Good old PearPC. I remembered I was fascinated by the Mac and tried PearPC on my Pentium D system for a long time...and it then lead me to hackintosh later... Good memories...
@@Sparkette That's a bit of a stretch, yes, they did run 6502, but that was in an entirely different line of products (Apple II). The Macintosh was running a 68000 from the start.
@@masterkamen371 The Macintosh actually started off with a 6502, it wasn't until Jobs took over the project that it switched to the 68000. If Jef Raskin had his way, the original Macintosh would have been a drastically different machine. The first prototype of the Macintosh under Jef used a 6502 in 1981. It would have been a largely text based, keyboard driven machine because Jef hated mice.
I have actually used PearPC back around 2012 to resurrect a broken G3 mac with no CD drive and broken USB port, where I installed MacOS in PearPC then cloned the disk image onto the mac's drive with an external HDD caddy.
I did something similar recently to get Windows 2000 on a macbook, plugged the macHDD to my PC, used RAW HDD Copy Tool to copy a virtualbox machine I'd already loaded with drivers to the hdd after running the first pass of setup, then booted from the macHDD itself in the virtual machine completing setup before moving it back to the macbook
@@thewubmachine840 Instead of Apple the computers from icarly were Pear (Edit: I can imagine a prop department guy found PearPC and decided to make the show use PearBooks)
God, PearPC. That brings back memories. I'm pretty sure that Halo didn't launch because the emulator doesn't support graphics acceleration. It's a common issue with OS X virtualization and emulation, as emulating graphics hardware is a bit obtuse. If you can get QE/CI working entirely under software, you've got something good going.
I remember my antivirus flagging the PearPC HDD file as an "Archive Bomb". It reported that it was an extremely small and empty file which would expand into a multi-Gibibyte file size when I needed to use it.
Hey! This brought back memories. I used PearPC back in the day. I say "used," I mean "farted around with." It led me to messing with OSX on a Dell Mini 10 netbook which was a whole other project. Love your videos for stuff just like this.
I used PearPC on our family computer as a kid (a P4-era Celeron). 10.4 Tiger ran like crap but I remember being AMAZED that modern PPC emulation was possible.
I remember this waaaaay back in the day! I made one of the config UIs for it out of the installation wizard workflow in Visual Studio. Interest in it flat out dissolved when Mactel was announced
Yeah, I was surprised this never came up when talking about the development slowing and then stopping. It's the first thing that comes to mind, as someone who was following the project with great interest at the time. The pace of development never recovered after Stefan Weyergraf's untimely accident.
This takes me back… I had a Pentium 4 Dell with 768mb of ram and I tried to run Mac OS X on that thing so many times using PearPC. I ended up getting a G3 iMac, G4 eMac, and then an Intel iMac a few years later. Fun times.
Halo would obviously require some pretty advanced 3D acceleration, and I wouldn't think that PearPC has that. Even QEMU lacks that today when it comes to PowerPC system emulation. I think they might be working on Rage 128 emulation, and I sure hope that's the case and that we see it reach a working state soon.
I got into Mac first running Snow Leopard on my Acer Netbook with Intel Atom processor and 10" display. Originally shipped with Windows XP. Formatted immediately to run OS X. I could only use Ethernet as the integrated wifi was not compatible. It ran fine!
Thank you for your great, nostalgic video about the old-school PearPC emulator. It brings back the memories of software like Stardock WindowBlinds (the old-school one) etc., which is also a good idea for the next video.
I remember trying this in like 2003-4. I had a P4 1.5 and it took like 10-15 minutes to boot MacOS because not only was it translating PowerPC instructions, but it had no AltiVec (SIMD) support whatsoever. The Mac OS X about dialog showed a CPU speed of 0 MHz LOL
Oh my god. I actually tried this out when I was a teenager. I was able to convince my friend's dad to borrow their OS X Panther CDs, and it surprisingly worked.
