Have you ever wished to run Windows apps on your MacOS? There are many free apps on the Windows but they cost a lot of money on MacOS platform. You only have a Mac and want to run these Windows apps. Thankfully, there is one more way to run Windows apps on your Mac, including:
- Use Apple’s Boot Camp and then run a full installation of Window on your Mac
- Use a virtual machine like Parallels Desktop
- Have Windows app installed directly with CrossOver and then use a Windows app like other Mac apps
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/3/3/8/133867747/711139111.jpg)
There are both advantages and disadvantages of each method. However, the last one – installing Windows apps under CrossOver – has many differences, which offers some distinct advantages if you know how to make it work.
You will not need to install Windows and then the app. It’s only the app. Although the CrossOver is a little different, it’s not difficult to use. But there are still a few things you should know. For example, CrossOver cannot run ALL Windows apps. But almost apps work well.
“Mac users can for the first time run iOS and iPadOS apps on the Mac,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said. While the company didn’t share a lot of details, Apple isn’t talking about Catalyst, its own.
For the latest information about running your iOS and iPadOS apps on macOS, see mac OS Big Sur 11 i OS & i Pad OS Apps on Mac Beta 10 Release Notes. Determine Whether Your App Makes Sense on macOS. IOS and macOS support most of the same frameworks and features, and most iOS apps run smoothly on macOS. Like Windows, Xamarin is an excellent tool to run iOS apps on Mac. It is developed and owned by Apple, so you can anticipate great quality and superb performance. Xamarin comes with a range of cool features that let you run and test iOS apps on your Mac. It has the basic features that you would find in an emulator.
Also see: HOW TO ADJUST THE ACCENT COLOR ON MACOS
Install apps with itunes on mac. Download macOS Catalina for an all‑new entertainment experience. Your music, TV shows, movies, podcasts, and audiobooks will transfer automatically to the Apple Music, Apple TV, Apple Podcasts, and Apple Books apps where you’ll still have access to your favorite iTunes features, including purchases, rentals, and imports.
How to install Windows apps on your Mac with CrossOver
If you want to run Windows apps on your Mac without all the overhead associated with Windows, follow these steps.
- Go to CodeWeavers and then download CrossOver app
- Now, head to your Downloads folder and then locate the Zip file that has recently been downloaded. After that, double-click on it to open. Archive Utility tool will open it up and decompress the contents of the archive file.
- Now, double click on the app in the Downloads folder. It will then move itself to the Applications folder on your Mac
- CrossOver will now open for the first time. Once done, you will be asked for the way you want it to run. By default, it will run in the trial mode. But you can enter your registration information or buy a license key to use full functions of the app.
- In the next screen, click on the Install a Windows Application
- Enter the name of the app that you want to run on your Mac. CrossOver will then search its database and display related matches.
- Click on the application you wish to run. CrossOver will display the compatibility information from its database, and you will be told how well it will run.
- Click on the Continue
- Now, choose an installer source.
- Next, click on the Choose Installer file and there will be a Finder window sliding down over the app, which allows you to navigate to the position you have stored the installation file.
- Choose the app and click on the Use this installer You will be taken back to the Select an Installer Source screen.
- Finally, click on the Continue
Note: CrossOver will not find and download the software that you want to run. You need to have the installation file available for the software you’d like to run.
How to run Classic (pre OS X) apps on Intel Macs | 34 comments | Create New Account
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There is a simple solution to the mentioned SS video problem:
- startup with extension off;
- after OS9 has finished starting up, select your preferred video resolution using the Monitor control panel;
- reboot.
From now on, SS will boot the emulated Mac without video problems.
- startup with extension off;
- after OS9 has finished starting up, select your preferred video resolution using the Monitor control panel;
- reboot.
From now on, SS will boot the emulated Mac without video problems.
Thanks. Also, the new binary of SheepSaver (version 2.3-0.20060514.1) works 'out of the box'.
easy way to install mac os on intel or amd or asus is given at this site
http://osquestionsforum.blogspot.com/
http://osquestionsforum.blogspot.com/
I am just curious how fast this emulation is on dual core Intel Macs--- I imagine it could be wicked fast, running old PPC apps faster than G4s ever did. Yes? No? Maybe?
No, unfortunately. Unlike the transition from 68k to PowerPC, the new architecture is not Wicked Fast™. Most of the performance increases seen in the new machines have little to do with the main processor, but rather with the FSB, DDR2 RAM, PCI Express, SATA, &c.
Perhaps when Conroe, Morem, &c. come out the difference will be more significant.
JP
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Pell
Perhaps when Conroe, Morem, &c. come out the difference will be more significant.
JP
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Pell
Is there a way to use 9.2.2 with Sheepsaver? That's the only install disc I have (that came with my PowerMac).
