This video is Part II of the interview excerpts with Ray Arachelian, focusing on the Apple Lisa's historical significance as an inflection point in computing and the development of his LisaEm emulator.
Cool, I've watched this now! I think most of what I knew about the Lisa came from the extensive benchtest in Personal Computer World (UK) in July 1983; the book "Insanely Great"; possibly bits from the biography "Jobs" and reading Folklore.org. It's good to describe the Lisa as an inflection point, as it united a number of technologies at the cusp of a new era; whereas the Mac actually broke through.This video is Part II of the interview excerpts with Ray Arachelian, focusing on the Apple Lisa's historical significance as an inflection point in computing and the development of his LisaEm emulator.

I'm currently playing with SunOS emulators. I must say that Sunview (1989) and Solaris 3 (1991) are woeful as GUIs in comparison with even an early Mac. Ugly, crude, unintuitive, Unix bolt-ons; though intriguing in their own right.
Good theory. I've never used a PERQ, though I think I saw one when I was visiting Unis during my 'A' levels (it was switched off). I also saw a Sun Workstation in 1986 with its massive monitor when I snuck off from the guided tour for about 15 seconds into a small office (I saw the computer as we were going past, so I popped into the office just to gawk at it, before they noticed I wasn't following).I love messing around with early graphical environments. I have a couple UK-centric ones <snip> PERQ PNX, and Oriel <snip> circa 1984 or so.
<snip> My hypothesis <snip> One camp said <snip> familiar idioms <snip> Lisa and the Mac. <snip> The other camp <snip> Ease-of-use was not the goal: it was power.
Sounds like a PERQ all right, especially if it was summertime and a space heater was not required.it was switched off
Yes it could have been summer. The PERQ already seemed like an old design even in the mid-80s.Sounds like a PERQ all right, especially if it was summertime and a space heater was not required.
Something tells me that SparcStation emulation on the 68KMLA on a thread about the Lisa might not be 100% on topicUnfortunately I've never troubled MAME for very much (the in-browser emulator for software on archive.org is about it), so I'm afraid I can't offer any help! Hopefully someone else knows...
Aaah, anyway I've figured out part of the problem. I can get data onto the SS1 by creating a folder with the data I want, then creating an .iso image from macOS using:Sounds like a PERQ all right, especially if it was summertime and a space heater was not required.
Unfortunately I've never troubled MAME for very much (the in-browser emulator for software on archive.org is about it), so I'm afraid I can't offer any help! Hopefully someone else knows...
hdiutil makehybrid -iso -joliet -o image.iso /path/to/sourcemount -rt hsfs /dev/sr0 /mnt/cd (I had created a directory /mnt/cd). Then I can ls /mnt/cd to get my files. Can't yet get data off it though!Indeed, the technique with QEMU's SS-5 emulator is to use NFS. However, when I boot up the SS-1 under MAME, its MAC address in the emulated PROM is just FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF. And it doesn't boot automatically into disk3 (where the OS is), I have to type b disk3 each time at the OpenFirmware (OpenBoot?) prompt. So perhaps ethernet isn't working or the PROM isn't. It's something I'll look into.There's CD authoring software for SunOS 4.1.2 isn't there? I vaguely remember it back in the day, with a 1X CD-RW drive.
That said, SunOS comes with an easy way to get stuff on/off: NFS <snip> not sure how MAME is handling that<snip>