Postby shooraijin » Thu Dec 23, 2004 2:29 pm
Classic is the OS 9 emulation layer in OS X that lets you run pre-OS X programs. You need OS 9 itself to run Classic; for a recent Mac you should be using 9.2.2.
Typically, this should have already been installed for you on your hard disc. If it isn't, look on your Software Restore CDs to see if it's offered for installation. Once you have an OS 9 system folder installed, you can tell Classic to use it, and whenever you start an old Mac application, Classic will take control, start OS 9 if necessary, and then start your older program. All of this is transparent and doesn't affect OS X or any OS X applications you have running.
If you absolutely, positively, cannot find OS 9 on any of your CDs, Apple will sell you one for Panther (last I checked it was around $20), but I'm quite sure it's there as it comes with most new Macs I've seen. (It came with mine.)
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