

It seems that 95% of content related to Apple that appears on the web nowadays is little more than recycled press releases, repeated gossip from a rumor site, or wild speculation with little basis in fact, all with click-bait headlines. Of course part of the reason is that I keenly appreciate anyone who shares my passion for classic Apple hardware and software, but what delights me the most about “Think Retro” is that is is quality content, with glorious photos and beautiful, descriptive words that evoke the genuine emotions I remember the first time I saw or used the items he writes about. Written by Christopher Phin, the series is, in his words, “unashamedly in love with yesterday’s Apple.” He promises to provide readers with “a mix of practical advice, hidden histories and wildly nostalgic love letters to beautiful old pieces of hardware and software” in the coming weeks, and after reading the first 4 articles I am impressed and plan to be a regular reader. I was excited to see a new weekly column devoted to vintage Apple products debut on the Macworld web site in November. I plan to have my teenager spend some time playing some of these to better appreciate the gaming experience they enjoy now! Caution: you should probably allot a good amount of time in advance. Just point your browser to and get ready for a trip down memory lane.
#CLASSIC FTP FOR MAC SERIAL INSTALL#
You don’t need to find a compact beige Mac with a working floppy disk drive or install an emulator like Sheepshaver on your MacBook Air.

If you’ve been longing to relive computing in the 80’s and 90’s in glorious bitmapped monochrome, you’re in luck.
#CLASSIC FTP FOR MAC SERIAL SOFTWARE#
This isn’t just a gallery of screenshots – this is a way to experience classic Mac software like MacWrite, Dark Castle, Lemmings, and many more by playing them in your web browser. It is actually much more, and one feature for lovers of classic Mac computing is the Mac Software Library they just added.

You are probably already well aware of as the amazing time machine that lets you view web sites the way they were years, even decades ago.