I rmember running it on my HP ZD8000 laptop. I just loved seeing the expression on people's faces, seeing a PC running MacOS X. Priceless! BTW, I coded the initial implementation of a mouse capture/release, just by moving the mouse in and out of the emulator's window (instead of pressing a shortcut key). Unfortunately, I don´t think my code was ever merged as someone (at the same time) did a much better job and rewrote the whole serial/mouse stack.
cherryOS is very sloppy. HPFS was the File System used in OS/2 and had nothing to do with HFS that Mac OS used… They probably did the bare minimum to wrap an UI around PearPC.
Well, the guy behind Maui X-Stream (the MXSinc who made it) now fancies himself as a "serial entrepreneur", and of course, is flogging AI nonsense. Looks like he was sued in 2016 for defrauding investors in one of his companies, Code Rebel, and makes no mention of Maui X-Stream anywhere in his online bios.
To be fair, the standard Qemu build lacks audio for the Apple PowerPC machines as well, and so far I haven't got it working with the "screamer" fork either.
@@zebubble2084Seconding that. You'll get the sound it wants to play... sometimes on time but most of the time with extra sputters, pops, and clips along with it.
Y love this channel. Just yesterday I needed to run a PPC version of Illustrator CS2 on my M1 MacBook. The first thing I said was "Is PearPC for M1 MacBook a thing?". Turns out, it isn't, and I ended up using UTM (Pretty program btw! It's basically a UI for Qemu in Mac, and it is pretty friendly). But I made me nostalgic for this one program Literally the next day the smoothing computer madman comes out and makes a video on just that to scratch my itch
There was a GUI Windows (maybe Linux too?) launcher for PearPC that made the rounds, it might've been hosted on SF as well but my memory of that time is pretty shot. I'm currently messing with the more modern PowerPC emulators, like dingusppc and the mentioned support by QEMU.
Wow, I haven't thought about PearPC in a long while, I used to mess around with it and Basilisk II to play around with the old MacOS versions before eventually getting a PowerMac G4. Good times.
As soon as I saw the title of this video, it reminded me of a Linux distro called Pear OS. That was meant to mimic macOS. They got up to Mac OS Monterey before they switched branding. It actually may be the same company. I’m not completely sure. You may want to look into it.
I remember trying PearPC the first time, I ran Tiger. But I was having a brandnew MacBook1,1 in my clauset, but still I had to wait for my Birthday before trying this one, so I ran Tiger in PearPC a few days earlier.
in regards to Halo, none of the emulators support 3D Acceleration, there are some games you can run in emulators but nothing you need 3DFX for. Tons of games much older than halo work on PearPC and other emulators
I'm fairly certain Halo needs OpenGL acceleration. I don't know if the G3 Clamshell had the needed drivers or hardware, but I do know that my Beige G3/333 would _not_ because Mac OS X never had 3D drivers for the built-in GPU (ATI Rage, IIRC). And there's no way that emulator supports anything 3D, not only due to its alpha state, but because _very_ few emulators even do 3D acceleration emulation or pass-thru. There is a new emulator on the Mac emulator scene called DingusPPC. However, it is still very new, and probably won't even be able to run Halo (the upper limit they're aiming for, hardware-wise, is a Beige G3 (including GPU); See comment above about Mac OS X support for 3D), but it shows promise.
Reminds me of the hassle of setting up a Hackintosh. I can't remember the amount of clean installs it took to get it working (and then I still had no sound).
Man I remember trying to use pear back in the day on my celly laptop it was so bloddy slow but super cool. Then a few years after that osx86 was a thing and I was natively running it on that same laptop.
Perhaps I’m wrong, but as far as I remember, OSX was built for both PPC and X86 CPUs. But the x86 official public compiled version started from 10.4 tiger. I never was able to find a x86 version prior 10.4, although Steve Jobs himself told the world that indeed they existed. When he showed the transition to the public he was running a P4 3.4 ghz with HT on tiger 10.4. I would imagine all the x86 clones if this was leaked somehow.
