In the case of the IIgs, no one has quite nailed the emulation as accurate as they could. It gives the graphics a pleasant contrasty glow. As good as the programs look on a modern LCD-type screen, they still look better on a nice tiny tube monitor. Also, you can throttle the disk speed and machine speed to make productivity software run much better than it ever ran on the actual hardware. This means you can save your game even in a program that doesn’t natively support save games. In the case of AppleWin you can save the state of the machine. Most of the times emulation is much faster and convenient. Running old software in emulation can be good and bad. If all this downloading is a bit much for you, the easiest way to explore Apple II software is via a browser applet/plug-in/activex widget at Virtual Apple ][. Flaws aside, once you get over the initial learning curve it can do a fairly good job with several IIgs programs, especially system software. The developers could learn a thing or two about usability from AppleWin. It is far from perfect and can’t run everything. The one that I have gotten familiar with is Kegs32 (a Geocities link… you’ve been warned) ActiveGS. However, if you are running Windows, you are a bit limited. There seem to be many choices if you are running OSX. AppleWin can’t emulate the IIgs so you will need to use another program.Įmulators for the IIgs are not nearly as good as AppleWin. There is also a great resource for IIgs called What Is the Apple IIgs? In addition to being a pretty complete history of the system, they also host disk images and packaging for most of the software ever released for the IIgs. There are several Apple emulators out there, but this one is the best. AppleWin is an Apple II emulator, a program that mimics the hardware of another computer in software. On a PC you can get these disk images running quite easily in AppleWin by just dragging the. Be warned, even though most of the companies that created this software are long gone, downloading old “Abandoned” software is still a legal gray area and there’s always a chance, albeit quite slim, that you may get in trouble for this. From here you can find just about every piece of software ever created for the Apple II in disk image format (usually a. The ultimate resource for all things Apple //e and earlier is Asimov FTP Archive. What’s great about playing around with a twenty year old computer is that all that software that looked so cool, expensive and unattainable back in the day is now widely available for download on the Internet. It’s fun to fire it up every now and again and listen to those 5.25″ drives grind away. I still own an Apple IIgs’the last of the Apple 2 computers before Apple went all Macintoshy and Apple’s direct competitor to the Commodore Amiga. In fact, I have posted a few of my better creations on this very web site (check out Dippy Golf and Malfunction). In the early eighties my dad bought a Apple ][+ and this is where I learned the ins and outs of programming. There was so much great software for the Apple 2 and I have many-a-fond memories of games like Karateka, Star Blazer and Ultima. I recently have been on a bit of an Apple II retro-computing kick.
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