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Helpful answers
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Dec 2, 2013 10:11 PM in response to jimidakineby hands4,★HelpfulFor Rosetta, as of Lion (10.7) the PowerPC compatibility "Rosetta" utility is no longer supported by Apple.
If you are willing to install Bootcamp or Parallels, you can run the Snow Leopard Server in parallel with Mountain Lion (10.8) and run the Rosetta-dependent applications on Snow Leopard. You need to call Apple to order it. You need the server version.
Snow Leopard Server for $19.99 + sales tax & shipping costs at 1.800.MYAPPLE (1.800.692.7753) - Apple Part Number: MC588Z/A (telephone orders only).
Bootcamp (free). http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp/
Parallels ($80): http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop/
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Dec 3, 2013 4:30 AM in response to jimidakineby Roger Wilmut1,- Word Processing documents can be opened directly in Pages 4* (AppleWorks 6 only) - the new Pages 5 (Mavericks required) does not open AppleWorks documents. Panergy Software's docXConverter v3.2 ($19.95) can convert Appleworks 5 and 6 Word Processing documents to RTF (though it has been reported that it can only handle documents which contain only text, not those which include images or frames). The latest version of the free LibreOffice has announced that it can open AppleWorks 6 Word Processing documents and an ability to open ClarisWorks documents has been reported: it does appear to be able to handle at least some embedded images.
- Draw Documents can be opened directly only in EazyDraw (the more expensive version from their website, not the cheaper one from the Mac App Store, and you will need v4.0 'Retro' not the most recent version) or Intaglio (though this appears not to be able to handle very complex drawings).
- Spreadsheets can be opened directly only in the older versions of Numbers* - the new version for Mavericks will not do this.
- Unfortunately nothing will open AppleWorks database files. You would have to be able to run AW and export as ASCII, then import into another program.
*Previous versions of iWork can be still bought from Amazon, which would enable you to open some documents as indicated above.
More information here:
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Dec 3, 2013 7:24 AM in response to hands4by hands4,Edit:
> If you are willing to install Bootcamp or Parallels
I should have said if you install Snow Leopard on a separate partition or on a separate disk you can boot from it. BootCamp is not used. You can also use the Snow Leopard Server with Parallels.
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Dec 3, 2013 9:30 AM in response to jimidakineby MlchaelLAX,To further clarify, you can install Snow Leopard client into a new partition or external hard drive and use the "dual-booting" method to restore use of Appleworks and your DVDs. Be sure to select the OPTIONAL install for Rosetta.
More information on the Snow Leopard Server in Parallels method, here:
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Dec 5, 2013 10:29 AM in response to MlchaelLAXby jimidakine,Is it possible to get Snow Leopard and install it on a seperate partition on my hard drive and just go with that? The other thing I'm thinking about is buying a refurb iMac running SnowLeopard and going from there? I wouldn't get much use out of Paralells.
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Dec 5, 2013 10:57 AM in response to jimidakineby Roger Wilmut1,Yes, provided your hard disk has sufficient space you can partition it and use that as a boot partition, but you really must back up the drive first in case of problems, for which you will need an external drive anyway. Booting from a partition would be faster than an external drive. Drives aren't all that expensive these days, and certainly cheaper than a decent refurb Mac.
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