I remember trying PearPC years ago but it was too slow to be useable. I suspect the JIT feature hadn't been added yet. To me it's always been a bit of an oddity since there wasn't much "regular" software for that era of Macintosh that didn't also have a corresponding Windows version. So you may as well just run the Windows version natively. How well does PearPC run on a more modern PC? A video on BasiliskII might be worthwhile. It was a predecessor to PearPC, for running MacOS 7 or 8 under emulation. Unlike PearPC the emulation was fast enough to be perfectly useable. I don't know if BasiliskII is still under development but there are builds to run it under recent versions of MacOS. It also runs under Windows and Linux. I remember running it years ago under Windows XP on an AMD K6-2 350 (from 1998) and the emulator was faster than a PowerBook 190cs from 1995. On a modern PC the emulation just flies, though I've never actually tried running games on it. A good test might be something like IndyCar Racing 2 from 1996.
Did you never make a video about Executor? Might make for a fun follow-up to this one. Its an MS-Dos program that I can most closely compare to Wine, if it was meant to emulate MacOS
pearOS the windows/Apple hybrid like OS that was used from Drake and Josh / Zoey-101 to Danger Force which is the last show that will use it. pearOS has a lot in common with both macOS and Windows XP
IN 2015 I try the other way around, emulate 386 on macG3, but never got beyond the install scream of XP. I hold my G3 for years, because of the games I had for it.
That sure would make for an interesting follow-up video! Back in the day I used to run 98 SE under Connectix's/Microsoft's Virtual PC on a 400 MHz Indigo iMac, and it actually wasn't bad at all. I even got a game (Counter-Strike 1.6) to run. It was a slideshow, yes, but it ran nonetheless, which was just amazing to me. I remember even playing a multiplayer match over the LAN with a real Windows PC that I had at the time.
I remember doing it as well, but in my case it was all pre set because it just worked by clicking the pear pc.exe logo, it came with the disk image and everything in the folder. However my problem was that I was never able to make it recognize usb drives or my disk drive, or had any network capabilities so it was like having only the desktop apps loaded into the screen with no other capabilities whatsoever. This pushed me to actually try hackingtosh later. It was 10.4.11
I didn’t use this emulator, but I did run hackintosh versions of Mac OS I found online. Even though it ran natively on Intel hardware, there was still a lot of limitations, so much so that I end up buying a Mac Mini in 2009. I since bought 4 Mac Book Pros (last user upgradeable Mac Book pro, I upgraded the HDD to SSD, I had already configured it to have 8 gigs of RAM when cpu got old, I got the first Mac Book Pro with Touch Bar. When Dual Core CPU got too slow, I traded it in for Final Intel based MacBook Pro. Then I traded it in for a M2 Pro Mac Book Pro). I also had built gaming PCs and had game consoles. But I primarily game on PC now. Mac Book Pro is a video editing beast. Yeah I guess could video edit on my gaming rig which isn’t a slouch. But Mac sips energy. Gaming rig sucks 600watts full tilt. 😅 Intel 13700k 32 GB DDR4 3600 (I bought early so DDR 5 motherboards were really expensive, I would have gone DDR5 if they were the price they are now) 500GB WD NVME SSD - OS drive Older 2TB Intel NVME SSD Gigabyte Radeon RX 6800 XT (cheapest high end video card with 16GB of vram at the time)
About the GPL, you need to make the modified source available only if you publish your changes, if you use the changed version internally in your org/company/home, you don't have to publish the sources.
Man, can’t believe I wasn’t aware of this when I was a kid. I wanted to switch to Mac because our school used Macs in the computer lab and we only had windows XP at home. I ended up begging my parents for a MacBook for “school purposes”. I was a spoiled kiddo😅😅😅😅
@12:01 I'm not surprised Halo didn't work. My experience with PPC emulation (Basilisk II, Sheepshaver, qemu, ect) trying to play the few Mac exclusive titles has been non of the emulators have true hardware 3d accelerated graphics, meaning except for simple 2d games I still need to pull out my bulky IMac g3 or g5 tower when I want to play an 3d tittles. qemu at least reports hardware acceleration to the guest OS allowing some 3D games that "require" hardware acceleration to run, but it's all software rendering and often slow. I read online if you can tracked down the correct AMD card (I haven't manged to) possibly requiring a pci to pcie adapter, you can setup gpu pass-through to the PPC guest. Someone started working on Rage ATI emulation for qemu, when using a build of qemu with that, it enables more 3D games to run with software rendering. However it was even slower then vanilla qemu. Ironically waiting for 3D acceleration to come to these emulators, I have seen the games I wanted to emulate slowly be given source ports on github. So one day it might not be necessary for me to this at all.
