As long as there is a USB port, then yes, you can.
To connect a dwl-g122 to a Mac use the Ralink driver USB (RT257x/RT2671) from their Mac support page. (See links below) Ralink make the chips used in the dwl-g122.
Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) can be installed on an iBook Dual USB (G3 processor) by inserting the installation disc and double clicking the Install icon.
the power mac G3
One can play video from a LG g3 on a non blue-tooth boss bv8962 touchscreen car stereo by use of USB cable.
No unfortunately it only runs on G3 Macs
g2 means the generation 2 pen drives which has the usb 2.0 in g3 the transfer rate of data is very high compared to g2
No because the Mac App Store requires Mac OS X 10.6.6 which is not supported on the old G3/G4 iBooks.
Kingston G2 and G3 are somehow having similar speed but the price of G3 is a little cheaper than its G2 counterpart. If any of them came with USB3, it's still a backward compatible with USB1 and USB2 anyway. In general term, Kingston G1, G2, and G3 aren't indicating USB port but its generation 1, 2, and 3 of its product line. Hope this help. Concern.
The iMac g3 is best known for being the first model of the company Apple's iMac line of computers. This Apple computer model was first produced in 1998.
The G3 iMacs were discontinued in 2003 and Garageband was not launched until 2004 so they would not normally have had Garageband installed. If an early version has been installed on a G3 iMac it will be of limited use as Garageband requires considerable processor power to handle multi-track compositions for which the G3 processor would not be suited.
If it has an Intel or G5 processor, then yes. If it has a G3 processor, then no. If it has a G4 processor, then it depends on the processor speed.
The PowerMac G3 was a Macintosh computer that appeared in 1997 and was discontinued in 1999. The G3 refers to the PPC processor. It was subsequently followed by the G4, G5 and then the Intel processor based Macs. It would have limited use today being unable to run the latest versions of Mac OS X.