First... like Rhapsody, NEXTSTEP and OPENSTEP have their own version of the UFS filesystem. This means that you aren't going to just
mount one of these in some foreign OS.
Second... most of what is on Wikipedia about Rhapsody and NeXT is written by people who really have never even used this stuff. Don't take anything you find there as fact unless you can verify it with some other source.
QUOTE(Don Luca)
EDIT: hey!!! Openstep isn't a stand-alone OS!!! it's an API for NextStep!!! Am I wrong?
Depends... what product are you talking about?
OPENSTEP... which is fully titled
OPENSTEP for Mach, is an operating system. It is the fourth major version of the NeXT OS originally called NEXTSTEP (originally written as NeXTStep).
OpenStep is both the APIs and the Application Environment for non-NeXT systems (sold as OpenStep Enterprise).
There is a nice article on the naming conventions
here.
QUOTE(Don Luca)
however, arix openstep 4.2 doesn't work at all... it is recognized as an Audio CD and all it reproduces is static sound.
Part of the problem with all these
images floating around is that you don't even get the basic info that was on the media itself.
For example... there was one CD for NEXTSTEP 3.3 for both NeXT and Intel hardware. But these images you guys are passing around blind don't tell you any of that.
And because you guys are assuming that you can run these in emulation software designed for special operating systems (Windows or the Mac OS), you are missing the fact that these systems are designed to be run on real hardware with certain conditions (requirements).
NeXT (or Apple for that matter) never intended their media to be opened on a Mac or Windows system. These CDs were for NeXT and Rhapsody systems.
But what is most frustrating is that it isn't like most of the documentation on this stuff is missing... it isn't. So it makes someone like me wonder why you guys aren't reading up on this stuff first.
When I got started in all this I read up on these things. And the original media came with manuals to help people with installing NEXTSTEP/OPENSTEP/Rhapsody. Both NeXT and Apple supplied articles for when you ran into issues.
And all that information is
way better than the information (and misinformation) you get from Wikipedia.
I have to wonder some times if me being part of this forum is actually helping. Some questions are hard to find answers for, and first hand experience really is needed to fully understand what is happening... others are questions that only take a little bit of effort to solve by reading the documentation. But if I'm here to answer those questions, I may be stopping you guys from actually doing any reading at all.
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QUOTE(jackoverfull)
ok, i got now the dr1 cd (thanks!) and tried it on an imac g3@400. the disc doesn't but (i expected that: there is os 8.0 on it…) so i installed os 8.6 and tried from it. the installer hung immediately after the license screen, no way. the booter utilities tells that is not supported and i have to force quit it.
i looked in the extensios folder and i can't find any strange one…
anyway i can confirm that the rhapsody partitions are here if someone else want to try it on a supported mac.
I don't think that either of the developer releases will work on an iMac G3/400... that system would need Rhapsody 5.3 or later.
Both Rhapsody 5.0 and 5.1 should work on most pre-
Blue & White PCI Power Macs (but require a patch for them to run correctly on G3 processors).
A good way to judge if the developer releases will work is if the hardware has USB. Because the iMacs only have USB and neither Rhapsody 5.0 or 5.1 support USB, that pretty much rules out iMacs for them.