QUOTE(david.j.lincoln @ Jun 13 2003, 11:27 PM)
The G3 had come out of a network and the HD was still set to slave mode. This explains why the non-existant 'network disk' kept appearing in the startup disc control panel when I booted from the OS 9 CD. The machine was still thinking that it was still a "slave" on a network.
The hard drive should work whether it is set to "master" or "slave."
There is no such a thing as being a "slave to a network." When a hard drive is set to "slave," that just means it is set to "ID 1" (a "Master" drive is "ID 0"). The terminology "master" and "slave" is still used for historical reasons, but has nothing to do with one device "controlling" another device (and certainly nothing to do with networks at all).
You will only see the Network Disk in the Startup Disk control panel if you are using OS 9. The ability to tell a computer to boot from a network server running MacOS Server was introduced about the same time OS 9 was introduced. Since you installed OS 8 on your computer, you no longer see the option to boot from a network disk.
QUOTE
There is no such a thing as being a "slave to a network."
Try telling that to Albert Finney