![]() ![]() 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. ![]() There are lots of MacOS installers to pick from.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). You may also set up a new OS from scratch, MacOS Anthology is now available at Macintoshgarden. Just add an additional disk image in the Basilisk II Volumes GUI, run the emulator, initialise the new volume and copy over what you need. It may be, that you have to open System Folder and close it again, to make it bootable. Usually you may move all your stuff from one disk (image) to another in MacOS without damage. It is very easy to make disk images of any size on a Mac, here are some collected: for some reason the emulator says that my disks are locked and I can't copy files, even though in the GUI I have them set as read/write.Īlternatively, is there a way to expand the size of a disk? Namely the system disk that I downloaded from the second link.Ģ4bit wrote:Good to hear you got Basilisk II running!ĭisk images can not be expanded with the exception of sparse bundle ones. I am just confused about how the disk mounting works. I'll try that older one you linked at the bottom right now.Įdit: after some fiddling, I got it to work with the 2008 version. I just can't get BasiliskGUI to run because of the dll errors (which I assume is used to configure Basilisk itself, because if I try to run the Basilisk.exe without the GUI, it says it can't find a ROM). ![]() Yeah, I started with that webarchive package, then moved the updated. Many still feel that this was the best build ever, at least for 32bit Windows, it runs in 64bit too though. It has floppy and SCSI support and offers a buch of Gestalt IDs too. On a side note, you may also run the remade Build142, which runs more or less self contained. If you want to try a System 7.5.3 boot disk, there is one here: (You may of course update the BasiliskII.exe to the recent one, once you are up and running.) 24bit wrote:Just to make sure, did you start with Cat_7´s "Always start with this…"? ![]()
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