![]() ![]() Do not try to load the 7z version on the SD card. ( If you really want to have a dead cheap device look at my solution for the Orange Pi ($9.99) )ĭownload the image for a Raspberry Pi from: So now a new member of solutions is for for Raspberry Pi. If you don’t have one you can use an emulator like BasiliskII or SheepShaver to play around. If you have a LocalTalk bridge you can use the MacIPRpi. If you have an extra Macintosh with both Ethernet and LocalTalk you can use a software solution.You can find them on Ebay or (local) Craigslist, Hardware, like a AsantéTalk or Dayna Mini EtherPrint. ![]() Their are two types of LocalTalk bridges you can use: Now a combination of a LocalTalk bridge and a MacIPRpi can do the trick. In the old days we had router devices like a FastPath to do this. This device will ‘unpack’ tthe TCP/IP packages and send them to other TCP/IP networks. To do this right you need a piece of hardware or software to do this. To ‘speak’ TCP/IP from a LocalTalk network to a TCPnetwork, like the Internet, it is necessary to encapsulate Internet Protocol (IP) packets within the AppleTalk DDP protocol. On this kind of network it is not possible to ‘speak’ TCP/IP to the Internet right away. You can connect Macintosh computers over LocalTalk with the use of cabling between the printer ports. Picture: MacIPRpi at work for a MacIP session in BaseliskII emulator And the MacIPRpi is loaded with software to get you going with file sharing with almost any computer. gives you a MacIP gateway out of the box on a Raspberry Pi thanks to the Linux port of macipgw done by Stefan Bethke. ![]()
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