![]() If you’re unfamiliar with this process, check out this disk image setup tutorial for the original ROM-inator. Once you’ve mounted a few different disk images, you can copy programs and data between images to configure your ROM disk image however you’d like it. It’s a cross-platform tool that emulates a Macintosh Plus, and you can quickly mount disk images by dragging them into the Mini vMac window. I recommend Mini vMac for editing the contents of the disk image. If you’re using your own disk image, its size must be a multiple of 65536 bytes (64 KB). ![]() You can use your own pre-existing disk image, or start with these empty 2.25 MB or empty 5.5 MB or empty 12 MB disk images. The exact limit depends on the contents of the disk image and its compressibility. When using compression, the ROM-inator II Atom SIMM can store a disk image as large as about 2.2 MB (or 5.5 MB for ROM-inator II Basic, 12 MB for Mega). You’ll find an example disk image at the ROM-inator II project page. If in doubt, confirm that the first two bytes of the file are 4C 4B (hex). For ROM-inator II, the disk image file should be in “raw” format, meaning it contains only the actual contents of the Macintosh disk with no extra headers or checksums. If you’ve previously used a Floppy Emu disk emulator or a Macintosh software emulator like Mini vMac, you’ve doubtless seen these kinds of disk image files before. Lastly, you’ll also need a disk image file that defines the contents of your ROM disk. You can find the latest versions of all of these in the Downloads section of the ROM-inator II project page.
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