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What To Do With an Old G5 Tower?

lunatic1969 writes "I've got an old G5 PowerPC tower that's sitting in a spare room not seeing much in the way of use. I'd like to stick a Linux distribution on it and maybe breathe some life back into it. I've got a few vague ideas — it might be a handy file server, streaming video for a security system, or simply just to have a spare box around. My question is therefore in two parts: First, are there any particularly creative projects or ideas anyone has for an old G5, and second and most important, which distribution currently offers the best support for this box?"

4 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. PPC Linux by worx101 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yellow Dog probably has the best support, but you could always look at the PPC version of Ubuntu.

  2. Audio Workstation/Recording Studio by dangitman · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you have the model with the PCI-X, rather than the PCI Express bus, then probably the optimum usage is putting it in a recording studio. There are some great rack-mount multi-channel (like 10 in, 10 out) audio interfaces by the likes of M-Audio which use the PCI bus, and have never been updated for PCI Express compatibility, so they won't work in a Mac Pro.

    The G5 has plenty of performance for audio work, and plenty of space for internal hard drives or RAID. This would really be the optimum niche for such a machine. For other purposes (file server etc), it sucks too much power and takes up too much space for its usefulness. But for audio work with dedicated hardware, it's perfect.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  3. Debian by dandart · · Score: 5, Informative

    Debian's PPC port works well, I used it on an iMac G3.

  4. A file server? Linux? by Darth+Sdlavrot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seriously? Okay. The OS that probably works best with this machine is --- drum roll -- OS X.

    Without hardly thinking about it it'll serve files via AFP and SMB.

    Google will tell you how to enable the NFS server on it. (That's right, you don't need OS X Server.)

    Streaming video? If there's open source software for Linux to do this, there's a pretty good chance it'll build on OS X too.