Sorry for the busted links to ROM-grabber and TomeView. Here are a couple that work:
http://homepage3.nifty.com/toshi3/data/Rom-grabber.sit
http://virtual.haru.gs/tomeview.hqx
http://homepage3.nifty.com/toshi3/data/Rom-grabber.sit
http://virtual.haru.gs/tomeview.hqx
I'm curious what essential Classic apps folks are still running.
Essential apps:
Oxford English Dictionary (set up to run from a CD image instead of the original CD)
Lexis-Nexis (much faster than the web interface)
WordPerfect (sometimes)
And most important and productivity-ruining of all -
The old AfterDark Stained Glass module, using the MacDim AD launcher (see my hint about this somewhere else on the site).
It's the last one that I'm really going to miss on an Intel Mac..
Oxford English Dictionary (set up to run from a CD image instead of the original CD)
Lexis-Nexis (much faster than the web interface)
WordPerfect (sometimes)
And most important and productivity-ruining of all -
The old AfterDark Stained Glass module, using the MacDim AD launcher (see my hint about this somewhere else on the site).
It's the last one that I'm really going to miss on an Intel Mac..
Lots of custom software is needed to configure or operate older hardware. The devices may still be in use but the control computer has failed. In my case, I don't want to carry around an old laptop to occasionally configure an older device.
Does anyone know if a classic app running in these emulators can use a USB-serial adaptor?
Thanks
Does anyone know if a classic app running in these emulators can use a USB-serial adaptor?
Thanks
Lots of old Ambrosia software games!
Maelstrom, Escape Velocity, Mars Rising, Apeiron
I can't cope with all this Doom stuff!
Maelstrom, Escape Velocity, Mars Rising, Apeiron
I can't cope with all this Doom stuff!
Indeed. I'm still occasionally playing Fool's Errand and the original Myst. Except for that, I can't remember the last time I used Classic to actually accomplish anything.
There are Mac OS X versions of a few of those games I think - Maelstrom certainly, and Apeiron too I think.
Yeah, games are about all I ever run in Classic, too!
I still run Civilization 2 (sue me, that's the version I like!), and I just get a hankerin' to run Future Cop sometimes, which was a kick-butt game that never got the marketing it deserved. It even came out for the Mac before the PC (in 1998!).
Neither of these games, AFAIK, will ever be updated to OS X. As long as I can play these games, I will, 'cause they're great games, so why all the hate about those of us who still keep a copy of Classic around?
SimTower. :-D
JP
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Pell
JP
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Pell
quarkxpress 4.0 along with a ton of custom developed software for it. the expense and time to re-develop the code for use with the current version of quark would be out of proportion with the benefit gained. xpress 4.0 runs perfectly for what i use it for.
i'll be following and researching how to run classic apps on the intel chips very closely before i can purchase any for the shop.
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if it aint broke, break it!
i'll be following and researching how to run classic apps on the intel chips very closely before i can purchase any for the shop.
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if it aint broke, break it!
Virtual TimeClock 2.5. I know that there are dozens of Time-recording applications available for OS X, but they all require entry of clients, projects, tasks, or other endless information for which I have no need. Virtual TimeClock does one thing, simply--it works like a regular punchclock, allowing me to clock-in/clock-out for the day and for breaks, and totals my time entries and overtime. There is a Pro version for OS X, but it costs $129--the one I have cost me $29 years ago. Until someone comes up with a replacement, I'll keep using this one.
Oops! That's $195 for Virtual TimeClock Pro.
Those are some interesting replies. I'm just confused how someone can have the money to buy an intel machine, but no money to upgrade software. How about you upgrade that software first?
I do understand about needing old software to control even older hardware. But again, how about some hardware upgrades?
OS 9 has been dead for 4 years, lets all let it go.
I do understand about needing old software to control even older hardware. But again, how about some hardware upgrades?
OS 9 has been dead for 4 years, lets all let it go.
It is quite possible for software upgrades to total MORE than the cost of new hardware. Software can be VERY expensive. I got a font editor for less than a hundred bucks 20 years ago. Now it's several hundred, and doesn't even have all the features of the old software. I am planning to use vMac to run FONTastic Plus 2.0.2 and other System 6 software which to this day still have no OS X equivalent. Apple's killing of OS 9 does not magically make new and affordable software appear. Hey, I wish it did.
Over the last 20 years I have written literally hundreds of HyperCard apps that are indispensable to my research. Most of them use specialized externals that will not work with the various HC replacements that have come out since Apple dropped HC. I also need to use a genetic mapping program called ACeDB. There is a OS X version but it would require that I redo much of my data AND modify the HC scripts I use to generate the data file in the first place.
