Update #4:
Upon my next time using the iBook, I discovered that my arrow keys were locked up. I couldn’t use Command + ArrowUp to return to the parent folder in Finder, for example. Weird, but the arrow keys returned their functionality upon a restart of the computer. Maybe my installation of VirtueDesktops interfered with it, but that’s just speculation, and the problem is resolved now.
Using Audio Overload to play .nsf, the program wouldn’t open. Double-clicking it gives the impression that its starting, but nothing ever comes up. I don’t know what’s up with it, but I ended up sticking with Game Music Box instead. Unfortunately, it doesn’t play a very wide arrange of game music files anyways, and Cog also plays .nsf, so having Game Music Box is rather redundant I assume. The next day I re-downloaded Audio Overload and made sure to get the latest beta that was compatible with Tiger from Macintosh Garden. I opened it, and it functioned. Sometimes your computer or program just needs a restart or a good re-installation to give it a kick in the pants for misbehaving. Audio Overload works fine now and is superior to Game Music Box. I was hoping I wouldn’t have to settle with that program, its compatibility and versatility is sorely lacking. Mission accomplished with testing .nsf files.
I began organizing my collection of 1024x768 wallpapers and sorting them by topic. There's more than enough to divide them up into categories like that, several hundred images, even. Wallpapers depicting cars get sorted into a car folder, landscapes into a landscape folder, Apple branded images into an Apple folder, etcetera, and deleting ones that I don’t want on the iBook like Microsoft-branded ones, lol. Shrunk the collection down to around 200MB and less than half the amount of images I started with. That took a while, but time passes by when you’re enjoying what you do. Most of my time spent while using a computer, if I’m not in a web browser, I’m using a file manager. In this case, Finder, although I also took the liberty to install a Tiger-compatible version of the muCommander file manager - version 0.8.5. It’s rather fine, actually! If I had more view options than just a file tree, like say an icon view, and if muCommander 0.8.5 supported resizing the icons and displaying thumbnails for images/videos, then I would use it more often. There’s only one view option, and that’s a file tree view. I customized muCommander to give it the Mac OS X “brushed metal” look so it can blend in better as a native OS X application, as opposed to using muCommander’s rather out-of-place default look. Now it fits in with the rest of the programs! See muCommander with its “brushed metal” aesthetic option activated below:
I’ve spent most of the day with my iBook, and I’ve also taken the liberty to install X11 so I can have access to certain apps like Links2 and GIMP, the former of which I also installed today. The X11 .pkg and X11SDK .pkg took around 10 minutes to install. I have yet to retrieve GIMP from the Macintosh Garden, but that will be for another day. I already have Seashore installed, which is another open source image editor. Maybe I’ll install this small program called “ChangeDesktop” that’s available on the Macintosh Repository. System Preferences already allows for the automatic changing of wallpapers at a few chosen specified time intervals, so I’m curious what this program does that is different from what’s already included in Mac OS X. Even though Links2 is now installed, I won’t be connecting this iBook to the internet until much later in this PowerPC challenge, though. I’ll save that for one of the last things to do. I think I'll stay offline until all of the programs I want to install have completed their installation. Some programs are better when offline either when running or during their initial setup so they won't constantly connect to a dead server or nag about an update that doesn't exist for my hardware because "X app doesn't support this version of Mac OS X" or whatever error message it wants to display.