8 Hours Mac OS

broken image


  1. Mac Os 8.1 Download
  2. Mac Os 9 Download
  3. Mac Os 8 App
  4. Mac Os 8 Js
  5. Mac Os X

Apple Mac OS 8 was another major overhaul of the OS from the earlier Mac OS 7.It added a new Platinum visual theme, a multi threaded Finder, better virtual memory, and many customization options. 8.5 and later require a PPC CPU. Some people are big fans of Mac OS 8 and it turns out Slack developer Felix Rieseberg is one of them. So much so that he decided that the best way to spend his time was on creating an Electron app that emulates it. And you can download it, for free, now.

Mac OS 8 introduced several modern features while still supporting Quadras and 68040-based PowerBooks and Performas.

Mac Os 8.1 Download

Apple's New Mac OS Is Grrrrr-8

The six-inch '8' from that headline adorned the cover of the August 1997 issue of MacAddict magazine. Mac OS 8 had been released five days earlier, on July 26. Included on the magazine's CD-ROM was a Mac OS 8 Preview Pack that consisted of technology demo presentations and Aaron, a popular shareware extension that let you make System 7.5 through Mac OS 7.6 look like OS 8.

Mac OS 8 was not without anticipation: Aaron had already been applying the Mac OS 8 look to System 7 for years. Because of this anticipation, sales were more brisk than expected. Internet retailer Cyberian Outpost sold more than 2,000 copies in the first four days.

What caused all this commotion? New features, especially the user interface called Apple Platinum.

Here Comes the Bride (of Buster)

Mac OS 8 introduced many new features for Macintosh users. The Finder changes are the first you'll notice. These changes are deeper than just Apple Platinum; many features that are still part of the Macintosh today made their first appearance in Mac OS 8:

  • Spring Loaded Folders: Drag a file or folder and then pause, holding it over a folder or disk. After a short delay, the folder or disk will darken, flash, and then open. This process can be repeated over and over until you finally reach your destination. When you drop the file or folder, all the windows that opened snap shut again, leaving only the destination window. Cheryl England, then of MacAddict magazine, described the experience as '[somewhat like] having someone pick up your socks for you.'
  • Contextual Menus: Holding down Control while clicking activates this new feature. A popup menu appears with appropriate options for the object on which you're clicking. These are not Windows 95 style right-click menus, either; their contents change dynamically. For example, Empty Trash only appears in the Trash's Contextual Menu when there's actually something in the Trash.
  • Simple Finder and View As Buttons: Despite their famed user-friendliness, Macs sometimes need help being classroom-friendly. With Mac OS 8, AtEase and the Launcher are replaced with this tag-team of simplification features.
    Simple Finder turns off all but the most self-evident features of the Finder, making it much harder to accidentally do something destructive. Setting a window to View As Buttons makes all its icons appear inside large, single-click-to-open buttons. Turn on Simple Finder, stick aliases to all your classroom applications on the Desktop, set it to View As Buttons, and you're set. Kid-friendly and safe.
  • Multithreaded Finder: With Mac OS 8, you no longer needed to install Speed Doubler just to keep working while files are copying. The Multithreaded Finder of Mac OS 8 allows everything to keep on truckin', even while you're copying up a storm. It has a nicer-looking interface than Speed Doubler, too!

Not Just the Interface

There are many other improvements that may not be visible at first blush. Here are some other features that made their debut with Mac OS 8:

