68kMLA Classic Interface
This is a version of the 68kMLA forums for viewing on your favorite old mac. Visitors on modern platforms may prefer the main site.
| Click here to select a new forum. | | .bin images? | Posted by: bilbomacuser on 2021-08-17 09:33:24 Hi,
I kept a load of old 68K Mac images which are in various formats, and not sure how to use them! I have a set of British 7.5.3 install disks which are named .smi.bin and .part.bin but not sure how to make them usable?
Ideally I would like to get them readable by Basilisk II so that I can install them into a hard drive image for the BlueSCSI.
Any idea where I should start?
Thanks | Posted by: Nixontheknight on 2021-08-17 09:34:57 Just get rid of the .bin in the filename in any modern OS | Posted by: olePigeon on 2021-08-24 11:57:04 .bin is MacBinary encoded (similar to BinHex.) They need to be decoded. I don't recall if Apple's built in archive utility can do it, but I believe Unarchiver can. You can also use Stuffit Expander. | Posted by: MrFahrenheit on 2021-08-25 07:21:17
.bin is MacBinary encoded (similar to BinHex.) They need to be decoded. I don't recall if Apple's built in archive utility can do it, but I believe Unarchiver can. You can also use Stuffit Expander.
To add to this, .smi means it’s a “self mounting image”, referring to it being an application that launches and mounts an image on the desktop, as opposed to being a raw disk image itself.
To open and mount the SMI, you’ll need a PowerPC or 68k Mac, running System 7 through Classic OS 9 (under OS X 10.0-10.4.11). | Posted by: olePigeon on 2021-08-25 09:46:26
To add to this, .smi means it’s a “self mounting image”, referring to it being an application that launches and mounts an image on the desktop, as opposed to being a raw disk image itself. To add to this added to this, a .part is like it sounds: it's part of a .smi file. Disk Copy has a nifty feature where you can break up a single, large disk image into many small parts, with the idea that you could fit a large image file onto multiple floppy disks. | | 1 |
|