You need to find out if Adobe Persuasion is scriptable. If you have the manual, check it and it may say so. In any case, you can open the AppleScript Script Editor application, then from Editor, open the Adobe Persuasion application as a scripting dictionary.
If you find that Persuasion has a...
That's why I don't cross-develop. I use MPW, and I moved from MPW on a Mac SE/30 to MPW on a Power Mac G3 so I could use a bigger monitor on the G3.
When all is said and done, you've got to test on the real hardware, and cross-development only takes you an extra step away from the real...
My followup advice: don't buy one for a set price, because you'll pay more.
Instead, get into an auction with a low starting bid.
This advice applies to other computers of similar vintage, like a Mac 128K. Don't do "Buy It Now;" just wait for a low-starting auction and bid there.
Unless you...
If you are accustomed to *nix development on the command line, you'll find that MPW is similar enough, and also offers a GUI for the various tools and their switches.
I've been using MPW for Macintosh assembly language development for over 2 years now.
You can use any scratch disk as a cleaning disk. Just put the iso stuff on the bottom of the cookie and let it spin. I just paint one stripe through the window and that's typically enough to clean the head.
Eudimorphodon, your discussion of the interplay between the LC and Firmware cards reminds me that this configuration in my Integer Apple II was not, in my experience, a practical arrangement. I have not used the machine for at least 3 or 4 years, but I now recall that I could never run ProDOS.
This is the solution:
On your Power Mac G3, use Disk Copy to create a smaller disk image, say 20 MB or 40 MB. Mount this image on the desktop, then use Get Info to enable File Sharing for it.
On the Chooser on the Mac SE, select this volume.
The problem is that your hard disk is too large for...
The integer Apple II I have has Rev 4 motherboard with soldered 16K RAM blocks. The handwritten date code is 1980. Its base pan sticker identifies it as a standard Apple II.
The Apple II Plus I have is a Rev 3 board with removable RAM blocks. This Apple II Plus appears in the book, The New...
An Apple II Plus is defined on page 27 of the white spiral Apple Reference Manual (1979) as having a Revision 1 or later motherboard, Applesoft ROM, and Autostart ROM.
I misspoke. It is actually a 3rd-party RAM card called the Legend, which adds LC banked RAM but does not have an on-board ROM.
Here's a photo inside the case.
Also I have it in slot 2, not slot 4. I haven't used this Apple in several years. :-(
It will work in other slots. I have an Integer Apple II with a Language Card in Slot 0 and an Applesoft Firmware Card in slot 4. Your choice of slots is limited because you'll want the red switch to extend out of one of the vertical cutouts on the Apple's case.
TeleDisk makes it easy to transfer an entire floppy disk from a classic Mac to a newer computer over an ordinary RS-232 serial connection. The resulting disk image is immediately ready to use in the mini vMac emulator.
You can also select individual files to transfer, and optionally have them...