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moving data from windos to mac
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,620
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Hello,
There *might* be a way to directly connect a Mac and PC via Firewire, but without knowing your model, I cannot say further. Back in the day, there was a "SCSI Disk Mode" that a powerbook could go into under OS9, and hook it to another Mac via a SCSI cable. The powerbook would then turn into an external SCSI hard drive.
Now, if both computers have an ethernet connection, you could wire them up through a hub, and have one be a "server" and the other be a "client". IN this case, your PC would be the server, and the Mac would be the client. Let us know what OS you are running on BOTH computers, and we can help you out more there.
Or, you can burn a CD/DVD ROM. Assuming you ahve a burner on the PC, and a reader on the Mac, that would work too. (hint -- if you ever want to go reverse, to have a Mac burn, and a PC read, make sure to use ISO 9660 format on the Mac side so that Bill's friends can read the disk).
Let us know more details on what you have, and we can go from there. I'll look tonight.
Christian
There *might* be a way to directly connect a Mac and PC via Firewire, but without knowing your model, I cannot say further. Back in the day, there was a "SCSI Disk Mode" that a powerbook could go into under OS9, and hook it to another Mac via a SCSI cable. The powerbook would then turn into an external SCSI hard drive.
Now, if both computers have an ethernet connection, you could wire them up through a hub, and have one be a "server" and the other be a "client". IN this case, your PC would be the server, and the Mac would be the client. Let us know what OS you are running on BOTH computers, and we can help you out more there.
Or, you can burn a CD/DVD ROM. Assuming you ahve a burner on the PC, and a reader on the Mac, that would work too. (hint -- if you ever want to go reverse, to have a Mac burn, and a PC read, make sure to use ISO 9660 format on the Mac side so that Bill's friends can read the disk).
Let us know more details on what you have, and we can go from there. I'll look tonight.
Christian
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 3
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Solved Threads: 0
[QUOTE=kc0arf]Hello,
There *might* be a way to directly connect a Mac and PC via Firewire, but without knowing your model, I cannot say further. Back in the day, there was a "SCSI Disk Mode" that a powerbook could go into under OS9, and hook it to another Mac via a SCSI cable. The powerbook would then turn into an external SCSI hard drive.
Thank you for your reply. I di not want to go the cd route
My mac is a G4 using 10.2 OS and the pcis using windows XP operating system. I tried to hook up via a usb port without any result. Any help will be appreciated. My plan is to transfer into the MAC to utilize PHOTOSHOP.
thank you
There *might* be a way to directly connect a Mac and PC via Firewire, but without knowing your model, I cannot say further. Back in the day, there was a "SCSI Disk Mode" that a powerbook could go into under OS9, and hook it to another Mac via a SCSI cable. The powerbook would then turn into an external SCSI hard drive.
Thank you for your reply. I di not want to go the cd route
My mac is a G4 using 10.2 OS and the pcis using windows XP operating system. I tried to hook up via a usb port without any result. Any help will be appreciated. My plan is to transfer into the MAC to utilize PHOTOSHOP.
thank you
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