![]() However, none of these setups replicated the true feel of using a computer in the 90s. The Macintosh Repository is experimenting with in-browser emulation via either Basilisk II or vMac.RetroWeb Vintage Computer Musem, also based on James’s PCE.js work.OldWeb.Today, which extends James’s Basilisk II work to support a working networking stack.The Internet Archive’s Mac Emulation, which is partly based on James’s PCE.js work.James Friend’s in-browser ports of the Basilisk II and PCE.js emulators.Some research into browser-based alternatives uncovered a few options: ![]() As far as I could tell, that was still the state of the art, at least if you were targeting late era 68K Mac emulation. I had earlier experimented with Basilisk II, which worked well enough, but it was rather annoying to set up, as far as gathering a ROM, a boot image, messing with configuration files, etc. My heritage being of the classic Mac line, I was curious what the easiest to use emulation option was in the modern era. Projects like v86 make it easy to run your chosen old operating system in the browser. ![]() ![]() Between increasing CPU power, WebAssembly, and retrocomputing being so popular The New York Times is covering it, it’s never been easier to relive your 80s/90s/2000s nostalgia. ![]()
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