piscsi
bluescsi
piscsi | bluescsi | |
---|---|---|
30 | 15 | |
493 | 377 | |
2.6% | - | |
9.0 | 6.5 | |
4 days ago | 2 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
piscsi
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Apple //gs to USB? Files from Mac Mini --> //gs? Home Network? BBS?
The ultimate setup is to get an Uthernet II card for your IIgs and connect to a netatalk file server via AFPBridge. The easiest way to set up a netatalk file server is on a Raspberry Pi using PiSCSI software. Your vintage Macs, modern Macs, and IIgs can all transfer files to and from the server.
- My new Raspberry Pi case! The Pi emulates the modem for Captain's Quarters BBS running on my IIgs and hosts my netatalk file server. It uses the existing LED's and power switch.
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Help: Found at the a flea market not working, needed a full recap and now I need a hard drive solution. More info in comments.
PiSCSI is a good solution for macs that don’t have built-in networking as it can emulate a network card as well as HD and CD.
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Is it possible to connect an old Macintosh classic to the internet? And if so how?
Best bet is probably getting a PiSCSI. It’s a modern Raspberry Pi-based device that emulate many devices, including hard drives but also an Ethernet adapter. I also have mine set up to run an AFP server that I can connect to from my modern Mac to transfer over, then retrieve them from my vintage Mac.
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Installing an Ethernet card and video card and other upgrades for a Mac SE/30
Eh... I had many, many battles with parallel SCSI. However, once active terminators became widely available and affordable (late 90s-ish) it was practically plug&play (just mind the ID switches)
The trickier bit would be to find one of those old SCSI-attached ethernet devices (Asanté, DaynaPort, EtherMac, ...) since they're coveted items in the retro scene. Although it looks like at least PiSCSI can emulate a DaynaPort https://github.com/PiSCSI/piscsi/wiki/Dayna-Port-SCSI-Link
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What measures are other European homelabbers taking to combat rising electricity costs?
https://github.com/PiSCSI/piscsi is your friend; I also use it on my alphas and vaxen.
- 50-pin SCSI pinout
- Who still here uses their very old Macs and their softwares?
- Any grooveboxes/samplers with wifi network/browser accessible drives?
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It actually works ! What do I do now !?
Get a RaSCSI and connect it up to the internet!
bluescsi
- Help finding a Games hda for my Blue Scsi MAC color classic
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Mac SE Update #5: not booting from the Blue SCSI
BlueSCSI <-> SD - https://github.com/erichelgeson/BlueSCSI
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Looking for an external SCSI-2 CDROM Drive
There's the Bluescsi, which is a microcontroller board that acts as a SCSI emulator, serving drive images or ISO files from a SD card. It's open source, so you can build one from scratch or buy it premade from various places. https://github.com/erichelgeson/BlueSCSI or scsi.blue
- What are these 4 unused jumper terminals for on my DIY Bluscsi? I haven’t soldered these yet as I didn’t know what they’re for
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Bluescsi on Powerbook 145?
Also the BlueSCSI discord is a helpful place for specific questions like this: https://github.com/erichelgeson/BlueSCSI
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How to Stream a Mac Plus to Twitch (RGB2HDMI)
BlueSCSI (I'm also using this for a nice fat multiple Gb drives solution off a microsd card): https://github.com/erichelgeson/BlueSCSI
- #MARCHintosh2022 - PowerBook 180c restoration
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Macintosh LCIII: repair, recycle, install raspberry with emulator? What do do with this?
You can build or purchase a bluescsi to replace the missing hard drive and easily load it up with cool software and games once it's working
- RaSCSI is a virtual SCSI device emulator that runs on a Raspberry Pi. This project is aimed at users of vintage Macintosh and Atari computers and more from the 1980's and 1990's.
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BlueSCSI – Open, Low Cost, DIY SCSI to SD Device – TinkerDifferent
>It's a lot easier to upload some zip files to JLCPCB, have them assemble it and then sell them on eBay for 4x the cost than it is to do the initial design.
but the author of BlueSCSI didnt do that initial design
"BlueSCSI created by erichelgeson is a fork of ArdSCSino-stm32" https://github.com/erichelgeson/BlueSCSI
What are some alternatives?
SCSI2SD - Copy of SCSI2SD from codesrc.com, as found at
ArdSCSino-stm32
RGBtoHDMI - Bare-metal Raspberry Pi project that provides pixel-perfect sampling of Retro Computer RGB/YUV video and conversion to HDMI
glci - 🦊 Test your Gitlab CI Pipelines changes locally using Docker.
tangram-es - 2D and 3D map renderer using OpenGL ES
mac-minivnc - A VNC remote desktop server for vintage Macintosh computers, including the Mac Plus.
Data-Structures-and-Algorithms-in-cpp - This repository is in development phase and will soon provide you with c++ code of various data structures and algorithms
interview-prep - Everything you need to know to get the job
hd-idle - Hard Disk Idle Spin-Down Utility
ciderpress - CiderPress Apple II archive utility for Windows