You should run this on a newer PC. It's far too slow to be usable with a Pentium 4 class processor. Plus, you can run some pretty recent X releases on some PCs. Frankly, the inability of even a high end G4 to run anything modern on the web is an indictment of how bad the web is today. Even really basic websites will not display properly on an older compatible browser.
PLS make a review for the bb navigator for ps2 The BB Navigator for the PS2 was akin to an XMB (Cross Media Bar) user interface for the console. It seemed poised to be the original interface for the PS2, but perhaps due to time constraints, it wasn't implemented at launch. But it will be interesting For you to review it
I remember trying PearPC as a kid back in the day, never could make it work as I didn't read the documentation and expected it to "just work"
me too... until i tried it with the HDD from my iMac G3. it "just worked" O.o 19 year old me was amazed
Me too lol
And nothing has changed lol, all the kids still expect console emulators to just work.
Me, but with Virtualbox when i was a kid.
trying to uncompress 6GB image in FAT32 😂
Good old PearPC. I remembered I was fascinated by the Mac and tried PearPC on my Pentium D system for a long time...and it then lead me to hackintosh later... Good memories...
From PowerPC to x86 to ARM
Time flies so fast
And from M68k to PowerPC in the mid-90s.
@@masterkamen371 And 6502 before that.
And now to ARM/Silicon Mac.
@@Sparkette That's a bit of a stretch, yes, they did run 6502, but that was in an entirely different line of products (Apple II). The Macintosh was running a 68000 from the start.
@@masterkamen371 The Macintosh actually started off with a 6502, it wasn't until Jobs took over the project that it switched to the 68000. If Jef Raskin had his way, the original Macintosh would have been a drastically different machine. The first prototype of the Macintosh under Jef used a 6502 in 1981. It would have been a largely text based, keyboard driven machine because Jef hated mice.
I have actually used PearPC back around 2012 to resurrect a broken G3 mac with no CD drive and broken USB port, where I installed MacOS in PearPC then cloned the disk image onto the mac's drive with an external HDD caddy.
I did something similar recently to get Windows 2000 on a macbook, plugged the macHDD to my PC, used RAW HDD Copy Tool to copy a virtualbox machine I'd already loaded with drivers to the hdd after running the first pass of setup, then booted from the macHDD itself in the virtual machine completing setup before moving it back to the macbook
It's possible to do a similar thing with the Basilisk II emulator, mounting IDE hard drives removed from old "classic" Macs on a more modern machine.
That’s awesome! 👏 I have a 350mHz blueberry g3 slot-loader that works beautifully on os9 but good to know in case.
And that's how they got the iCarly PC OS right
Edit: HOLY SHIT, *821* LIKES?!, Also, i don't need iCarly intro lyrics
Right
Yeah
So wake up, the members of my nation
@@mysticaxolotl8215 Its your time to be
@@deltaboogaloo633 There's no chance unless you take one
If you drag PPC.CFG to PPC.EXE it will run PPC.EXE with the full path of PPC.CFG as an argument
Try saying that out loud. ;)
... because that's how arguments in drag n drop works.
@@santoshpssI did. Now i cant close my mouth. I broke it..
Oh wow, the computer from iCarly!
The show didnt exist when PearPC came out
@@thewubmachine840 not with that attitude!
@@thewubmachine840 Instead of Apple the computers from icarly were Pear (Edit: I can imagine a prop department guy found PearPC and decided to make the show use PearBooks)
@@thewubmachine840Bro missed the joke
@@thewubmachine840But Drake & Josh did, which also has the pear computers
God, PearPC. That brings back memories.
I'm pretty sure that Halo didn't launch because the emulator doesn't support graphics acceleration. It's a common issue with OS X virtualization and emulation, as emulating graphics hardware is a bit obtuse. If you can get QE/CI working entirely under software, you've got something good going.
You will never be a cat
@@jm036 👍
@@jm036 and you will never be a decent human being, whats your fuckin point?
@@jm036wtf
@@jm036and you will never be a meme
No time for sleep. MJD has uploaded.
