To create an external OS X Recovery, download the OS X Recovery Disk Assistant application. Insert an external drive, launch the OS X Recovery Disk Assistant, select the drive where you would like to install, and follow the on screen instructions.
[Top DL]: The 9.2.2 universal OS installer CD's archive is a .zip compressed .iso image. It is OK to burn this back to CD using ImgBurn on Windows or Disk Utility on Mac OS X, or Toast on Mac OS 9/X. This archive has been tested as working, prior to uploading.MD5 checksum & filename: 5ba031dfd678a74b9dee414af93ea514 *macos-922-uni.zip
mac os x 9.2.2 install dvd full iso image download
I have used this to boot up and install to a beige G3 and an eMac G4 OK. This will install onto most early to late model G3 & G4 Macs. However if the Mac cannot boot into OS 9, e.g: Macs with USB 2.0, then this CD will not be of use (as a bootable System Install CD). Check everymac.com for specs if you are unsure if your Mac is capable of booting to Mac OS 9.2.2 or earlier.
PowerLogix manufactured 3rd party G3 and G4 upgrade cards for Macintosh. This is their driver software for a G3 daughter card from 1999. PowerLogix included a full install of LinuxPPC 1999 Release 5, on the CD which came with the G3 daughter card.
This upload is a hardly touched boot image for BasiliskII, SheepShaver and MiniVMacII.(Note that SheepShaver will need a 4MB OldWorld ROM to boot into 7.6.1 or lower - the ROM is hosted on GS12s awesome site: _oldworld_rom4mb.rom.zip )MiniVMac (Mac Plus) does not boot from this upload, but it should be easy enough to run a custom install for it.
Mac OS X 10.1 "Puma": The retail Puma package has two CDs; the main OS installer is still a single CD, but there's a second CD labeled "Tools" that has some extra fonts, utilities and a few dev goodies that are all completely optional. You got a LOT more when you bought a brand-new Mac that shipped with Puma - eleven CDs, which included Puma, Mac OS 9.2.2, a Hardware Test CD, an Applications disc, and a 6-CD set holding a system-restore image. Most folk who bought Puma as a retail/upgrade would install the tools too, so 648MB + 341 MB = 989 MB
Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard": When you're supporting two disparate CPU architectures, everything takes up more than twice the space. Retail OS X Leopard ships on a dual-layer DVD that is absolutely chock-a-block full - 7.553 GB of the 8 GB capacity is taken, but not all of that is OS. The System you run when you boot the DVD is 1.1 GB, there's another gig's worth of 'Optional Installers' (mostly Xcode), but the main folder of installers amounts to 6 GB worth, which happens to include all the language packs, fonts for same, and over 2 GB worth of printer drivers. There's also a 460 MB hidden ISO partition that's got the Boot Camp software on it for Windows. If you add up the size of just the installers used to make up the default OS X - remember, it carries all the baggage needed for both PowerPC and Intel - it adds up to 2.15 GB.
Mac OS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard": The boxed retail Snow Leopard ships on a dual-layer DVD like Leopard did, and it too is chokka-block. You'd think going Intel-only would free up a lot of space on the disc, but no, they've filled the once-free-space with even more extras, including the PowerPC emulator, Rosetta - including the hidden Boot Camp partition, it all adds up to a very full 7.82 GB. There are two releases, 10.6.0 and 10.6.3 (in fact, Apple still sell the 10.6.3 DVD through the Store) with the latter release squeezing in even tighter, but if I cherry-pick the installer packages for a default OS install, it comes to 2.31 GB.
Download #4: Mac OS 9.2.2 system folders extracted from the PowerBook G4 Titanium (DVI) A1025 (867MHz/1.0GHz) Software Install and Restore DVD. Unstuffed, this should result in a bootable OS 9 toast image.
2. I downloaded a copy of the latest vmwaretools for linux from CDS Repository - /www/stage/session-32/cds/vmw-desktop/fusion/5.0.3/1040386/packages only to find that it was exactly the same as the vmwaretools package that fusion gives me anyway VMwareTools-9.2.2-893383
Okay, I downloaded and installed linuxmint-15-cinnamon-dvd-nocodecs-32bit.iso under VMware Fusion 5.0.3 and applied vmtoolspatch and the output was exactly as expressed in the previously linked thread and VMware Tools installed and the VMware Shared Folders feature worked. So obviously something isn't right and apparently I swapped out the default linux.iso and linux.iso.sig files a while back and didn't remember that I did that. So as I ran diff -Naru against the target files found in the respective tarballs in the linux.iso from VMware Workstation 9.0.2 and what should have been VMware Fusion 5.0.3 and the attached tarbals in Re: VMtools installation problem on Ubuntu 13.04 I wasn't getting the real results. So my suggestion would be to use the VMware Tools for Linux from VMware Workstation 9.0.2 as I do not have time at the moment to recode the vmtoolspatch to account for the actual diff between all the pieces.
Okay, I updated the vmtoolspatch Bash Shell Script so give it another try as it should now work with both VMwareTools-9.2.2-893683.tar.gz and VMwareTools-9.2.3-1031360.tar.gz. The Date/Time stamp on the old vmtoolspatch script is Jul 7 00:00:00 2013 and the new one is Jul 15 00:02:00 2013. You can download it again from: Re: File sharing on Player betw host and guest doesn't work on Ubuntu 13.04 2ff7e9595c
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