Mac Os 9 Startup Disk Download

Mac Os 9 Startup Disk Download Rating: 4,6/5 58 votes

The initial Mac App Store version of Mavericks will boot only those Macs released prior to Mavericks’s debut; Macs released after Mavericks’s debut ship with a newer version of OS X 10.9. Software download library for vintage Mac software. Getting a beige Mac up and running can be very challenging these days. Older software updates are very hard to find, and of course you need Stuffit to download Stuffit:) This web page is my attempt at getting everything you could ever need together in. Apparently in preparation of tomorrow's retail release of Mac OS X, Apple has released a new version of its Startup Disk control panel. The new version, 9.2.1, is ready for download from Apple via.

  1. Mac Os 9.2
Disk

You could create a Mac OS 9.x bootable utilities disk, from the OS installation on the hard drive - if you know what you're doing. You'd need a third-party software like 'Toast' to recognize the third-party CD-R/RW burner and write the bootable disk. You'd need to determine which assortment of System Folder files were necessary to copy, to create the abbreviated System Folder on the bootable CD. You can burn data CDs with USB 1.1, but you'll be limited to 4x burn speed - which is slow, but not intolerable. If you can borrow or buy an older USB CD-R/RW drive that's backward-compatible with your iMac's USB 1.1 bus speed, you could accomplish this. The alternative is to check eBay for Norton SystemWorks 1.0 for Macs, which shouldn't be expensive. The disk is bootable and would enable you to run DiskDoctor, and then Optimize the disk. This consolidates/moves all data on the drive and arranges it by file type, and then leaves contiguous free space at the end. You can select to wipe the free space with a security wipe, to remove all traces of your personal data. The average user won't be able to recover it. Otherwise, you could check eBay for a Mac OS (retail) universal installer disk for OS 8.1, 8.5, or 9.x and just reload the software to a newly-reformatted hard drive. If you want to sell it, you may have to spend a little $$ to do so. Considering the negligible value of a working 233 MHz iMac now, you'll likely not make a profit. I suppose that's why so many just remove the hard drive and e-Cycle old computers.

Apr 19, 2012 9:24 AM

Mac Os 9.2

I have an anicent PowerMac 6100. As some of you may know its about as pickey as you can get!
I refuses to boot from the MacOS 9.1 CD and I have tried everything. It boots fine from a 7.5 CD-ROM but after 7.5 is installed it does not see the CD-ROM drive anymore (mabey because its not the origonal, but I have had it working a few times). I also cannot install 9.1 from the booted 7.5 because it says it needs the Apple Script extenstion, and since its being booted from CD there is no way to add it, right?
The only way I can see this being done now is to make a 9.1 boot floppy, if such a thing even exists??
How would I create one of these? or can anyone think of anything else I could try. I have 2 CD-ROM Drives and they both do the same thing (I can switch them both butween internal and external) 7.5 setup can see them both, but installed 7.5 cant.
Thanks in advance.