The goal of the Gryphel Project is to help preserve software made for early Macintosh computers, the computers that Apple sold from 1984 to 1996 based upon Motorola’s 680x0 microprocessors.
The center of this project - a family of free and open source emulators that allow such software to be used on modern computers
The rest of this project - software for the early Macintosh, links to alternatives to Mini vMac, links to related forums, lists of books, and more.
April 4, 2021 - permanent link
The MkKeysTl command line tool now supports multiple platforms, as was done for SigChkTl and SigWrtTl.
Compiling command line tools for m68k and mppc targets is now automated like all the other supported platforms. Except that they are not reproducible builds yet. It does not seem to be possible to clear junk out of the “Reserved for system use” area of a resource fork without the operating system immediately putting junk back in. Another approach would be to have to my tool for creating a “.sit” archive file clear this area in its output.
March 9, 2021 - permanent link
I noticed that some Apple System Software disk images I have fail the new test in Mini vMac 37 that is designed to protect files that aren’t actually Macintosh disk images by refusing to mount them. (The -ndp option, which defaults to on.) The boot blocks of these System Software images are garbage.
So today’s gateio beta no longer looks at the boot blocks, but only checks the master directory block.
February 14, 2021 - permanent link
The SigWrtTl command line tool now supports multiple platforms, as was done for SigChkTl.
While doing this, I worked out how to automate compiling command line tools using a networked virtual machine (in this case to compile for Apple Silicon), like is done for the Mini vMac Variations Service. To finish being able to compile for all supported platform with one command, I next should figure out how to automate compiling command line tools for m68k. Perhaps by using, for now, the technique used for compiling Mini vMac 3.5 for m68k, which is slower than current methods, but fast enough when not for the Variations Service.
January 30, 2021 - permanent link
A Chinese translation for the Mini vMac user interface has been anonymously contributed.
Unfortunately, as mentioned on the Mini vMac Localization page, displaying Chinese characters is not currently feasible for Mini vMac. I used Google Translate to convert the characters into Pinyin, and added a Chinese Pinyin page. This translation can be included in the next branch of Mini vMac. But I gather, from people who have previously considered doing the Chinese translation (1 2 3), that it would not be very useful. (Elsewhere I have seen it compared to an English speaker trying to read English written in the International Phonetic Alphabet. Even without previous practice it is doable, but slow and awkward.)
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Thanks to Yu Tsz Lui, Edzard Ceadda Stanislaus III, Arnaud Abbati, Scrutinize My System, and John Leake for sponsoring 15 months of web hosting for the Gryphel project.