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ICEBreaker
Oct 30, 2007, 12:00 PM
Dear forum members,

I am a newbie and I've read somewhere that Tiger was the last OS to support Classic Mode and that Leopard will do away with this.

I've Googlepediaed for this term but none of the items that turned up actually explained it properly.

Can anyone please inform me of what Classic Mode is?

I would like to be able to find and use old Mac programs from the 80s and 90s. Is Classic Mode related to this?

Thanks a lot.



Eidorian
Oct 30, 2007, 12:01 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classic_%28Mac_OS_X%29

http://www.google.com/search?q=mac+leopard+classic

bartelby
Oct 30, 2007, 12:01 PM
Classic is what remains of OS 9.

~Shard~
Oct 30, 2007, 12:04 PM
Classic Mode (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classic_%28Mac_OS_X%29) deals with Apple's pre-OS X environment and would allow users to run applications designed to run OS 8, OS 9 which may not be compatible with OS X.

ICEBreaker
Oct 30, 2007, 12:22 PM
Thanks for your replies guys, especially Shard. So may I have confirmation that Tiger can run OS 9 programs but Leopard cannot? Or is Classic Mode related to the hardware. If I buy Tiger on the new aluminium iMacs, will I still get Classic Mode?

Eidorian
Oct 30, 2007, 12:23 PM
Thanks for your replies guys, especially Shard. So may I have confirmation that Tiger can run OS 9 programs but Leopard cannot? Or is Classic Mode related to the hardware. If I buy Tiger on the new aluminium iMacs, will I still get Classic Mode?It's in relation to hardware and software.

Intel Macs can't run Classic Mode and a PowerPC one with Leopard can't as well.

a456
Oct 30, 2007, 12:23 PM
Thanks for your replies guys, especially Shard. So may I have confirmation that Tiger can run OS 9 programs but Leopard cannot? Or is Classic Mode related to the hardware. If I buy Tiger on the new aluminium iMacs, will I still get Classic Mode?

No, Classic mode has never been on Intel only PowerPC Macs.

xUKHCx
Oct 30, 2007, 12:25 PM
There are alternatives for getting Classic to run on intel such as sheepshaver

Cromulent
Oct 30, 2007, 12:25 PM
Thanks for your replies guys, especially Shard. So may I have confirmation that Tiger can run OS 9 programs but Leopard cannot? Or is Classic Mode related to the hardware. If I buy Tiger on the new aluminium iMacs, will I still get Classic Mode?

Intel Macs are incompatible with classic. You would need to get an old PPC based Mac to run the classic environment.

Edit : Damn it beaten by 3 people :). I type too slowly.

ICEBreaker
Oct 31, 2007, 11:25 AM
I see guys! Thank you all for your kind help. I shall get Sheepsaver then. Thanks!!

~Shard~
Oct 31, 2007, 11:28 AM
I wasn't actually aware of Sheepshaver myself, I might have to give it a try when I get my new Mac.

DoFoT9
May 5, 2008, 05:50 AM
hello, just got OS9 working under leopard. is anyone aware of how to read/write to the disk image that has been created??

apparently it is supposed to mount on the desktop, mine isnt doing that. is the disk image in a certain format? maybe i could add that and mount in disk utility and modify it there..


anyways,

thanks

gnasher729
May 5, 2008, 07:20 AM
Dear forum members,

I am a newbie and I've read somewhere that Tiger was the last OS to support Classic Mode and that Leopard will do away with this.

I've Googlepediaed for this term but none of the items that turned up actually explained it properly.

Can anyone please inform me of what Classic Mode is?

I would like to be able to find and use old Mac programs from the 80s and 90s. Is Classic Mode related to this?

Thanks a lot.

"Classic Mode" allows programs written for MacOS 8 and MacOS 9 to run on a machine with MacOS X installed. To use "Classic Mode", you need a computer with a PowerPC processor, not an Intel processor, and an operating system up to MacOS X 10.4 (Tiger), not Leopard.

You could of course look on eBay for an old Macintosh that actually runs MacOS 9 directly; they should go rather cheap by now.

DoFoT9
May 5, 2008, 07:23 AM
"Classic Mode" allows programs written for MacOS 8 and MacOS 9 to run on a machine with MacOS X installed. To use "Classic Mode", you need a computer with a PowerPC processor, not an Intel processor, and an operating system up to MacOS X 10.4 (Tiger), not Leopard.

You could of course look on eBay for an old Macintosh that actually runs MacOS 9 directly; they should go rather cheap by now.

are you aware of system 7 being able to run over sheep saver???