Posted by davelawrence8 at 6:13 am on February 8th, 2010. Note, though, that Einstein also has a Windows version. But it’s a fun little project to get running on your Mac. And that’s about it, at least from what I saw, so it could be that the ROM only has certain features from the eMate. What’s nice about Einstein is that it grabbed my Address Book information automatically. Then you pick how much RAM you want the thing to have, native or full-screen resolution (warning: full screen is a bear), and how to run the screen and sound.Īfter a few minutes of booting, Einstein pops up with a Newton screen showing that it’s working fine.įrom there, the pseudo eMate runs through the name, address, and time setup process. Lantern DDK gives you ROMs from an eMate and an MP2000, along with a few other pieces of debugging software.Įinstein has you pick which Newton device you want to emulate, and point it toward a viable ROM image. In my case, I’m grabbing my eMate’s ROM with a package of file called Lantern DDK (thanks to Macintosh Garden). The Users Manual is handy because it gives instructions on how to grab a ROM image of your OS 2.x Newton device. This seemed like the perfect time to give Einstein a spin on my new iMac.įirst, I downloaded the latest Einstein app from Google Code, plus the Users Manual. Now that Paul Guyot’s Einstein, the Newton emulator for Mac and Windows, is available for Snow Leopard, users with up-to-date Macs can play around with the Newton OS.
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