Byte Knight
Well-known member
Nope, I totally missed that option down at the bottom of the list!Macproxy is already (lightly) integrated with RaSCSI, and can be installed through the RaSCSI easyinstall.sh script. Or did you mean something else?
Nope, I totally missed that option down at the bottom of the list!Macproxy is already (lightly) integrated with RaSCSI, and can be installed through the RaSCSI easyinstall.sh script. Or did you mean something else?
Congratulations! This is so neat!I'm glad to announce the first tagged release of this Netatalk fork! A broader group of people have tested it for a good few weeks now, and code changes have been minor recently, so I think this is as good a time as any to cut a "stable" release as a baseline for further development.
Find the release notes and tarballs at: https://github.com/rdmark/Netatalk-2.x/releases/tag/netatalk-2-220101
As I was compiling the release notes, I thought the sheer amount of changes warranted a bit of a larger version number bump. It's no longer a simple hotfix release for 2.2.6. Therefore, I decided to give the fork a new name: "Netatalk 2.x"
Fantastic news. Thank you for doing this.I'm glad to announce the first tagged release of this Netatalk fork! A broader group of people have tested it for a good few weeks now, and code changes have been minor recently, so I think this is as good a time as any to cut a "stable" release as a baseline for further development.
Find the release notes and tarballs at: https://github.com/rdmark/Netatalk-2.x/releases/tag/netatalk-2-220101
As I was compiling the release notes, I thought the sheer amount of changes warranted a bit of a larger version number bump. It's no longer a simple hotfix release for 2.2.6. Therefore, I decided to give the fork a new name: "Netatalk 2.x"
Is anything like this possible for, say, Windows 9x or NT 3.x/4.x?Ok, I'm blown away - I was able to even get my Canon MG6220 inkjet printer to print in color from my LC III! All I had to do was set it up in the CUPS local web page and then select it under Chooser -> Laserwriter -> Generic and it just works. Amazing!
Yes, CUPS can handle printing duties for older versions of Windows too. Samba works similar to Netatalk in that it can pick up any available printer queues on the system and share them via SMB. On the Windows side, you can use generic Postscript drivers since cups-filters will process it via Ghostscript and send it whatever format your "modern" printer expects.Is anything like this possible for, say, Windows 9x or NT 3.x/4.x?
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This compelled me to give this a quick try, and I can report that DDP service discovery works perfectly fine on OS 9.2.1 on my G4 Quicksilver.This is fantastic. I'm working on getting this up and running as well. So far, it compiles and works well on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS running in a virtual machine.
BTW, does anyone remember why netatalk shares don't show up in the Chooser under Mac OS 9? Is it the AFP over TCP thing? Any way to change that? I can connect via IP address.