You need the Macintosh version - you have to create the resource forks
on the Mac.
I found my little sticky-note with the magic type/creator
codes - dImg and dCpy
-Ian
--- On Thu, 3/24/11, Terry Stewart
<
terry@webweavers.co.nz>
wrote:
From: Terry Stewart <terry@webweavers.co.nz>
Subject: Re: Lisa Test Program
To: lisalist@googlegroups.com
Date: Thursday, March 24, 2011, 7:19
PM
Thanks for those comments everyone,
Just a clarification on ResEdit. I've found
the
program on the Web. There seems to be a
Windows and a
Mac version though? Which one are you
reffering to
Ian? Should I re-fork the image once I've
got it to
the Mac Classic II, or on my Windows PC before I
transport
it there?
Cheers
Terry
----- Original Message ----- From: "Mr Ian Primus"
<ian_primus@yahoo.com>
To: <lisalist@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2011 1:18
AM
Subject: Re: Lisa Test Program
--- On Thu, 3/24/11, tezza <terry@webweavers.co.nz>
wrote:
I found some other ZIPPED versions of LisaTest
disk
images
which I can
get to the Mac no problem but Disk Copy
doesn't
recognise
these as
valid images. I'm assuming the fork has
been
lost
somewhere.
If you have a disk image where the resource fork
has been
whacked, you can use ResEdit to fix it. Simply use
ResEdit,
and open a good DiskCopy image, then view the file
type
information (from one of the dropdown menus in
ResEdit).
Write down the creator type and file type codes
(from
memory, dCpy and something else). Close that file
and open
your forkless file. ResEdit will prompt you,
saying it's
creating a resource fork for this file. Say OK.
Then, view
the file type info, and type the creator type
codes into the
box. Save the file, and then DiskCopy will see
it.
On the subject of LisaTest, I haven't fully
figured
everything about it out. For example, I have no
idea what
the purpose of Disk 2 is. Disk 1 boots, but disk 2
does not,
and it won't mount under the office system. I've
never had
the test program ask for disk 2. Perhaps because
I've never
had it test a profile?
I don't know how to get it to help you identify
failed RAM
chips, as the Lisa won't boot if you have a bad
memory board
- or rather, I've never tried. I have two memory
boards that
are so clobbered that even if you put it in slot
2, they
cause the two-beep error and a scrambled screen. I
have one
that just fails the memory test, but I don't think
I've
tried to get the machine to boot past that
point.
-Ian
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