![]() ![]() I actually did own a plus (it made a good foot rest), but before I moved I ripped the ROM, and trashed it. Now you will need a ROM from a plus Macintosh in order to run this. That being said, it will emulate a 68000 cpu with 4 (yes, FOUR) megabytes of ram. Simply put vMac is a quick & fast Mac Plus emulator. Naturally with the speed limits dropped it’s quite FAST! vMac doesn’t have sound yet, so it’s a silent experience but it works quite well. Then using hfv explorer, copy over Duke and stuffit.īoot back into MacOS, install stuffit, and expand Duke and away we GO! I then installed 7.5.3 into the 100mb disk, then shut down the emulator. Then I booted the emulator with a minimal System 7 floppy. I created a target diskette of 100MB, then used hfvexplorer to copy 7.5.3 and it’s 19 segments into the disk. The next part of the puzzle was System 7.5.3, which apple still thankfully provides, along with HFVExplorer, and Stuffit, and I was all set to go! an exciting adventure in floppy disks, but with it in hand I was ready! With the emulator built, the next fun filled thing was to dump the ROM from my SE/30, which was. There is some help on the mini vmac site, but it’s kind of in places. So for me to build on windows, a mac II with 256 colors, I gave it. Basically you pass a program what config you want and it’ll spit out source code. ![]() What is different about this is that you get the source from within the emulator. The first thing I needed to do was get the latest source to Mini vMac. So after stubmling across this site, Emacualtion, I had to fire this thing up! I had no idea this even existed… I guess it’s to be expected, all the popular games of the time (doom) were ported to pretty much everything and anything. It turns out this is reliant on Carbon, which doesn’t allow for 64bit binaries… Posted in Macintosh, MacOS, mini vmac, OS X, powerpc | Leave a reply Duke Nukem 3D for the Macintosh (68020) Minivmac (for architecture ppc): Mach-O executable ppc Minivmac (for architecture ppc7400): Mach-O executable ppc Minivmac (for architecture i386): Mach-O executable i386 Minivmac: Mach-O universal binary with 3 architectures I’ve just updated it to contain all the 32bit binaries… Â The OS X PowerPC build is lacking sound (did the intel OS X have it?) but it runs!įor anyone that cares, my PowerPC binary is here. So I had to install OS 7 on a Windows machine with my last binary, configure the source there, then import it to my PowerPC, then build it on my G5. Â However I did remember the great mini vMac is very portable, runs 68000 code great, and even can run 68020 programs with the experimental branches. Â So I don’t have a good way to get there from here. I wanted to run some old 68000 programs on OS X, but as luck would have it, OS X 10.5 doesn’t support the classical environment, and the 10.4 discs that I have won’t boot on a G5. ![]()
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