Faedon Mac OS

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The RADEON 7000 MAC EDITION runs with the following minimum system requirements:. Any Power Macintosh computer with a PCI (66MHz or 33MHz) expansion slot. Mac OS 9.0 or Mac OS X version 10.1. OpenGL 1.2.2 (required for 3D graphics). Apple monitor, VGA-style monitor (see note below),DVI-I style digital flat panel, or TV. QuickTime 5.0 (earlier versions areNOTsupported). Minimum 32MB of. Powering the Mac Pro on should give you a fully functional RX 480 GPU with the right name in About this Mac. Warning: If you want to upgrade macOS to 10.12.4 or newer with a working RX 480 setup, you need to run the OS update through Terminal instead of the App Store. This method prevents the computer from restarting during the system upgrade.

Learning to live with Mac OS X Fellow Mac OS X adopters who have bought - or are thinking of buying - ATI's retail Radeon graphics card can rest assured: Radeon Mac Edition is supported by Mac OS X - despite all my curmudgeonly complaints that it wasn't.

I haven't received protestations from ATI - or Apple, for that matter - pointing out my error. No, I found this one out for myself, quite by chance, experimenting with the way Mac OS X handles fonts.

Last time round, I mentioned how my OS X installation always died whenever I ran some pretty essential applications, and how the problem was solved by swapping out my shiny new Radeon for the old Rage 128 board that shipped with my otherwise perfect blue'n'white Power Mac G3.

I'd already reinstalled OS X half a dozen times - and upgraded to 10.0.2 and, later, 10.0.3 in the most cases - each time without improving system stability, so it never occurred to me that this, not the graphics card, might be the solution.

Logic dictates, Captain, that when one process (reinstalling the OS) fails to solve a problem and a second process appears to do so, it's the second one that provides the fix.

Faedon Mac OS

If only...

The thing is, installing OS X isn't the straightforward process you might think it is. You've got rather a lot of decisions to make even before you even slide the CD into the drive. For example, do you reformat the hard drive first? Then, do you format it into a single volume or two, one for Mac OS 9, the other for OS X? If you've already formatted the drive into two parts, do you reinstall OS 9 as well as OS X when the latter alone fails?

Here's what I did. Way back when the Mac OS X Public Beta shipped, I backed up my hard drive, formatted it into two volumes, installed OS 9 on one and the PB on the other. No problemo - both operating systems worked a treat.

Come Mac OS X 10.0.0, and I - following Apple's warnings - erased the PB volume and installed the new version instead. Suddenly, half the bundled apps stopped working properly and worse, dragged the system down with them. To save having to back up the OS 9 volume again, reinstalling the operating system and putting back all my apps and documents, I just reinstalled OS X on the appropriate partition.

When I decided to swap out the Radeon card, I'd also decided to start from scratch by reformatting the drive - this time into a single partition; I'd heard it might work better that way - and reinstalling both OS 9 and OS X. I did, and... well, you know the rest.

Move forward in time a couple of weeks to this past Friday. I'm thinking that I'd like to take a look at all the fonts that come bundled with OS X. I run TextEdit and have a look at some. Then I remember that I never got round to reinstalling my third-party OS 9 fonts. I naturally wondered whether I should put them in the Fonts folder in OS 9's System Folder, in the equivalent folder in OS X's main Library folder or even in /Users/smitty/Library/fonts. See what I mean, all the decisions OS X foists on you?

I chose the latter (for no clear reason) and dragged a whole bunch of fonts off the Zip disk I'd backed them up. I ran TextEdit, chose Font Panel from the appropriate menu and... boom, the whole system bombed, just like before.

It looked to me that maybe the problem had been a font issue all along. Come to think of it, many - though not all, which is why it wasn't so obvious before - of the apps that crashed did work with fonts. So this time, I removed all the fonts I'd added and - wanting to be scientific about it - started putting them back a few at a time. Eventually, I narrowed it down to a single Star Trek symbol font, one of a pack I'd reviewed years ago and just left on my system. It works just fine under OS 9, but OS X doesn't like it one little bit.

This discovery let the Radeon off the hook, and putting it back in proved its innocence. It works a treat, and doesn't crash anything.

Faedon Mac Os Catalina

There are two morals to this tale. The first is that whenever you try a solution to a problem, cut out as many variables as you can to make it as easy as possible to identify the solution.

The second is that it's essential to bear in mind that OS X is more closely tied to OS 9 than you might think from running Classic. The operating system reads in the contents of 9's own fonts folder, and other apps may also access other contents of the System Folder, to maintain consistency of your preferences, for example. This is definitely worth bearing in mind if you too are suffering regular application crashes. ®

To Be Continued...

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This article applies only to video cards that originally shipped with a specified Mac Pro or were offered as an upgrade kit by Apple. Similar cards that were not provided by Apple may have compatibility issues and you should work with the vendor of that card to confirm compatibility.

