![]() ![]() Potential Issue: If you customized the installation you may get an error related to the “A/ROSE” extension. You are now finished setting up the emulator. You can configure the given settings, but the emulator will freeze if you attempt to configure network settings. If you have been using a physical CD, remove that and switch to “Boot from Any”. Run “BasiliskIIGUI.exe” and remove the CD image. When the installation is finished shut down the emulated computer (special –> shutdown). Potential issue: If you followed the above instructions but get an image of a floppy disk with a question mark, your CD image is not bootable. Hit “Quit” when the installation is finished. If you need something else from the CD, you can install it later. You probably don't need to customize the installation right now. I suggest that you install the default software. You should see an icon named something like “Install MacOS 8.1.” Run that to start the installation. Give it a name and select “initialize.” See figure two, below. You will first be asked to initialize the hard disk image you made. If you had the GTK development kit installed to run the old GUI, and it is not used for any other program you have installed, you can remove it too. If everything is OK, you can remove the old folder and its content. Next, run the GUI, point to the required Rom and disks in the new folder (or where you kept them outside of the old folder) and adjust the other GUI settings to match what you had before. If they are outside your old Basilisk II folder, leave them where they are now. If you kept your Rom file and hard disk image(s) in the old Basilisk II folder, copy them into the new folder. The number of dll files may be a bit overwhelming, but the up-side is that it is no longer necessary to install the GTK development kit to run the GUI. Most dll (application extensions) files included are needed to run the GUI. mircemk has added a new project titled Clone PI-W Atmega8 Metal Detector review.If you are upgrading from an old version of Basilisk II, the best thing to do is to download all files into a new folder and make a fresh start (but you can still use your old disk image and ROM).Lee Sampson has updated details to Sequencer.Lee Sampson has updated the project titled Sequencer.mircemk has updated details to Clone PI-W Atmega8 Metal Detector review.mircemk has updated components for the project titled Clone PI-W Atmega8 Metal Detector review.Andreas Hoelldorfer has added a new project titled mantisDeck.Andreas Hoelldorfer has added details to mantisDeck.Andreas Hoelldorfer has updated components for the project titled mantisDeck.steelman on Chandelier Mimics The Solar Analemma.Mr Name Required on Nazi Weapons Of The Future.Frankel on A Spreadsheet For The Python Hacker.Michael on Exploring Texas Instrument’s Forgotten CPU.ConductiveInsulation on Nazi Weapons Of The Future.Retrotechtacular: The Original Robot Arm 9 Comments Posted in classic hacks, Mac Hacks Tagged adapter, ipad, mac, mac Classic, touch screen Post navigation If you’re going to do it, might as well go all the way. As we’ve seen in the past, you can simply cut the ports off of a motherboard and glue them in place to make one of these conversions look a little more convincing. If there’s one thing we’re not thrilled with, it’s the empty holes left behind where the ports, switches, and floppy drive were removed. It’s an elegant solution that keeps you from having to make any modifications to that expensive piece of Apple hardware. Pushing the button essentially “unplugs” the iPad for a second, which just so happens to wake it up. In the end he came up with a very clever solution: he cuts into a charging cable and splices in a normally-closed momentary push button. That’s an excellent question, and one that wrestled with for awhile. Those with some first hand iPad experience might be wondering how you wake the tablet up once the Mac is all buttoned back up. ![]() You won’t be able to hit the Home button anymore, but otherwise it’s a very nice fit. We’ll just pretend hope that the computer was so damaged that repair simply wasn’t an option.Īnyway, with a hollow Mac in your possession, you can install the adapter that allows the iPad to get bolted in place of the original CRT monitor. He goes over the whole process in the video after the break, while being kind enough to spare our sensitive eyes from having to see the Mac’s enclosure stripped of its original electronics. ![]() With a laser-cut adapter and a little custom wiring, has come up with a repeatable way to modernize a Compact Macintosh (Plus, SE, etc) by swapping out all of its internals for an iPad mini. We know the classic Mac fans in the audience won’t be happy about this one, but the final results are simply too clean to ignore. ![]()
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