-
All replies
-
Helpful answers
-
by Ralph Johns (UK),May 6, 2014 1:51 PM in response to RemainAnonymous
Ralph Johns (UK)
May 6, 2014 1:51 PM
in response to RemainAnonymous
Level 9 (73,254 points)
ApplicationsHi,
Not really.
Sheep Shearer offer a way of effectively installing an emulator to run PowerPC app in (akin to running Classic in earlier OS versions).
However you need access to OS 9 Install Disks to extract various things.
I am sure there may be other ways.
9:51 pm Tuesday; May 6, 2014
iMac 2.5Ghz i5 2011 (Mavericks 10.9)
G4/1GhzDual MDD (Leopard 10.5.8)
MacBookPro 2Gb (Snow Leopard 10.6.8)
Mac OS X (10.6.8),
Couple of iPhones and an iPad -
May 6, 2014 1:56 PM in response to RemainAnonymousby Niel,You need to run it in Mac OS X 10.6.8 or earlier; on a mid-2010 iMac, this requires using its original disks or running Mac OS X Server 10.6 inside a product such as VirtualBox, Parallels Desktop, or VMware Fusion. SheepShaver is for Classic applications and not PowerPC ones written for Mac OS X.
(106257)
-
-
May 6, 2014 4:44 PM in response to Ralph Johns (UK)by MlchaelLAX,Ralph Johns (UK) wrote:
Sheep Shearer offer a way of effectively installing an emulator to run PowerPC app in (akin to running Classic in earlier OS versions).
You've mixed your metaphors!
SheepShaver will run the older Classic apps pre-OS X.
PowerPC apps generally refers to the software written for OS X that ran on the older PowerPC CPU Macs (G3, G4 & G5's: from the mid-1990's until 2006, when all Macs migrated to the Intel CPU).
-
May 6, 2014 8:13 PM in response to RemainAnonymousby RemainAnonymous,Thanks for the replies.
I have a mid-2010 iMac and have of course upgraded to the latest version of Mavericks (OS X 10.9.2).
I tried to download SheepShaver, but it would not let me. Not a recognized developer or something like that.
What would the step by step be? Dumb it down for me.
Thanks again for the help!
-
May 6, 2014 10:17 PM in response to RemainAnonymousby MlchaelLAX,According to information gleaned from Wikipedia and Battlenet website, Warcraft 3 is a Universal application, which means it will run on an Intel Mac. However apparently the installer app is PowerPC, which requires Rosetta; which was eliminated from OS X starting with Lion. So forget all about SheepShaver...
Best suggestion:
Partition the hard drive on your 2010 iMac or add an external drive and install Snow Leopard (with the optional Rosetta) on it. Then install Warcraft 3 and use "dual-boot" (System Preferences:Startup Disk) to boot into either Snow Leopard or Mavericks as needed.
