not fully implemented, so turn it off.)
After some mathematical help from fingers and toes, you will find the answer for the question to be: Use IE 5.1.7 with Mac OS 7.5.5, 7.6, 7.6.1, 8.0, and 8.1.
It is nice to be anti-Microsoft, but don't cripple yourself just for the fun of it, as there really is no substitute for IE 5.1.7 with these versions of the Mac OS.
Cookies and Cache
The security loopholes of IE were fixed in 5.1.7, but here are two apps you will want to use anyway: Cache Killer Pro II ($14 shareware) and Cookie Dog 1.1 ($6 shareware).
Unlike some other browsers, IE cannot delete cookies and clear its cache by itself - and deleting manually ain't no fun. Semi-manual deleting is available for users of Aladdin Spring Cleaning 3.5 (long discontinued), which can also be found as an add-on in Norton SystemWorks 1.0 ($10 from FastMac).
There is some info that Cookie Dog 1.2.x should run from 7.5 and up, so you could try it first, as the site where 1.1 is still available just started to ask for a log-in - in Italian. I have downloaded a lot of rare share/freeware in English for the 7.6.1 from there in the past, so if you don't mind figuring out the log-in/subscribe, please do. I have not done it yet myself.
Yeah, delete cache and do not eat the cookies - those are bad for you. Unless you really have to, in which case you can choose which cookies to keep with Cookie Dog, to make automatic log-ins and such possible for selected and trusted sites.
Firewall and Antivirus
There are no new viruses for the Classic Mac OS, so why use an antivirus app? And wouldn't Disinfectant be enough? Nope. You are using an old OS, so you will be downloading old apps, and some of those may still carry a payload of an old virus. Disinfectant is wonderfully well made and easy to use, but it cannot detect macro viruses targeting IE, OE, and MS Office.
Then there is the question of Windows viruses, which are plentiful. They cannot harm you, but why would you pass those to your friends? Most people don't know even the basics of their PCs, although they may be masters in that one app they use for a living. Back-ups, upgrades, vir defs? What are you talking about? So keep your friends out of harm.
I am using Norton Personal Firewall 2.0 and Norton Antivirus 7.02 - both of these are cheap "eBayware", easy to use and easy to get. Neither should work fully in Mac OS 7.6.1, but both do with the OS mods - including NAV's automatic virus def update. The CDs I have also includes versions for OS X, if one is so inclined.
There are alternatives for each of these, but one can be hard to find, and the other is expensive, but both work. They are Virex 5.9 for antivirus and IPNetSentry for firewall (please check out the latter's site for more info of their products). With one exception, all of these work in stock OS 7.6.1 without the Appearance Manager, and Virex actually work from OS 7.1 upward, making it a real beauty if one is running all kind of Macs between 7.1 and 9.x. Trying to locate it on eBay could prove be difficult.
Virus definition updates are available for Virex 5.9 until the end of this year. The current ones are for version 6.2, and SpeedScan and Snapshot do not work for licensing reasons, making 5.9 a bit slower. If you can find a vir def for v. 6.1, you should have those options working. But I doubt the possibility to locate an old vir def. My v 5.9 came with defs from 1998, and I used it with the latest defs.
QuickTime, Real Player, Windows Media Player, Shockwave, and Flash
Check the download links for QuickTime 5.0.5, Real Player 8, Windows Media Player 7.1, Shockwave 10.1.0.11, and Flash player 5 at the end of the article. Of these, only Flash and QT will run without the OS modifications.
Things I Use, but You Don't Have To
Web Free 1.1 - This will block ads fine when used with IE 5.1.7. Start using it by checking only the option: Block The Following Tags . Choose a wrong option or browser and things will sloooow down.
iGetter 1.9.5 - You will find a separate download manager to be faster than the built-in one, and if you are doing large downloads, iGetter is able to continue after an interruption without starting from the beginning.
Web Confidential 2.2.2 - A good password/PIN-code and whatnot manager that works fine in modified 7.6.1, although it should need OS 8.1.
URL Manager Pro - Frankly, this is something I like, but you could find it cumbersome when compared for the one in IE. Allow yourself some time to find the best way for using it. Things I like: Making backups of my URLs or exporting those as text files. I am using 2.0 (you can Google for this German version; it's easy to find), but 2.8fc2 for OS 8.1 works in 7.6.1 as such, unlike 2.7.1 for 8.0! These two latter ones are still available from the author's site, also in English.
Running an OS from the Stone Age doesn't mean you're left out of all the fun. Mac OS 7.6.1 (with the Appearance Manager 1.0.4 SDK and ResEdited to fake OS 8.1) really is fast, reliable, and modern enough for everyday use.
BTW Outlook Express 5.0.6 runs great in the modified OS 7.6.1,
giving an option for using the SweetMail, adding HTML and giving more
choices for a default character set for unlabeled messages.
Software Links
Not sure if you should upgrade your old Mac or replace it? Check the Mac Daniel index to see if we've already addressed your problem.
Recent Mac Daniel columns
- WiFi Hardware Compatible with Desktop Macs Running OS X, MetaPhyzx, 03.11. USB, ethernet, PCI, and other wireless hardware compatible with Mac OS X.
- WiFi CardBus Adapters Compatible with PowerBooks, MetaPhyzx, 03.11. CardBus hardware and drivers compatible with PowerBooks running Mac OS X.
