The latest versions for Windows, OS X and Linux can be found on the E-Maculation Forum. WARNING: Drive images with multiple partitions can not be edited with Basilisk II.Load Basilisk II, and copy files from your host system on to the drive image using Basilisk.Use BasiliskIIGUI.exe to configure BasiliskII to point to you ROM file, use the drive/partition/volume image(s) you want to edit, and allow access to the host systems drives (the Enable “My Computer” icon option).Download one of my System 7.5.5 drive images or partition/volume images.the LCIII ROM rom from the internet archive. Create or download a 32bit clean Macintosh 68k ROM file, e.g.Download and install Basilisk II (tested with release 29-05-2021 for Windows).You probably know what Basilisk II is, but if not, a quick summary: Basilisk II ( manual) is an open source emulator of 68k-based Macintosh computers that support 32 bit memory (see section 2) that runs on Windows, OS X and Linux (also works on some other platforms).īecause Basilisk II is already well documented on sites like Emaculation, I’m only going to describe the basics of how to setup Basilisk II and focus on how you can use it to add or remove files from the System 6.0.8 or System 7.5.5 bootable images available to download on my site. This entry describes how you can edit my images on Windows 10 using Basilisk II. Now you’ll need a Mac IIx ROM image (which I’m not supposed to help you find, but it’s an easy search) and OS image disks from the Mini vMac System Software page.One of the most popular features of my site is my ready made System 6.0.8 or System 7.5.5 bootable images for use with 68k Macintosh systems. It’s a really simple build, and fast, too. The build program will export a file out/minivmac-3.5.0-larm.tar that you can unpack into the full source code. I’ve chosen to swap the Ctrl key with the Command (⌘) key, as most non-Mac keyboards work better with this. The build options I chose are: -t larm -ccs -m II -hres 512 -vres 384 -depth 3 -mf 2 -magnify 1 -em-cpu 2 -mem 8M Pretty much any basic setup and bootable disk will run this okay: Mini vMac building on an emulated Mac Classic booting from the System 7 Network Access floppy image (no, I couldn’t boot from Classic’s hidden boot ROM disk) You’ll also need a working Mini vMac setup, as it uses a 68k Mac program to set up the source. To build a Mac II-capable version of Mini vMac, you’ll need the Alpha source code. The screen size I’ve chosen is closer to a Color Classic, for no other reason that I like it. But maybe running it as a colour Mac II is. Running Mini vMac on a Raspberry Pi is hardly news. Yup, I have a failing for 512Ã-384 screens …
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December 2022
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