+1
Yeah
YEAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!
bro it's 6pm
@@F1Guy1because we are europeans xD
I remember my antivirus flagging the PearPC HDD file as an "Archive Bomb". It reported that it was an extremely small and empty file which would expand into a multi-Gibibyte file size when I needed to use it.
well that's because it was the Bomb🤣🤣
Hey! This brought back memories. I used PearPC back in the day. I say "used," I mean "farted around with." It led me to messing with OSX on a Dell Mini 10 netbook which was a whole other project. Love your videos for stuff just like this.
Farted around with?
@@comedyreliefguy5112he lollygagged, or better yet did some tomfoolery- might i even say shmeckledorfed
Man, I was wondering why this emulator stopped development up until you explained CherryOS. What a damn shame.
I used PearPC on our family computer as a kid (a P4-era Celeron). 10.4 Tiger ran like crap but I remember being AMAZED that modern PPC emulation was possible.
I remember this waaaaay back in the day! I made one of the config UIs for it out of the installation wizard workflow in Visual Studio. Interest in it flat out dissolved when Mactel was announced
The original developer was actually hit by a train which is why developments ceased.
Yeah, I was surprised this never came up when talking about the development slowing and then stopping. It's the first thing that comes to mind, as someone who was following the project with great interest at the time. The pace of development never recovered after Stefan Weyergraf's untimely accident.
This takes me back… I had a Pentium 4 Dell with 768mb of ram and I tried to run Mac OS X on that thing so many times using PearPC. I ended up getting a G3 iMac, G4 eMac, and then an Intel iMac a few years later. Fun times.
18:35 I like that it calls "HPFS" volumes, which is the OS/2 file system. I'm sure they actually meant HFS+... and it shows how smart they were.
Great video, and great emulator. I didn't know PearPC existed until now, but it's certainly quite impressive for the time
Halo would obviously require some pretty advanced 3D acceleration, and I wouldn't think that PearPC has that. Even QEMU lacks that today when it comes to PowerPC system emulation. I think they might be working on Rage 128 emulation, and I sure hope that's the case and that we see it reach a working state soon.
I got into Mac first running Snow Leopard on my Acer Netbook with Intel Atom processor and 10" display. Originally shipped with Windows XP. Formatted immediately to run OS X. I could only use Ethernet as the integrated wifi was not compatible. It ran fine!
Thank you for your great, nostalgic video about the old-school PearPC emulator. It brings back the memories of software like Stardock WindowBlinds (the old-school one) etc., which is also a good idea for the next video.
I remember trying this in like 2003-4. I had a P4 1.5 and it took like 10-15 minutes to boot MacOS because not only was it translating PowerPC instructions, but it had no AltiVec (SIMD) support whatsoever. The Mac OS X about dialog showed a CPU speed of 0 MHz LOL
For Easy access, you can drag the CFG File to the PPC Executable then it will open immediately
8:15 Even QEMU needs a bit of hackery to get sound working on PPC and it's not implemented in the main distro yet.
Oh my god. I actually tried this out when I was a teenager. I was able to convince my friend's dad to borrow their OS X Panther CDs, and it surprisingly worked.
I rmember running it on my HP ZD8000 laptop. I just loved seeing the expression on people's faces, seeing a PC running MacOS X. Priceless!
BTW, I coded the initial implementation of a mouse capture/release, just by moving the mouse in and out of the emulator's window (instead of pressing a shortcut key).
Unfortunately, I don´t think my code was ever merged as someone (at the same time) did a much better job and rewrote the whole serial/mouse stack.
cherryOS is very sloppy. HPFS was the File System used in OS/2 and had nothing to do with HFS that Mac OS used…
They probably did the bare minimum to wrap an UI around PearPC.
Well, the guy behind Maui X-Stream (the MXSinc who made it) now fancies himself as a "serial entrepreneur", and of course, is flogging AI nonsense. Looks like he was sued in 2016 for defrauding investors in one of his companies, Code Rebel, and makes no mention of Maui X-Stream anywhere in his online bios.
To be fair, the standard Qemu build lacks audio for the Apple PowerPC machines as well, and so far I haven't got it working with the "screamer" fork either.
