Mac TCP/IP networking

From: Sean Caron <sean_at_techcare.com>
Date: Tue Oct 24 15:22:07 2000

----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Ford" <mikeford_at_socal.rr.com>
To: <classiccmp_at_classiccmp.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 24, 2000 4:27 PM
Subject: Re: Mac TCP/IP networking


> >> But of the 68Ks, I think the SE/30 is the most useful (to me). I use
mine
> >> as a boot server for the IIgses and as the LocalTalk server, after I
stuck
> >> a gig drive in it.
> >
> >Is it possible to remote boot a IIgs? I wasn't aware of that. Can you
point
> >me to info about how it's done? I doubt I'd do it, just curious. My IIgs
> >has a larger HD than any of my Macs, but I've been thinging of putting
> >a big drive in the IIfx I just obtained to use it as a LocalTalk server.
> >
> >I'm also looking for info about how to gateway between TCP/IP over
AppleTalk
> >and TCP/IP over ethernet. I've got a stand alone AppleTalk<>Ethernet
box,
> >but it appears only to transport the LocalTalk protocol without
transforming
> >IP into the proper format. A couple of other options I've been looking
at
> >are putting a AppleTalk card into a Linux box or using a Dayna SCSI
Ethernet
> >interface on one of the Macs.
> >
> >Any ideas on how to proceed are appreciated.
> >
> >Eric
>
> If you want TCP/IP and want to support IIgs as well as mac, the only
> solution I know of is the FastPath 4 made first by Kinetics, then Shiva.
> The downside is that these boxes are not trivial to figure out how to
setup
> (then again they to a LOT of tricks). I have a dozen or so of them, with
> one waiting to ship just as soon as I figure out the setup just a little
> better. (I found a manual last week, which should help). The upside is
that
> nobody knows about them and they sell pretty cheap (around $25 to $50
> used), and they do stuff you wouldn't even guess at like Ip tunneling. The
> Fastpath 5 is newer etc., but the 4 seems from what I have read to be more
> friendly to Apple II clients.
>
>
>

There was also a slick little series of devices made by Cayman called the
GatorBox. They would bridge pretty much any protocol (TCP/IP, Appletalk,
and even DECnet) over LocalTalk to Ethernet and back.

I don't know how easy they are to track down; I've got a GatorBox CS
Rack-mount that I was looking forward to playing with, unfortunately it
appears as if the previously owning institution (a local university) set a
password on it that I am not able to remove (apparently Cayman is no
longer assisting people with lockouts as they are in the DSL business
now, and seem rather uninterested in supporting their old product
line).

In any case, nice little devices; I just wish mine worked :)

--Sean Caron (root_at_diablonet.net) | http://www.diablonet.net
Received on Tue Oct 24 2000 - 15:22:07 BST

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