This is probably verboten, but how does one get a copy of 9.0.4? I have a CD of 9.2.2, but tossed any version of 9 before that ('Ha! Won't need THOSE anymore!'). It's frustrating since I have a valid license to use OS 9 (several, actually); I just want to use an older version.
eBay Simplify music app mac.
If you have valid licenses, then LimeWire might be your friend. Be careful not to download anything you don't have a license for! ;-)
JP
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Pell
JP
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Pell
Lew, I could afford a new machine every year, the cost is trivial compared to the number of hours invested in writing software. It is a matter of the number of hours invested in writing software. I have spent 20 years programming hypercard stacks for various psychology research projects. The time involved learning new programming languages and compilers then redoing much of this work would take me about 5 - 6 years if I worked on it non stop. I have more important things to do with my time. It is sad, I have gone from teaching in a university department buying about 30 macs a year to surrendering to use microsh**t platform for all but my individual research simply because the lack of backwards compatability and steves hubris in junking hypercard. The Gee wizz look what new macs can do focus has completely stuffed many in education and research. We do not have the time resources to cope with new platforms and are faced with a choice of hours wasted rewriting software or abandoning macs for windows because of the central support that is offered.
That is why those of you in the academic departments should push for Intel mac development because the systems themselves can be put together for around 500$ a piece keyboard, mouse, and monitor plus a p4 with HT, 1gb of DDR ram, 80gb HD, and DVD/RW- at that price that is the best deal there is. I am sorry to say also all of the enthusiasm for this new operating system has made it one of the most well documented ones in my opinion of fixing computers for the last 12 years. Unix outperforms Linux and Windows as a server OS- it always has and the mach kernel is a testament to that. The real problem is the government is forcing the university system to adopt 'active directory' as its networking standard. That alone has forced you into the situation that you are in. If there was some way for you to make agreements with the univeristy to allow you to use offsite computers in your research than the sky would be the limit as you would not be constrained to those requirements (or you can lie and say that you are following them). Who knows..I just think that in the future windows will be something that only children will use.
I've built a complete SheepShaver install, including _everything_ needed to run, as well as the last version of WordPerfect and several utilities. To download this 243mb image, go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/wordperfectmac, to the Links section, to the 'SheepShaver and Basilisk' folder, and click 'SheepShaver-WordPerfect Install'. It's about 20 minutes on a fast connection.
Enjoy,
John
Enjoy,
John
John,
your downloadable disk image + installer guide are terrific.
it díd take less than 20 minutes to get a classic environment running on my intel MacBook. Very well done. Thank you.
your downloadable disk image + installer guide are terrific.
it díd take less than 20 minutes to get a classic environment running on my intel MacBook. Very well done. Thank you.
Thank you.
I have downloaded and installed your wonderful little present. now..
how do I get it to use classic apps - where do I put them to install them etc.. PLEASE help me, I'm almost there. after months of struggling.
I also get a message that says 'The result of a numeric operation was too large' should I worry about that?
and, thanks again.
I have downloaded and installed your wonderful little present. now..
how do I get it to use classic apps - where do I put them to install them etc.. PLEASE help me, I'm almost there. after months of struggling.
I also get a message that says 'The result of a numeric operation was too large' should I worry about that?
and, thanks again.
John,
your downloadable disk image + installer guide are terrific.
it díd take less than 20 minutes to get a classic environment running on my intel MacBook. Very well done. Thank you.
your downloadable disk image + installer guide are terrific.
it díd take less than 20 minutes to get a classic environment running on my intel MacBook. Very well done. Thank you.
Run Ios Apps On Macos
I can run SimCity 200 & Pinballthrillride again, not to mention the software from the macintosh gardens? Yipee!
https://connectortree467.weebly.com/count-it-app-mac.html. All these values are presented visually on the detalization bar. Together with plain shutter count you’ll get separate values for photos taken through the viewfinder, photos taken via the Live View and a number of Live View sessions. Check Canon EOS Shutter Count and Get Live View Usage DetalizationShutterCheck reads and decodes shutter information directly from the internal memory of your camera. For newer Canon EOS models such as the 1D X Mark II, 5D Mark IV and 5DS the app displays an extended shutter information.
I'm going through all this trauma just to be able to run Claris Homepage and a wonderful little game called War of Flowers.
Run Ios Apps On Mac Os X
Unfortunately SheepSaver just doesn't work. You can't write to any drive, you can't read any of your drives, you can't read firewire drives. It's just.. bad.
Install Ios Apps On Mac
Let me just highlight the circular logic every single Sheep Saver instruction page seems more than happy to gloss over:
1) To install OS9 start up your already installed OS9 and extract your ROM.
2) FTW?
1) To install OS9 start up your already installed OS9 and extract your ROM.
2) FTW?