- WiFi PC Cards Compatible with PowerBooks Running OS X, MetaPhyzx, 03.11. PCMCIA/PC Card hardware and drivers compatible with PowerBooks running Mac OS X.
- WiFi PC Cards for PowerBooks Running Mac OS 9, MetaPhyzx, 03.10. PCMCIA cards and drivers reported to be compatible with PowerBook running the Classic Mac OS.
- More in the Mac Daniel index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: Power Mac G5 Quad, Oct. 2005 - With two 2.5 GHz dual-core G5 CPUs, the G5 Quad was the most powerful PowerPC Mac ever and introduced PCI Express.
- Group of the Day: Mac Network deals with all aspects of Mac networking.
- November 21 in LEM history: 00: OS upgrades, downgrades - AltiVec vs. Pentium III - 01: Saved by the clones - Computer of the future - 02: Apple Education: Let's get to it - 03: Panther lets Macs and PCs work together, - Lombard SCSI bug - 05: 3 survivors from the 1970s - Real world battery life inadequate - Windows to Mac file transfer with Zip disks - $99 alternative to Microsoft Office - 06: Parallels 1.0 far more polished than beta
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Apple's Tablet an End Run Beyond Netbooks, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 11.20. Whatever Apple has planned will leverage existing technologies while going beyond what its competitors can offer.
- NASA Chemical Sensor for iPhone, Smartphone Death Match, iPhone Earrings, and More, Ian R Campbell, 11.20. Also mobile phone dangers, new apps, GPS solution for iPod touch, new iPod and iPhone cases, and more.
- Apple #4 in Reliability, Apple Tablet a Gadget for All?, HP's i7 Notebook Outdoes Mac Rivals, and More, The 'Book Review, 11.20. Also Flash 10.1 improves video on Hackintosh netbooks, thin-and-light notebooks impress, Windows XP finally on the way out, and more.
- i5 iMac Benchmarked, Mac mini 'Shouldn't Be Overlooked', Twitter Client for Classic Mac OS, and More, Mac News Review, 11.20. Also why Apple leaves the low end to others, 10.6.2 fixes video playback problem in 27" iMac, 3D Leopard and Snow Leopard performance, and more.
- Replacing the Hard Drive in a Clamshell iBook, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 11.19. Yes, it is one of the most difficult Apple notebooks to disassemble and reassemble, but a 10 GB hard drive just will not do.
- IBM Model F: A Great Old Keyboard with an Outdated Layout, Tommy Thomas, Welcome to Macintosh, 11.19. Although it used a different technology than the revered IBM Model M keyboard, the Model F was a great keyboard in its own right.
- Soft Touch Keyboards, Wireless Mouse Options, Loving SeaMonkey 2, and More, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 11.18. Also the future of browsing with PowerPC Macs and the multiple mouse input bug introduced with OS X 10.5.8.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best eMac Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz Combo, $100; SuperDrive, $269; 1.25 GHz Combo, $119; SD, $319; 1.42 GHz Combo, $289; SD, $498.
- Best Mac OS X 10.6 and Mac Box Set Deals, 11.18. "Snow Leopard", single user, $25; 5 users, $45; Mac Box Set, single user, $139; 5 users, $180; Server, $414. Shipping included.
- Best Xserve Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $649; 2.3 dual G5, $795; 3.0 4-core Xeon, $1,899; refurb 2.26 4-core, $2,499; new, $2,888; refurb 8-core, $2,999; new, $3,449; more.
- Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 11.17. Used 1.83 GHz, $750; 2.16, $800; 2.33, $900; refurb 2.4, $1,299; 2.53, $1,449; 2.66, $1,699; 2.8, $1,899; new 2.53, $1,579; 2.66, $1,799; more.
- Best Power Mac G4 and AGP Video Card Deals, 11.17. Used 400 MHz, $50; 933 MHz, $80; 500 dual, $60; 867 dual, $90; 1 GHz dual, $150; 1.25 GHz dual, $225; 1.42 GHz, $499.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 Deals, 11.17. "Leopard" upgrade, $80; single user license, $135; 5 users, $173; Mac Box Set, 5 users, $230; Server, 10 users, $340; unlimited, $850. Shipping included.
- Best Mac mini Deals, 11.16. Used 1.42 GHz G4 mini, $379; 1.66 GHz Core Solo, $419; 2.0 Core 2, $450; new 2.26 GHz nVidia, $580; 2.53 GHz, $769; Server, $990.
- Best iBook G4 Deals, 11.16. Used 12" 1.07 GHz Combo, $210; 1.33 GHz, $298; 14" 1.33 GHz, $398; 1.42 GHz, $479; SuperDrive, $498.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 11.16. Used 1 GB, $35; 4 GB, $65; refurb 1 GB, $39; 2 GB, $59; new 2 GB, $55, 4 GB, $75. New and refurb prices include shipping.
- More deals in our archive.
About LEM | Support | Usage | Privacy | Contacts
Navigation
Used Mac Dealers
Apple History
Video Cards
Email Lists
Favorite Sites
MacSurfer
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System
6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Affiliates
The Apple
Store
Mac
Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial
Memory
batteries.com
Advertise
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System 6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Mac Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial Memory
batteries.com
