Born To Jump Mac OS

broken image


Table Of Content

  1. Born To Jump Mac Os Download
  2. Born To Jump Mac Os 11
  3. Born To Jump Mac Os X

1- Compare PC keyboard and Mac keyboard

The Macintosh (mainly Mac since 1998) is a family of personal computers designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Inc. Since January 1984. The original Macintosh is the first successful mass-market personal computer to have featured a graphical user interface, built-in screen, and mouse. Apple sold the Macintosh alongside its popular Apple II, Apple III, and Apple Lisa families of computers. In doing so, you will be able to move around the Mac OS more efficiently, and get more done in less time. In this tutorial and screencast, I will show you how to quickly and easily move from program to program while keeping your hands on the keyboard. It's easy enough to upgrade to OS X El Capitan from the App Store, but downloading the software multiple times isn't a great idea if you have more than one Mac, or a Hackintosh.

Most people are familiar with a computer using Windows operating system. Therefore, if you work with a Mac OS computer for the first time, you will feel confused. The keyboard of the Mac OS is different from that of a common PC. The shortcuts on Mac OS are also different from familiar ones of the Windows.
PC: is short for Personal Computer. Although computers manufactured by Apple running Mac operating system can be called a personal computer, according to a long-standing habit, PC is used to refer to a personal computer using the Windows operating system and the Windows keyboard. In this post, I also use PC with the same meaning and use Mac to refer to the personal computers manufactured by Apple, running Mac operating system and Mac keyboard.
This is list of common key combinations on the Windows and corresponding key combination on Mac OS:
WindowsMac OS
CopyCtrl + CCmd + C
PasteCtrl + VCmd + V
CutCtrl + XCmd + X
UndoCtrl + ZCmd + Z
RedoCtrl + YCmd + Shift + Z
Select AllCtrl + ACmd + A
FindCtrl + FCmd + F
HomeHomeFn + Left Arrow
EndEndFn + Right Arrow
UpUpFn + Up Arrow
DownDownFn + Down Arrow

2- Use Ctrl + A, C, V, X in Mac OS

If you are using a Mac OS virtual computer on a PC, you can not use the () Command key because the keyboard of the PC does not have this key in which case, you can not copy with the Cmd + C shortcut. You need to configure Mac OS so that you can use Ctrl + C.

Configure Mac OS to use Ctrl + C, V, X, A, ...

Choose the 'Shortcuts' tab and you can see 'App Shortcuts', select 'App Shortcuts' and press the (+) icon to add a new shortcut.
First of all, add a new shortcut for​​​​​​​ 'Cut' (Ctrl + X), enter
Similarly, you can add other shortcuts.
Menu TitleKeyboard ShortcutDescription
CutCtrl + X
CopyCtrl + C
PasteCtrl + V
Select AllCtrl + A

Born To Jump Mac Os Download

3- Use the keys such as Home, End, PageDown and PageUp

If you compose a text regularly, you will often have to move the cursor to the beginning or the end of a line. On Windows you use the 2 Home and End buttons. On the Mac OS to move the cursor to the beginning of the line you need to use the two keys of Fn + Left Arrow and to move the cursor to the end of the line, you need to use Fn + Right Arrow.
Jump
Mac OS allows you to configure to use the buttons such as Home, End, PageUp, PageDown.
Born
Mac OS allows you to configure to use the buttons such as Home, End, PageUp, PageDown.
On the Terminal, create ~/Library/KeyBindings folder, and CD the folder just created by running the following comands:
On the Terminal, create the DefaultKeyBinding.dict file, ans edit the content of this file.
Copy & Paste the following content to Terminal.
Press Ctrl + O, and then press Enter to save changes and pressCtrl + X to exit the file.
You need to restart Mac OS so that configures work.

(There's no video for Mac OS 9.2.2 'boot kit' for booting your G3/G4 from an USB stick yet. Please contribute to MR and add a video now!)


Born To Jump Mac Os 11

What is Mac OS 9.2.2 'boot kit' for booting your G3/G4 from an USB stick?

Stop wasting plastic! You've been doing it wrong if you burn install CD's for your old Mac :P

This Mac OS 9.2.2 'boot kit' was made by @that-ben and makes the process of booting (and installing) Mac OS 9 on any G3 and most G4's from an USB stick a little bit easier, because not all the Mac OS 9 install CD images can be used to boot a Mac from an unlocked volume (such as from an USB stick or hard drive). This disk image does boot the computer into a fully useable desktop (albeit quite slow) and it's loaded with utilities and disk image mounting tools which will enable you to prepare and install Mac OS, everything without the need for a CD-ROM drive at all. Since the USB drive is unlocked, you can even surf the web using the pre-installed Classilla browser and go get more files, directly from the same computer you're about to install Mac OS on :P

There is no Mac OS installer on this disk image. You still have to download a Mac OS install CD ISO of your choice (Mac OS 9.2.2 Universal 2002 edition is highly suggested unless you know and want to use your machine specific Mac OS install CD) in order to install it on your Mac.

Follow these steps to clone this disk image onto an USB stick and follow the link at the bottom of that article to learn how to boot G3's and G4's from an USB stick using Open Firmware.

Once the Mac is booted off of the USB stick, what I would do is:

1) Copy anything from the internal hard drive that's worth keeping onto an USB stick or external drive and then format the internal hard drive as HFS Extended using the Drive Setup found under the Applications folder on the USB stick.

2) Use another USB stick (formated as FAT32 if your main computer is a Windows PC or HFS Extended if it's under Mac OS X) or the network to copy your Mac OS install CD image onto that Mac's internal hard drive.

3) Lock that Mac OS install disk image (click on it to select it, then under the menu at the top: File > Get Info, then check the Locked attribute on the bottom/left corner).

4) Use the pre-loaded Toast 5 Titanium to mount the Mac OS install CD image (locked).

5) Launch the installer and enjoy your freshly installed Mac! No CD, no pollution.

Pre-loaded software installed on the USB stick that you can use when booting off of it include:

  • Classilla (9.3.3)
  • Disk Copy 6.5b13
  • Disk First Aid
  • DiskTracker 2.3.3
  • Drive Setup
  • GraphicConverter Classic 6.5
  • MacErrors 2.0.1
  • NativeChecker
  • QuickTime 6.0.3
  • Quit Anything 1.6.1
  • ResEdit 2.1.3
  • SerialReader 2001 w/ Serial Box 08.2005 definitions
  • SoundApp 2.7.3
  • StuffIt Deluxe 7.0.3
  • Toast Titanium 5.2.3
  • Virtual CD/DVD-ROM Utility

Mac OS 9.2.2 Boot Kit.zip(164.02 MiB / 171.99 MB)
Mac OS 9.2.2 Boot Kit / Toast (ISO) image / Zipped
1813 / 2019-02-12 / 3772eaedf5a1528c88d0a65252eb1333668b35c1 / /

Architecture


IBM PowerPC


Architecture: PPC

Use this to boot any G3 and most G4's into a fully useable Mac OS 9.2.2 desktop from an USB stick, pre-loaded with all the tools you need to prepare and install Mac OS 9 on your PowerPC Mac. This could also be used to boot the QEMU emulator if you wanted.


Emulating this? It should run fine under: SheepShaver


Born To Jump Mac Os X






broken image