gross@umiami.miami.edu (JD144) (07/18/90)
Ok...real simple question here...I've looked through Inside Mac's little descriptions of the the startup sequences and couldn't find a satisfactory answer so I now am aksing y'all: Can a SE be remote-booted via a card? And what kind of slot does the SE have anyway? PDS? pre-NuBus? IM doesn't really say in the SE queries the slot at anytimein the startup sequence. It doesthat on a Mac II, the slot bus is polled to see if any of the cards have boot info before it polls the internal drives and SCSI. And I've heard that the new Mac Classic will have remote-booting code in the ROM, but can it be done with present-day SE's? Thanks so much... :) -- Jason Gross Comp Sci Ugrad University of Miami Class of '91 (?) =========================================================================== Hey, wanna save the world? | Got sumtin' to say? gross@umiami.bitnet Nuke a Godless, Communist, | Pick and choose! gross@umiami.miami.edu gay whale for Christ. | gross@miavax.ir.miami.edu - Anonymous | jgross@umbio.med.miami.edu =========================================================================== The University of Miami has a lovely fountain.
oster@well.sf.ca.us (David Phillip Oster) (07/20/90)
Sure: turn the power switch on your SE on. Plug it into an X-10 socket (available from Radio Shack for about $10.) Use the X-10's remote control to turn the socket on. There you are. You can get X-10 remotes that use infrared hand held controllers, or those that connect to your phone line and decode touch tone pads. If you want to disable remote power-off, you can spend more money, and get an ADB power adapter (so you can control the power to your SE from the "<|" button on your keyboard. Some firms make boxes, such as for telecomm use, that will send out the appropriate ADB signals, if, say, a phone rings. For network booting, I use an RS232 -> X-10 intreface box (available at Fry's electronics or from Heathkit for about $40.00) A wrote an Appletalk X-10 Gateway server, and an X-10 desk accessory. The desk accessory shows a map of my home, with the X-10 equipped devices represented by icons. Click on some, and press the "ON" button, and the D. A. sends an ATP packet to the X-10 Gateway server, which sends it out that Mac's serial port to the RS232 -> X-10 interface box. Finally: :-) -- -- David Phillip Oster - Note new signature. Old one has gone Bye Bye. -- oster@well.sf.ca.us = {backbone}!well!oster