It works, but it ain't great.
@@zebubble2084Seconding that. You'll get the sound it wants to play... sometimes on time but most of the time with extra sputters, pops, and clips along with it.
If QEMU can emulate a USB Class 1 Audio device then that should work.
Now that is very interesting! A good Mac OS X emulator I have never seen before.
Sadly, PearPC is pretty much abandoned.
Qemu would be a better experience.
Y love this channel. Just yesterday I needed to run a PPC version of Illustrator CS2 on my M1 MacBook.
The first thing I said was "Is PearPC for M1 MacBook a thing?". Turns out, it isn't, and I ended up using UTM (Pretty program btw! It's basically a UI for Qemu in Mac, and it is pretty friendly). But I made me nostalgic for this one program
Literally the next day the smoothing computer madman comes out and makes a video on just that to scratch my itch
If someone does decide to pick up this project, I hope they add sound card support and also the opportunity to install OS 9 or even Leopard.
Oh jesus... PearPC. I barely even remember it
Nostalgic! I used to use Pear PC on an Intel mac under wine when I was a kid just to see how Mac OS used to be :D
yessir, dude! ive been waitin' for this!
When I was on Spymac (who here even remembers that site before it tanked?) there was a LOT more discussion around PearPC and CherryOS.
I was always interested in emulating Mac OS. It can be a bit of a pain but really cool once it's fully working
There was a GUI Windows (maybe Linux too?) launcher for PearPC that made the rounds, it might've been hosted on SF as well but my memory of that time is pretty shot. I'm currently messing with the more modern PowerPC emulators, like dingusppc and the mentioned support by QEMU.
Wow, I haven't thought about PearPC in a long while, I used to mess around with it and Basilisk II to play around with the old MacOS versions before eventually getting a PowerMac G4. Good times.
Holy crap, that 9down logo.. triggered some memories... Woah ..
finally mac os supports emulations, i’m still waiting for mac os x 10.7, i wonder when it releases
I remember that! It was slow as hell on the PC I had but it was an interesting peek into the OSX world
That "wintel" machine was the same type of prebuilt I had growing up. Blast from the past.
As soon as I saw the title of this video, it reminded me of a Linux distro called Pear OS. That was meant to mimic macOS. They got up to Mac OS Monterey before they switched branding. It actually may be the same company. I’m not completely sure. You may want to look into it.
I remember trying PearPC the first time, I ran Tiger. But I was having a brandnew MacBook1,1 in my clauset, but still I had to wait for my Birthday before trying this one, so I ran Tiger in PearPC a few days earlier.
in regards to Halo, none of the emulators support 3D Acceleration, there are some games you can run in emulators but nothing you need 3DFX for. Tons of games much older than halo work on PearPC and other emulators
Emulation is so nice!
I got a couple Apple certifications in '04 after training on PearPC because I was too poor to afford an actual Mac.
I'm fairly certain Halo needs OpenGL acceleration. I don't know if the G3 Clamshell had the needed drivers or hardware, but I do know that my Beige G3/333 would _not_ because Mac OS X never had 3D drivers for the built-in GPU (ATI Rage, IIRC). And there's no way that emulator supports anything 3D, not only due to its alpha state, but because _very_ few emulators even do 3D acceleration emulation or pass-thru.
There is a new emulator on the Mac emulator scene called DingusPPC. However, it is still very new, and probably won't even be able to run Halo (the upper limit they're aiming for, hardware-wise, is a Beige G3 (including GPU); See comment above about Mac OS X support for 3D), but it shows promise.
PearPC actually runs lightning fast on modern hardware the second phase of the installation took 7 minutes.
was about to sleep, then mjd has uploaded another cool video
1:29 First gateway into the Macintosh world as a Windows user: This sucks
oh and a side note... there in fact is some GUI's to edit and launch pearpc, unofficially created by users.. not sure if i have that though..
we all know its gonna be good when MJD features windows and mac in the same sentence
the bliss inside the wallpaper is as old as MJD's PC
well, good old times, i played a little with pear pc that time later on bought g4 mac mini :)
Great product! Unfortunate about CherryOS. Another awesome video 😁
Reminds me of the hassle of setting up a Hackintosh. I can't remember the amount of clean installs it took to get it working (and then I still had no sound).
