Ballyhoo (1985) Mac OS
Ballyhoo (1985) Mac OS
In 1984 Apple Computer unveiled their Macintosh. It included a new user interface that revolutionized the way people though about computer interaction. Originally referred to as simply 'Macintosh System', the underlying OS was a single-tasking disk system for the Motorola 68K CPU. Significant changes were made in MacOS 7.x.
Title Developer/Publisher Release Date Genre License Mac OS Versions; A-10 Attack! Parsoft Interactive: 1995: Flight Simulator: Abandonware: 7.5 - 9.2.2: A-10 Cuba! Ballyhoo is an interactive fiction computer game designed by Jeff O'Neill and published by Infocom in 1985. It was released for ten different 8 and 16-bit platforms, including MS-DOS, Atari ST, and Commodore 64. It is Infocom's nineteenth game. With a circus-themed plot, the game's tagline was.
Emulation note: For MacOS 0.x-6.x we recommend the vMac Mini emulator.
- (50 points)The textarea shown to the left is named ta in a form named f1.It contains the top 10,000 passwords in order of frequency of use - each followed by a comma (except the last one).
- Steven Jobs & Stephen Wozniak.
It is possible to write Macintosh 400k/800k images to a real disk using a Kryoflux.
Ballyhoo (1985) Mac Os Catalina
Note: Wikipedia's/Apple's Developer CD Classic Mac OS 'System Software' numbering scheme is GARBAGE and should NOT be used.
Screenshots
Release notes
System 1.0 (0.97), Finder 1.0 was the first official, stable release. It was released in 1984 with the original Macintosh and ran with 128k RAM, 400k 3.5' floppy drive, monochrome video, and a mouse. It used a flat file system (MFS) that only emulated folders. Officially the System revision was 1.0, but the internal number reported '0.97'.
The Macintosh Guided Tour was also released with the original Macintosh, but contained an earlier System 0.85, Finder 1.0. Notably the finder still had icons of the Twiggy Macintosh!
Ballyhoo (1985) Mac Os Update
System 1.1, Finder 1.1g improved font support, disk copying, and startup speed.
Ballyhoo (1985) Mac OS