For Apple, the M1 chip indicates the beginning of creating a rich ecosystem - through universal apps and beyond.īefore we talk about universal apps for Apple Silicon Macs and how they make our lives better, we’d have a brief introduction to Apple M1. However, a transition like this is not just about enhanced performance and speed. This brand-new chip from Apple will change the way Mac devices compete with other laptops and desktops in the market, taking the best advantage of the leap that the Silicon Valley company is proud of. Apple Silicon, a name due to the custom material that Apple is using to build these chips, is expected to change the entire Mac lineup from Apple, offering enhanced performance, better power savings, and many other features. Because of some of the screen tricks it did, this only runs on older Macs.After putting us in the dark for a few months, Apple has finally launched the first few Silicon-based MacBook laptops and the Mac Mini. It actually ran at a decent speed on a Classic too. This was the first emulator ever written for Macintosh way back in the days of the Mac Classic. It runs very fast and is compatible with most Apple II software. This is one of the first Apple II emulators. It's based on the BeOS version of Sweet16, which was in turn based on the outlandishly popular Bernie ][ The Rescue. Sweet16 is an Apple IIgs emulator for computers running Mac OS X. This'll even run well on your 68040's! Does not emulate the Apple IIgs. Currently it emulates the Apple I and II. OpenEmulator is an accurate, portable emulator of legacy computer systems for MacOSX.
The source is public domain however, so take it and do what you will.Ĭurrently microM8 features HD windowed and full-screen 64k Apple II / II+ / 128k Apple IIe emulation with decent compatibility, USB and mouse-controlled joystick support, print and modem emulation, Mockingboard support, cloud disk library, 3D voxel rendering, 3D LOGO, enhanced BASIC interpreters, custom file browser and editor, remote screen sharing, WOZ, DSK, NIB, PO, 2MG and HDV disk format support, the ability to record and rewind live emulation, a web-debugger and much, much more. This emulator was released in a very "prerelease" state, with no support for diskimages, and there's a lot of menu items that won't respond. This is based on KEGS, an Apple IIgs emulator for Linux. Sound card support is promised in future versions. It's solid all around, with very few rough edges. There is full sound and graphics support, and it even has the odd little screen colors that we all loved on our old Apples! Requires BIOS images from these computersīased on XGS: An Apple IIgs emulator originally written for X11 which has now been ported to MacOS.
This is a shareware version the full version costs $15, but it's worth it!Ĭatakig emulates the Apple II, Apple II+, and Apple IIe platforms, and it does it very well. It has almost perfect emulation, and runs most IIgs programs without flaw. This emulator is the best Apple IIgs emulator you will find.
It is available as a Mac OS X widget, a webpage Java applet, and a mobile phone midlet.
An Apple IIgs emulator for Mac OS X, Linux, and Unix/X11ĪppleIIGo is an Apple //e emulator written in Java.