I spent five hours on a Sunday night looking for it all over the web, which probably wasn’t the best use of my time. These versions will not run on newer versions of Mac OS. Traditionally the Amiga emulator (Unix Amiga Emulator ) have been compiled to run on non-Intel Mac (PowerPC based) hardware. In order to get started with Amiga emulation on newer versions of OS X, a binary compiled for the Intel processor is required.
Convenient? Sure, but does it require creativity? In my opinion, not as much as it used to when the limiting realities of hardware constraints were treated as hurdles to overcome via optimally written software. In this day and age, developers spend a lot of time fastening together APIs with glue and duct tape. A once ubiquitous approach of careful, calculated software craftsmanship is no longer necessary to build things. We now live in a world where memory and CPU constraints are no longer the obstacles they once were, and as a result, a cultural shift has occurred in the development community. In other words, I was determined to run virtualized Amiga hardware on my MacBook Pro under OS X 10.7. I was too young to enjoy this platform in 1980s and 1990s, but I believe the demo scene created some of the most resourceful programmers the world has seen. Before spending a hundred or so dollars on actual hardware I thought I’d give emulation a try. I’ve recently become enamored with the idea of experimenting with some old Amiga hardware and software.