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Macs made from 1984 to 1998 used Old World ROM as the boot loader for all Macs produced around that time period. From 1998 up until the PowerPC to Intel transition, New World ROM was used for all Macs starting with the first iMac and later expanding to the first iBook and the Blue and White Power Mac G3.
7.1–9.2.2 After Dark Games: Vivendi Universal Multiple games Commercial 7.5–9.2.2 Afterlife: LucasArts 1996 God game Commercial 7.1–9 Agatha Christie: Death on the Nile: Agatha Christie: Peril at End House: Age of Curling: Blackish 2011 Sports Commercial 10.6.6 or higher Age of Empires: MacSoft: 1997 Real-time strategy Commercial 7.1–9.2.2
In computing, the exit status (also exit code or exit value) of a terminated process is an integer number that is made available to its parent process (or caller). In DOS , this may be referred to as an errorlevel .
Mac gaming refers to the use of video games on Macintosh personal computers. In the 1990s, Apple computers did not attract the same level of video game development as Microsoft Windows computers due to the high popularity of Windows and, for 3D gaming, Microsoft's DirectX technology.
When a kernel panic occurs in Mac OS X 10.2 through 10.7, the computer displays a multilingual message informing the user that they need to reboot the system. [17] Prior to 10.2, a more traditional Unix-style panic message was displayed; in 10.8 and later, the computer automatically reboots and the message is only displayed as a skippable ...
The PC Exchange was a control panel that matched a DOS file type to a corresponding Mac program that was defined in the control panel. [3] It required the Macintosh have a 1.4MB SuperDrive . [ 1 ] The type of application that opened specific files could be changed in the control panel.
The Virtual Game Station (VGS, code named Bonestorm [2]) was an emulator by Connectix that allows Sony PlayStation games to be played on a desktop computer. It was first released for the Macintosh , in 1999, after being previewed at Macworld/iWorld the same year by Steve Jobs and Phil Schiller . [ 3 ]
In System 1, the menu had items related to emptying the Trash, cleaning up the desktop, and disk options. By System 1.1, the menu allowed the user to choose an alternate startup program to be run instead of the Finder at boot time; the feature was replaced in System 7 by the "Startup Items" folder in the System Folder. [citation needed]