Mac Pro (2019)

Learn more about cards you can install in Mac Pro (2019) and how to install PCIe cards in your Mac Pro (2019).

Mac Pro (Late 2013)

Faedon mac os x

If only...

The thing is, installing OS X isn't the straightforward process you might think it is. You've got rather a lot of decisions to make even before you even slide the CD into the drive. For example, do you reformat the hard drive first? Then, do you format it into a single volume or two, one for Mac OS 9, the other for OS X? If you've already formatted the drive into two parts, do you reinstall OS 9 as well as OS X when the latter alone fails?

Here's what I did. Way back when the Mac OS X Public Beta shipped, I backed up my hard drive, formatted it into two volumes, installed OS 9 on one and the PB on the other. No problemo - both operating systems worked a treat.

Come Mac OS X 10.0.0, and I - following Apple's warnings - erased the PB volume and installed the new version instead. Suddenly, half the bundled apps stopped working properly and worse, dragged the system down with them. To save having to back up the OS 9 volume again, reinstalling the operating system and putting back all my apps and documents, I just reinstalled OS X on the appropriate partition.

When I decided to swap out the Radeon card, I'd also decided to start from scratch by reformatting the drive - this time into a single partition; I'd heard it might work better that way - and reinstalling both OS 9 and OS X. I did, and... well, you know the rest.

Move forward in time a couple of weeks to this past Friday. I'm thinking that I'd like to take a look at all the fonts that come bundled with OS X. I run TextEdit and have a look at some. Then I remember that I never got round to reinstalling my third-party OS 9 fonts. I naturally wondered whether I should put them in the Fonts folder in OS 9's System Folder, in the equivalent folder in OS X's main Library folder or even in /Users/smitty/Library/fonts. See what I mean, all the decisions OS X foists on you?

I chose the latter (for no clear reason) and dragged a whole bunch of fonts off the Zip disk I'd backed them up. I ran TextEdit, chose Font Panel from the appropriate menu and... boom, the whole system bombed, just like before.

It looked to me that maybe the problem had been a font issue all along. Come to think of it, many - though not all, which is why it wasn't so obvious before - of the apps that crashed did work with fonts. So this time, I removed all the fonts I'd added and - wanting to be scientific about it - started putting them back a few at a time. Eventually, I narrowed it down to a single Star Trek symbol font, one of a pack I'd reviewed years ago and just left on my system. It works just fine under OS 9, but OS X doesn't like it one little bit.

This discovery let the Radeon off the hook, and putting it back in proved its innocence. It works a treat, and doesn't crash anything.

Faedon Mac Os Catalina

There are two morals to this tale. The first is that whenever you try a solution to a problem, cut out as many variables as you can to make it as easy as possible to identify the solution.

The second is that it's essential to bear in mind that OS X is more closely tied to OS 9 than you might think from running Classic. The operating system reads in the contents of 9's own fonts folder, and other apps may also access other contents of the System Folder, to maintain consistency of your preferences, for example. This is definitely worth bearing in mind if you too are suffering regular application crashes. ®

To Be Continued...

Related Story

Get ourTech Resources

This article applies only to video cards that originally shipped with a specified Mac Pro or were offered as an upgrade kit by Apple. Similar cards that were not provided by Apple may have compatibility issues and you should work with the vendor of that card to confirm compatibility.

Mac Pro (2019)

Learn more about cards you can install in Mac Pro (2019) and how to install PCIe cards in your Mac Pro (2019).

Mac Pro (Late 2013)

  • Dual AMD FirePro D300
  • Dual AMD FirePro D500
  • Dual AMD FirePro D700

Mac Pro (Mid 2010) and Mac Pro (Mid 2012)

  • ATI Radeon HD 5770
  • ATI Radeon HD 5870
    Learn about graphics cards supported in macOS 10.14 Mojave on Mac Pro (2010) and Mac Pro (Mid 2012).

Faedon Mac Os Sierra

Mac Pro (Early 2009)

  • NVIDIA GeForce GT 120
  • ATI Radeon HD 4870
  • ATI Radeon HD 5870, offered as an upgrade kit
    The Radeon HD 5870 card requires Mac OS X 10.6.4 or later and the use of both auxiliary power connections.

Faedon Mac Os Download

Mac Pro (Early 2008)

  • ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
  • NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT (part number 630-9191 or 630-9897)*
  • NVIDIA Quadro FX 5600
  • ATI Radeon HD 4870, offered as an upgrade kit
    The Radeon HD 4870 card requires Mac OS X 10.5.7 or later.

Mac Pro (Original)

Faedon Mac Os X

  • NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT
  • ATI Radeon X1900 XT
  • NVIDIA Quadro FX 4500 (part number 630-7532 or 630-7895)*
  • NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT (part number 630-9492), offered as an upgrade kit.*
    The NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT card requires Mac OS X 10.5.2 or later with the Leopard Graphics Update 1.0 or the computer may not start up properly.

* To identify a graphics card part number, check the label on the back of the card.





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