Mjd has been my favourite RUclipsr to watch past year and he never disappoints
You're about to make me dig up my old family OS10 machine...
So nostalgia.... Great video 👍👍😃😃
you keep making videos about things days after i look into them
That segway to the sponsor spot was genius. Started zooming in on the speaker and everything 😂
Man I remember trying to use pear back in the day on my celly laptop it was so bloddy slow but super cool. Then a few years after that osx86 was a thing and I was natively running it on that same laptop.
Perhaps I’m wrong, but as far as I remember, OSX was built for both PPC and X86 CPUs. But the x86 official public compiled version started from 10.4 tiger. I never was able to find a x86 version prior 10.4, although Steve Jobs himself told the world that indeed they existed.
When he showed the transition to the public he was running a P4 3.4 ghz with HT on tiger 10.4.
I would imagine all the x86 clones if this was leaked somehow.
I remember trying PearPC years ago but it was too slow to be useable. I suspect the JIT feature hadn't been added yet.
To me it's always been a bit of an oddity since there wasn't much "regular" software for that era of Macintosh that didn't also have a corresponding Windows version. So you may as well just run the Windows version natively.
How well does PearPC run on a more modern PC?
A video on BasiliskII might be worthwhile. It was a predecessor to PearPC, for running MacOS 7 or 8 under emulation. Unlike PearPC the emulation was fast enough to be perfectly useable. I don't know if BasiliskII is still under development but there are builds to run it under recent versions of MacOS. It also runs under Windows and Linux.
I remember running it years ago under Windows XP on an AMD K6-2 350 (from 1998) and the emulator was faster than a PowerBook 190cs from 1995. On a modern PC the emulation just flies, though I've never actually tried running games on it. A good test might be something like IndyCar Racing 2 from 1996.
Have you done something with TI-83 calculators? Seems something like this channel would do.
I used to use pearPC on my Windows 8 laptop, and I thought it was very cool for a version 1.0 program
Great video and I grew up with Windows XP and macOS 10 versions lasted until 2019!!!
Did you never make a video about Executor? Might make for a fun follow-up to this one. Its an MS-Dos program that I can most closely compare to Wine, if it was meant to emulate MacOS
Executor was also made available for Windows, IIRC.
It also was opened sourced in 2008, but sadly support for it never really materialized.
I dreamed of macs then I got my mac mimi 6 years later in 2012. I wish i knew about this!
Omg i actually remember using this back like almost 10 years ago
wake up babe, new MJD upload
pearOS the windows/Apple hybrid like OS that was used from Drake and Josh / Zoey-101 to Danger Force which is the last show that will use it. pearOS has a lot in common with both macOS and Windows XP
IN 2015 I try the other way around, emulate 386 on macG3, but never got beyond the install scream of XP. I hold my G3 for years, because of the games I had for it.
That sure would make for an interesting follow-up video!
Back in the day I used to run 98 SE under Connectix's/Microsoft's Virtual PC on a 400 MHz Indigo iMac, and it actually wasn't bad at all. I even got a game (Counter-Strike 1.6) to run. It was a slideshow, yes, but it ran nonetheless, which was just amazing to me. I remember even playing a multiplayer match over the LAN with a real Windows PC that I had at the time.
Hey, you got my speakers!
I remember doing it as well, but in my case it was all pre set because it just worked by clicking the pear pc.exe logo, it came with the disk image and everything in the folder. However my problem was that I was never able to make it recognize usb drives or my disk drive, or had any network capabilities so it was like having only the desktop apps loaded into the screen with no other capabilities whatsoever. This pushed me to actually try hackingtosh later. It was 10.4.11
I remember running PearPC on Vista. the GUI control panel required administrator privileges for some dumb reason.
