jruschme@exit109.com (John Ruschmeyer) wrote: >> If yours will fit, then, yes, if you put it in Slot 4 and set the Slot to >>"Your Card" you give up the mouse as long as the card is in use. Also, it seems >>that you would need to set IIgs Speed to "Normal" (slow) speed. > >Okay. Out of curiousity, where does one usually put a coprocessor card in a >IIgs (i.e., what slot?)? They can go into any slot except slot 3 and the memory expansion slot. The PC Transporter (provides an IBM XT processor at "Turbo XT" speed for a hardware/software IBM XT emulator) for example I've used in several different slots. >Do we all keep turning slots on and off, depending >on what we're running at the time? No. Some cards, especially IIGS specific cards, do not require that you switch a slot to "Your Card." This means that for these cards, you get to use your slot and keep your built in function. Sound cards and accelerator cards work this way as do most video cards. The Second Sight card for example. You can plug a Second Sight into any slot on a ROM 3 IIGS and you do not have to set the slot to "Your Card." Same thing with the Visionary GS frame grabber card. On the flip side, it is often possible to switch a slot to "Your Card" and still keep the built in function. On a ROM 3 IIGS, you can plug a card into slot 4, set the slot to "Your Card" and keep using your mouse. Under both a ROM 01 and a ROM 3, you can plug a card into slot 2 and set that slot to "Your Card" without losing the modem port in most terminal programs (ProTERM 3.1, for example). Finally, under System 6.0.1, you can have a card in slot 5, set that slot to "Your Card" and still keep your built in slot 5 RAM disk. >Okay, I admit it, I'm confused. Any good tutorials on the use of slots in >a IIgs? Nothing to be confused about. The following rules are all you need to know: 1. For IIGS cards that say they don't need the slot set to "Your Card" (Second Sight, sound cards, accelerator cards, Visionary GS card come to mind), just plug in the card and DO NOT set the slot to "Your Card." You do not lose the built in function associated with the slot. 2. For IIe cards, you plug the card into a slot, set the slot to "Your Card" and usually lose the built in function associated with the slot. The exceptions are as follows. You usually never lose the modem port even with the slot set to "Your Card" because most IIGS aware comm software such as ProTERM 3.1 will access the modem port regardless of the slot setting. On a ROM 3 IIGS, you do not lose the mouse if slot 4 is set to "Your Card." Under System 6.0.1, you do not lose the RAM disk if slot 5 is set to "Your Card." So, if you have a choice between IIe card and IIGS card (for example, a IIe Phasor sound card versus a IIGS Sonic Blaster sound card), choose the IIGS one because it works without the slot set to "Your Card" so that you'll never have to give up the built in function of the slot. If you must use a IIe card, the first choice is slot 2 because most software can still see the modem port with slot 2 set to "Your Card" so you keep the built in function. If you have System 6.0.1, slot 5 is the second choice, especially if the card you are plugging in is an enhanced 3.5 disk controller (Blue Disk or SuperDrive card) because you keep the RAM disk. However, if you have a ROM 3, slot 4 suddenly is the first slot you'd choose because you don't lose the mouse if you set this slot to "Your Card."