![]() In the middle of it all is the big red disk insert button. You can just barely see the SD card peeking out under the left edge of the display. ![]() Clockwise from the top-left are a custom CPLD board, an Adafruit ATmega32u4 board, and an Adafruit 1.8-inch TFT display with micro-SD card holder underneath. Pictured above is the Floppy Emu hardware. Today I finally got read-only floppy emulation working from an SD card, in a rough approximation of the originally intended design. That makes it possible to download disk images of classic Mac software from the web, copy them to an SD card, and load them onto a Mac Plus or other Macintosh using the Floppy Emu. I’ve been tinkering with this project for a while now, and wrote about it here several times before. ![]() The Macintosh Floppy Emu works! No, not the flightless Australian bird, but the SD card 800K floppy drive emulator for classic Macintosh computers. blindowl on Floppy Emu Disk Emulator for Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa.Robert on Floppy Emu Disk Emulator for Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa.Steve on Floppy Emu Disk Emulator for Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa. ![]() Yellowstone Universal Disk Controller for Apple II Floppy Emu Disk Emulator for vintage Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |