I have a macbook of 2012 (?) vintage, that will boot Mint from a USB drive. It
does have a working version of MacOS install (10.15 I think). I think at some
point Macs stopped being "fussy" about how they booted and became more like
PCs in that they used "standard" BIOS/Boot logic.

At Sun, 31 May 2026 22:01:37 -0400 [email protected] wrote:

>
> On Sun, May 31, 2026 at 2:53 PM Paul Duncan <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > My 15 year old son has found an old 2011 iMac in the side of the road. Long 
> > story short is that the processor probably works, but we think the GPU is 
> > dead as we cannot get video out of the mini display port connector, or the 
> > screen.
> >
> > So, I would like to boot from a Debian live ISO with the following kernel 
> > parameters (set in grub.cfg).
> >
> >     console=ttyUSB0,19200n8
> >
> > Now, I can mount up the ISO in loop mode, and get into grub.cfg, but how do 
> > I write this back to the ISO so that I can put in on a USB flash drive?
>
> I'm not sure about your technical problems.  Usually you need a
> blessed Apple partition to boot an old Mac.  I also seem to recall you
> may need to boot to a CD rather than a USB device on some models.  I
> have a PowerMac G5 that needs to boot like that (CD instead of USB).
>
> But you will find the folks who keep the old PowerMac's alive at the
> debian-powerpc mailing list
> (<https://lists.debian.org/debian-powerpc/>).  Many folks on the list
> are fanatics, and they can probably answer all your questions (and
> more).
>
> Jeff
>
>
>

--
Robert Heller             -- Cell: 413-658-7953 GV: 978-633-5364
Deepwoods Software        -- Custom Software Services
http://www.deepsoft.com/  -- Linux Administration Services
[email protected]       -- Webhosting Services


Reply via email to