

Controls a keyboard and a mouse Ctrl + Escape will exit the emulator Mini vMac (Macintosh Plus) Place your Macintosh Plus ROMs in /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh ROMS Place your Macintosh Plus disks in /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh at minimum you'll need to include a Macintosh operating system file named System Tools.dsk as when choosing any dsk the launch script launches into the OS first by default.īIOS Place your vMac.ROM (Macintosh Plus Firmware) in /home/pi/RetroPie/BIOS Controls You'll want to shutdown from within the emulator to make sure to not corrupt your dsk and then you can use Ctrl+Q to exit the emulator.
#Apple ii emulator mac free no rom install#
Similar instructions can be found at Once you have a working disk image large enough to install other software on, you can access other install disk images from the 'Unix' icon on the Mac desktop which can access the file system of the Raspberry Pi. Since the disk setup GUI is not included in RetroPie's version of Basilisk, you must install Basilisk on your PC to create a larger image and copy your disk.img file to it. If your disk.img file (from MacStartup.img) only has a few MB of free space on it while running the emulator, you must create a new larger one if you want more free space.
#Apple ii emulator mac free no rom how to#
BasiliskII ROMS Accepted File (.dsk?.sit?) Place your Macintosh ROMs in /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh BIOS To start up your mac you need two main files: mac.rom (can be renamed from PERFORMA.ROM) disk.img (can be renamed from MacStartup.img) You will also place these files in /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh For more details see the forum post at and the links therein for detailed instructions about how to set up Basilisk II. Macintosh Plus, BasiliskII also emulates 68K but supports newer hardware as well e.g. Emulator Rom Folder Extension BIOS Controller Config mac.rom, disk.img hardcoded macintosh.dsk vMac.ROM hardcoded Emulators:, Mini vMac emulates the 68K processor macs (older software) e.g.

The Apple Macintosh, later renamed the Macintosh 128K, was a personal computer released in 1984.
