Smi.bin mini vmac7/27/2023 ![]() ![]() If you don’t feel like creating your own Mac-on-Stick from scratch, you can download a prebuild package via BitTorrent: The package comes with the following bundled applications: TitleĪssign hotkeys to applications, documents, control panels, etc. Launch Mini vMac, drag the new disk image onto it, press the Initialize button when prompted, and give the new disk a name. Before you can mount it using the SetFType utility, you must format it in Mini vMac. This creates a 52MB disk image, named hfs52M.dsk, in the current directory ( count is the number of 512 byte blocks). Either way, read about my way to do it .If you need a larger disk image for use with Mini vMac, you can create your own using the terminal of Mac OS X or Linux with the following command: dd if=/dev/zero of=hfs52M.dsk count=106496 The only thing I can't get to work is the 256 colours mode. I'm using the Macintosh II version (26) with the original ROM from my IIx, and System 6.0.8 freshly installed on a 32M image. Or you could even copy the files to a real Macintosh floppy. It's always nice to get new software for the 'classic' MacOS, and anyway Mini vMac works like a charm in my iMac core-i5. One approach is to transform the downloaded package to a disk image (e.g. In the unfortunate case a game or utility was not preserved from an original floppy as a ready to use disk image ( shame on you Macintosh retro community!), we need to take some further steps. open the file in HEX editor, and check if there seems to be a header that looks like one defined in Disk Copy 4.2 format specification. If the size is something totally else, it could be one of the newer (compressed) formats that are not supported by Mini vMac or BMOW floppy emu. If it is a little bit more, then there’s a good change being Disk Copy 4.2 as it contains some metadata along with the raw file system. Raw images should be exactly 409 600 bytes for 400k disks and 819200 bytes for 800k disks. And you won’t see the image listed at all if it is not raw image or Disk Copy 4.2 format. You will see the format when the disk is accessed. If you are interested in to know the format, or perhaps want to understand why your image is not being loaded, you can. image, you are probably good to go and just use the file with your emulator or BMOW floppy emu. But there is always a way to get the software running. Funnily enough, you need first to extract these self-extracting archives with an unarchiever first.Īs you can see, the way old Macintosh software is being archived is a big mess. Sometimes old Macintosh software is distributed with formats like. BIN – MacBinary format that can be extracted with binUnpk or StuffIt. Double click inside an emulator or real Macintosh to “mount” a virtual drive. Double click inside an emulator or real Macintosh to extract files to the folder. StuffIt 1.5.1 should work with System 6 and 7. sit file often contains the game executable and support files, and you better extract them inside an emulator (or a real Macintosh). SIT – An old-school compressed file you could extract e.g. Basically just a raw file using HFS file system, but bigger in size than floppies are. If you are interested to know, BMOW floppy emu will show the format on LCD screen when accessing the image. IMAGE – Possibly a Disk Copy 4.2 image, but could be a raw HFS file system, too. img is used for newer disk image formats on Macintosh (Disk Copy 6 and later, and “New Disk Image Format” or NDIF). ![]() img extension is generally used for raw disk images (whereas raw Macintosh images usually have. It might be read only on your emulator, but BMOW floppy emu can also write back to the image. Most likely it is a Disk Copy 4.2 format. IMG - This extension is the mother of all confusions. DSK – A “raw” format simply containing disk data without checksums or other metadata. ZIP – A zip-compressed file you should know about :) Just uncompress it and see what’s inside. The downloads you get from Macintosh Garden, and other abandonware resources, are usually in one of these formats: A decent resource to extensively explain the disk image formats, and how to use them, is hard to find. Downloads are often directly usable with your favourite emulator or BMOW floppy emu, but sometimes you need to create a disk image. You can find a collection of Macintosh games from Macintosh Garden. I do not recommend downloading old software or other assets using these links. ![]()
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