  • Completeness: Mac OS 8 includes almost everything. It builds upon System 7.6's inclusion of Open Transport PPP by shipping a full suite of Internet connectivity software. Both Netscape and Microsoft's version 3 browsers are installed by default, along with lots of useful online utilities, such as Stuffit Expander.
  • Modern Networking: Mac OS 8 was also the first system software version to come with the ability to access printer and file sharing over TCP/IP networks. With the default installation, Mac OS 8 includes everything in my Modern System 7.5 article and more!
  • HFS+ File System: Mac OS 8.1 debuted the Mac OS Extended file system, also called HFS+. This file system organizes information more efficiently to waste less space on large hard drives. 680×0 Macintosh computers cannot boot from an HFS+ volume, but they can read CD-R disks burned by modern Mac OS X computers. HFS+ support is the strongest argument for using Mac OS 8.1 instead of an updated System 7.5 or 7.6.
  • Large Volume Support: Working hand in hand with HFS+ is large volume support that actually works. System 7.5.3 and up reportedly support partition sizes up to 2 terabytes. In practice, this capability is almost never realized; virtually all System 7.5 users are limited to 4 GB partitions. Mac OS 8 completely removes this limitation, allowing all supported Macs (Quadras and PowerMacs) to use the largest volumes.
  • 68030 Compatibility: Mac OS 8 is only officially supported on Macs with a 68040 or PowerPC processor, but an unsupported hack removes the limitation. With some effort, Mac OS 8 runs on all 32-bit clean Macintosh computers (including the SE/30 when used with a Mac IIsi or IIfx ROM). On a 25 MHz Macintosh IIci, Mac OS 8 is sluggish but useful.

A Complete Behemoth

While Mac OS 8 really is Grrrrr-8, it's not an automatic choice for every Mac that can run it.

Due in part to its inclusiveness, Mac OS 8 has a much heftier RAM requirement than previous Mac OS revisions. While System 7.5.5 can be very usable with 16 MB of RAM, 32 MB is a better minimum for Mac OS 8.

Mac Os 9 Download

Mac OS 8 also requires a great deal more disk space than earlier versions; the default install consumes 120 MB. Installation of larger, newer hard drives into these older Macs is becoming more common, so this isn't as much of an issue as it was in years past. Still, the space crunch can be a problem for those who haven't upgraded their hard drives.

Because of the increased RAM and disk requirements, Mac OS 8 is not a good choice for users of stock 68k Macs. While Macs as old as the IIci can run Mac OS 8, their original hard drives are too small for it to fit! Later Quadras shipped with hard drives as large as 1 GB, but the meager RAM that Apple gave them is not enough for Mac OS 8.

Despite these shortcomings, Mac OS 8 can still be a useful addition to your smaller Macintosh. Almost any system with 12 MB RAM and a 68030 will be minimally functional with OS 8. For access to CD-Rs burned by Mac OS X's Disc Burner utility, only these bare minimum requirements need be met.

Even if your system isn't big enough to run Mac OS 8 all the time, it can be helpful to keep a copy around.

Closing Thoughts

Mac Os 8 App

To prepare for this article, I installed Mac OS 8.1 onto my Mac IIci, an unsupported 68030 Mac that runs at 25 MHz. I configured it with 20 MB of RAM and a 1 GB hard drive, and then I installed the default installation of Mac OS 8 according to Gamba's directions.

Remember that this system is quite a bit smaller than both Apple's and my recommendations. While I wouldn't encourage anyone to run 8.1 on their IIci with less than 32 MB RAM, I found the system to be quite usable – and rather sluggish.

The Finder modernizations in Mac OS 8 are noticeable right away. For users with multibutton mice (such as the Kensington TurboMouse trackball), the contextual menus make for a lot less mousing-around to get to the menu bar. Spring-loaded folders really are as convenient as having your socks picked up for you. Mac OS 8 provides a great user experience.

Mac Os 8 Js

The broad out-of-the-box compatibility with newer Macs is great, too. Right after the install, I can connect to and browse the Web using Netscape. I can exchange files with my Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger machine without the hassle of long directions and multiple updates.

Simply mounting HFS+ CD-ROMs instead of asking 'Can you please reburn this as standard HFS?' is blissful.

While my IIci can't do it, my Quadra can store hundreds of gigabytes on one partition. System 7 user's '5 icons for one big partitioned hard drive' syndrome is no more.

All in all, I'd call my IIci with Mac OS 8 experiment a success.