im not sleeping this week
So does Lola Sonner
Nuh uh
我擦,是新视频,这下不得不熬夜了
Thank you for your story
"An unrecoverable error has occurred, and Halo cannot continue." Bungie predicting 343 all the way back in the CE days
I didn’t use this emulator, but I did run hackintosh versions of Mac OS I found online. Even though it ran natively on Intel hardware, there was still a lot of limitations, so much so that I end up buying a Mac Mini in 2009. I since bought 4 Mac Book Pros (last user upgradeable Mac Book pro, I upgraded the HDD to SSD, I had already configured it to have 8 gigs of RAM when cpu got old, I got the first Mac Book Pro with Touch Bar. When Dual Core CPU got too slow, I traded it in for Final Intel based MacBook Pro. Then I traded it in for a M2 Pro Mac Book Pro). I also had built gaming PCs and had game consoles. But I primarily game on PC now. Mac Book Pro is a video editing beast. Yeah I guess could video edit on my gaming rig which isn’t a slouch. But Mac sips energy. Gaming rig sucks 600watts full tilt. 😅
Intel 13700k
32 GB DDR4 3600 (I bought early so DDR 5 motherboards were really expensive, I would have gone DDR5 if they were the price they are now)
500GB WD NVME SSD - OS drive
Older 2TB Intel NVME SSD
Gigabyte Radeon RX 6800 XT (cheapest high end video card with 16GB of vram at the time)
I see a MJD video, I click without any hesitate
Steve Jobs claimed that every version of OS X was also compiled for Intel, however the earliest versions were never made public.
About the GPL, you need to make the modified source available only if you publish your changes, if you use the changed version internally in your org/company/home, you don't have to publish the sources.
Finally, a tutorial how to use ppc, now i can download unity 1
I sometimes watch you on warpstream!
Hi Michael I have a video idea for you!
Why Not Try
Farming Simulator 2008 on the 5$ 98 Pc
bc You have not showen it to us in a while! :)
Man, can’t believe I wasn’t aware of this when I was a kid. I wanted to switch to Mac because our school used Macs in the computer lab and we only had windows XP at home. I ended up begging my parents for a MacBook for “school purposes”. I was a spoiled kiddo😅😅😅😅
I wanted to install Mac Os on my trashed computer but this is close enough!
@12:01 I'm not surprised Halo didn't work. My experience with PPC emulation (Basilisk II, Sheepshaver, qemu, ect) trying to play the few Mac exclusive titles has been non of the emulators have true hardware 3d accelerated graphics, meaning except for simple 2d games I still need to pull out my bulky IMac g3 or g5 tower when I want to play an 3d tittles. qemu at least reports hardware acceleration to the guest OS allowing some 3D games that "require" hardware acceleration to run, but it's all software rendering and often slow. I read online if you can tracked down the correct AMD card (I haven't manged to) possibly requiring a pci to pcie adapter, you can setup gpu pass-through to the PPC guest. Someone started working on Rage ATI emulation for qemu, when using a build of qemu with that, it enables more 3D games to run with software rendering. However it was even slower then vanilla qemu. Ironically waiting for 3D acceleration to come to these emulators, I have seen the games I wanted to emulate slowly be given source ports on github. So one day it might not be necessary for me to this at all.
You should run this on a newer PC. It's far too slow to be usable with a Pentium 4 class processor. Plus, you can run some pretty recent X releases on some PCs.
Frankly, the inability of even a high end G4 to run anything modern on the web is an indictment of how bad the web is today. Even really basic websites will not display properly on an older compatible browser.
PLS make a review for the bb navigator for ps2 The BB Navigator for the PS2 was akin to an XMB (Cross Media Bar) user interface for the console. It seemed poised to be the original interface for the PS2, but perhaps due to time constraints, it wasn't implemented at launch. But it will be interesting For you to review it
dang, that rly is scummy and unfortunate for that company to do that :( this looked like a rly cool project w a lot of effort put into it
Fun experiment for the 98 pc or the hp laptop, try to run Tiny11. If it can run Win7 it can surely handle a stripped down version of Win11
i'll try this on my windows 11!
do you gonna make video about echelon theme for firefox?
OH my god MJD just uploaded 8mins ago oh wait it's now 9mins ago
Its gotta be at 10 mins now
for some reason every time I run the command ppc ppccfg it gives me a error saying "invalid format(file size isn't a multiple of 516096)
i remember pearpc program lol.. it lead me to the x86 hackintosh