JDW discovered my use of MFS under OS X on my site and posted his findings here: http://68kmla.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=26059#26059
Since MFSLives has nothing to do with MacServe, I thought it deserved its own thread for those of you who have not yet discovered it for yourselves.
I first read about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_File_System which also contains the following link to Apple's Developer Connection site: http://developer.apple.com/samplecode/MFSLives/
The instructions are relatively easy to follow, though somewhat complex. However, should someone want to volunteer a step by step tutorial with pictures, that should make it fool-proof (not that any of you are fools).
The end result after installing it, is that OS X (10.4 ONLY) will mount and read MFS disk images. You CANNOT write to MFS files under OS X (yet), but you can read any old 400K MFS disk image files and copy the files onto other disks.
This is invaluable for managing old Macintosh files under OS X and extremely helpful for my MacTerminal file transfer method to eliminate as much data corruption as possible by going directly from an MFS disk image into MacTerminal and transfer to an MFS Mac, rather than transferring it to an HFS disk image under OS X first.
Since MFSLives has nothing to do with MacServe, I thought it deserved its own thread for those of you who have not yet discovered it for yourselves.
I first read about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_File_System which also contains the following link to Apple's Developer Connection site: http://developer.apple.com/samplecode/MFSLives/
The instructions are relatively easy to follow, though somewhat complex. However, should someone want to volunteer a step by step tutorial with pictures, that should make it fool-proof (not that any of you are fools).
The end result after installing it, is that OS X (10.4 ONLY) will mount and read MFS disk images. You CANNOT write to MFS files under OS X (yet), but you can read any old 400K MFS disk image files and copy the files onto other disks.
This is invaluable for managing old Macintosh files under OS X and extremely helpful for my MacTerminal file transfer method to eliminate as much data corruption as possible by going directly from an MFS disk image into MacTerminal and transfer to an MFS Mac, rather than transferring it to an HFS disk image under OS X first.
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