The Final Verdict

For Quadra owners with RAM and hard drive upgrades, Mac OS 8 is a very convenient, modern choice. Users of heavily upgraded II-series Macs will also enjoy it. Even users with smaller Macs can find a reason to boot into Mac OS 8 from time to time.

Don't forget that the RAM and drives for these older Macs can be gotten very cheaply from many sources, including eBay. If you want to run Mac OS 8 but don't have the hardware, it can be gotten at minimal cost.

Mac OS 8 is not available for free download, but it can be found in all the usual places. One excellent source is owners of Beige G3 Macs; they shipped with Mac OS 8.1 on CD-ROM. Once again, eBay is also an excellent choice.

Once you've acquired a Mac OS 8 CD-ROM, the important 8.1 updater can be downloaded from Apple.

As either your primary system or on a secondary hard drive, Mac OS 8.1 deserves consideration by users of all but the earliest 680×0 Macintosh computers.

Find out what it can do for you.

Keywords: #macos8 #classicmacos

Short link: http://goo.gl/YDup8y

searchword: macos8

This content has been archived, and is no longer maintained by Indiana University. Information here may no longer be accurate, and links may no longer be available or reliable.
Hours

The Standard Roman character set, often called Mac OS Romanor MacRoman, is an 8-bit character set used in older Macintoshoperating systems to display Western characters. It has since beenreplaced by Unicode (UTF-8).

It is an extension of both US ASCII and earlier Mac OScharacter sets and is identical to ASCII for the first 128 characters.It also resembles the Latin-1 character set, including manyaccented characters and a number of additional symbols, though the twosets don't include all of the same symbols. Latin-1 and Mac OS Roman alsodiffer on the characters assigned to numbers. For example, smallletter 'a' with an acute accent (á) is decimal 225 in Latin-1,but is decimal 135 in Mac OS Roman.

Mac Os X

The following table describes the Mac OS Roman character set, associatingthe decimal and hexadecimal equivalents with descriptionsof the characters. Also included are the keystrokes for all printingand a few non-printing characters used with Apple's US Englishkeyboard layout. Not all fonts can represent all characters, whilesome fonts will represent alternate characters.

