Hi,
I've got a Powerbook Titanium with the following configuration: G4 667MHz, 768 MB, 30GB, Ati Radeon Mobility, DVD & CDRW, and OS 9.2.2 only (no OS X around ).
Everything seems to work OK, but once in a while it "freezes", I mean, you can move the mouse cursor but anything else. After two or three seconds, all works fine again. The freezing doesn't depend on the application, it happens with each and everyone (even when only Finder is open), so I don't believe it may be a memory settings problem.
At first, I thought of Energy saving configuration, but, even if you set the computer to turn off the disk after one minute, it should not interfere when that minute hadn't passed yet.
I've tried Software Update, but it says everything is up to date.
I've checked the extensions, but I haven't found any suspicious one.
Maybe it has to do with the network connection, but I think I don't have any software that does periodical checks in such a way. I would like to test this possibility more, but I don't know good tools to "hack" the MAC internals...
Any suggestions?
Thanks.
I've got a Powerbook Titanium with the following configuration: G4 667MHz, 768 MB, 30GB, Ati Radeon Mobility, DVD & CDRW, and OS 9.2.2 only (no OS X around ).
Everything seems to work OK, but once in a while it "freezes", I mean, you can move the mouse cursor but anything else. After two or three seconds, all works fine again. The freezing doesn't depend on the application, it happens with each and everyone (even when only Finder is open), so I don't believe it may be a memory settings problem.
At first, I thought of Energy saving configuration, but, even if you set the computer to turn off the disk after one minute, it should not interfere when that minute hadn't passed yet.
I've tried Software Update, but it says everything is up to date.
I've checked the extensions, but I haven't found any suspicious one.
Maybe it has to do with the network connection, but I think I don't have any software that does periodical checks in such a way. I would like to test this possibility more, but I don't know good tools to "hack" the MAC internals...
Any suggestions?
Thanks.