Dec Hex Description Keystrokes
0 00 null character
1 01 start of heading
2 02 start of text
3 03 end of text
4 04 end of transmission
5 05 enquiry
6 06 acknowledge
7 07 bell
8 08 backspace
9 09 horizontal tabulation
10 0A line feed
11 0B vertical tabulation
12 0C form feed
13 0D carriage return Return
14 0E Shift out
15 0F Shift in
16 10 data link escape
17 11 device control one
18 12 device control two
19 13 device control three
20 14 device control four
21 15 negative acknowledge
22 16 synchronous idle
23 17 end of transmission block
24 18 cancel
25 19 end of medium
26 1A substitute
27 1B escape Esc
28 1C file separator
29 1D group separator
30 1E record separator
31 1F unit separator
32 20 space Spacebar
33 21 Shift-1
34 22 ' Shift-'
35 23 # Shift-3
36 24 $ Shift-4
37 25 % Shift-5
38 26 & Shift-7
39 27 ' '
40 28 ( Shift-9
41 29 ) Shift-0
42 2A * Shift-8
43 2B + Shift-=
44 2C , ,
45 2D - -
46 2E . .
47 2F / /
48 30 0 0
49 31 1 1
50 32 2 2
51 33 3 3
52 34 4 4
53 35 5 5
54 36 6 6
55 37 7 7
56 38 8 8
57 39 9 9
58 3A : Shift-;
59 3B ; ;
60 3C < Shift-,
61 3D = =
62 3E > Shift-.
63 3F ? Shift-/
64 40 @ Shift-2
65 41 A Shift-a
66 42 B Shift-b
67 43 C Shift-c
68 44 D Shift-d
69 45 E Shift-e
70 46 F Shift-f
71 47 G Shift-g
72 48 H Shift-h
73 49 I Shift-i
74 4A J Shift-j
75 4B K Shift-k
76 4C L Shift-l
77 4D M Shift-m
78 4E N Shift-n
79 4F O Shift-o
80 50 P Shift-p
81 51 Q Shift-q
82 52 R Shift-r
83 53 S Shift-s
84 54 T Shift-t
85 55 U Shift-u
86 56 V Shift-v
87 57 W Shift-w
88 58 X Shift-x
89 59 Y Shift-y
90 5A Z Shift-z
91 5B [ [
92 5C
93 5D ] ]
94 5E ^ Shift-6
95 5F _ Shift-hyphen
96 60 ` `
97 61 a a
98 62 b b
99 63 c c
100 64 d d
101 65 e e
102 66 f f
103 67 g g
104 68 h h
105 69 i i
106 6A j j
107 6B k k
108 6C l l
109 6D m m
110 6E n n
111 6F o o
112 70 p p
113 71 q q
114 72 r r
115 73 s s
116 74 t t
117 75 u u
118 76 v v
119 77 w w
120 78 x x
121 79 y y
122 7A z z
123 7B { Shift-[
124 7C | Shift-
125 7D } Shift-]
126 7E ~ Shift-`
127 7F delete Delete
128 80 Ä (A with diaeresis) Option-u Shift-a
129 81 Å (A with ring) Option-Shift-a
130 82 Ç (C with cedilla) Option-Shift-c
131 83 É (E with acute accent) Option-e Shift-e
132 84 Ñ (N with tilde) Option-n Shift-n
133 85 Ö (O with diaeresis) Option-u Shift-o
134 86 Ü (U with diaeresis) Option-u Shift-u
135 87 á (a with acute accent) Option-e a
136 88 à (a with grave accent) Option-` a
137 89 â (a with circumflex) Option-i a
138 8A ä (a with diaeresis) Option-u a
139 8B ã (a with tilde) Option-n a
140 8C å (a with ring) Option-a
141 8D ç (c with cedilla) Option-c
142 8E é (e with acute accent) Option-e e
143 8F è (e with grave accent) Option-` e
144 90 ê (e with circumflex) Option-i e
145 91 ë (e with diaeresis) Option-u e
146 92 í (i with acute accent) Option-e i
147 93 ì (i with grave accent) Option-` i
148 94 î (i with circumflex) Option-i i
149 95 ï (i with diaeresis) Option-u i
150 96 ñ (n with tilde) Option-n n
151 97 ó (o with acute accent) Option-e o
152 98 ò (o with grave accent) Option-` o
153 99 ô (o with circumflex) Option-i o
154 9A ö (o with diaeresis) Option-u o
155 9B õ (o with tilde) Option-n o
156 9C ú (u with acute accent) Option-e u
157 9D ù (u with grave accent) Option-` u
158 9E û (u with circumflex) Option-i u
159 9F ü (u with diaeresis) Option-u u
160 A0 † (dagger) Option-t
161 A1 ° (degree) Option-Shift-8
162 A2 ¢ (cent) Option-4
163 A3 £ (pound sterling) Option-3
164 A4 § (section) Option-6
165 A5 • (bullet) Option-8
166 A6 ¶ (pilcrow [paragraph sign]) Option-7
167 A7 ß (small sharp s) Option-s
168 A8 ® (registered trademark) Option-r
169 A9 © (copyright) Option-g
170 AA ™ (trademark) Option-2
171 AB ´ (acute accent) Option-e
172 AC ¨ (diaeresis) (umlaut) Option-u
173 AD not equal to Option-=
174 AE Æ (AE ligature) Option-Shift-'
175 AF Ø (O with slash) Option-Shift-o
176 B0 infinity Option-5
177 B1 ± (plus or minus) Option-Shift-=
178 B2 less than or equal to Option-,
179 B3 greater than or equal to Option-.
180 B4 ¥ (yen) Option-y
181 B5 µ (micro) Option-m
182 B6 partial differential Option-d
183 B7 summation Option-w
184 B8 product (capital pi) Option-Shift-p
185 B9 small pi Option-p
186 BA integral Option-b
187 BB ª (feminine ordinal) Option-9
188 BC º (masculine ordinal) Option-0
189 BD ohm (omega) Option-z
190 BE æ (ae ligature) Option-'
191 BF ø (o with slash) Option-o
192 C0 ¿ (inverted question mark) Option-Shift-?
193 C1 ¡ (inverted exclamation mark) Option-1
194 C2 ¬ (not) Option-l
195 C3 square root Option-v
196 C4 ƒ (small script f) Option-f
197 C5 almost equal to Option-x
198 C6 increment (delta) Option-j
199 C7 « (left pointing guillemet) Option-
200 C8 » (right pointing guillemet) Option-Shift-
201 C9 … (horizontal ellipsis) Option-;
202 CA (non-breaking space) Option-Spacebar
203 CB À (A with grave accent) Option-` Shift-a
204 CC Ã (A with tilde) Option-n Shift-a
205 CD Õ (O with tilde) Option-n Shift-o
206 CE Œ (OE ligature) Option-Shift-q
207 CF œ (oe ligature) Option-q
208 D0 – (endash) Opt-hyphen
209 D1 — (emdash) Option-Shift-hyphen
210 D2 ' (left double quote) Option-[
211 D3 ' (right double quote) Option-Shift-[
212 D4 ‘ (left single quote) Option-]
213 D5 ' (right single quote) Option-Shift-]
214 D6 ÷ (division) Option-/
215 D7 lozenge Option-Shift-v
216 D8 › (y with diaeresis) Option-u y
217 D9 Ÿ (Y with diaeresis) Option-u Shift-y
218 DA fraction slash Option-Shift-1
219 DB € (euro) Option-Shift-2
220 DC Option-Shift-3
221 DD
› (right pointing single guillemet)
Option-Shift-4
222 DE Option-Shift-5
223 DF
þ (small fl ligature [small thorn)]
Option-Shift-6
224 E0 ‡ (double dagger) Option-Shift-7
225 E1 · (middle dot) Option-Shift-9
226 E2 ‚ (low single quote) Option-Shift-0
227 E3 „ (low double quote) Option-Shift-w
228 E4 ‰ (per mille) Option-Shift-r
229 E5 Â (A with circumflex)
230 E6 Ê (E with circumflex) Option-i Shift-e
231 E7 Á (A with acute accent)
Option-Shift-y or Option-e Shift-a
232 E8 Ë (E with diaeresis) Option-u Shift-e
233 E9 È (E with grave accent) Option-` Shift-e
234 EA Í (I with acute accent)
235 EB Î (I with circumflex)
Option-Shift-d or Option-i Shift-i
236 EC Ï (I with diaeresis)
237 ED Ì (I with grave accent) Option-` Shift-i
238 EE Ó (O with acute accent)
Option-Shift-h or Option-e Shift-o
239 EF Ô (O with circumflex)
240 F0 Apple Computer logo Option-Shift-k
241 F1 Ò (O with grave accent)
Option-Shift-l or Option-` Shift-o
242 F2 Ú (U with acute accent)
243 F3 Û (U with circumflex) Option-i Shift-u
244 F4 Ù (U with grave accent) Option-` Shift-u
245 F5 i without a dot Option-Shift-b
246 F6 ˆ (circumflex accent) Option-Shift-i
247 F7 ˜ (tilde accent) Option-Shift-n
248 F8 ¯ (macron) Option-Shift-,
249 F9 breve Option-Shift-.
250 FA dot accent Option-h
251 FB ring Option-k
252 FC ¸ (cedilla accent) Option-Shift-z
253 FD double acute accent Option-Shift-g
254 FE ogonek Option-Shift-x
255 FF hacek Option-Shift-t






broken image