

By way of a solution - what Id suggest is running a Debian VM on your Mac. you get the same problem if you try to run x86 Docker images on the Raspberry Pi if it is acting as a Docker host. The entire MacintoshPi project runs on Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W, 2, 3, 3B, 3B+ (at present, it does not run on version 4). The Docker image needs to be built for the same architecture as the host system.

In addition, thanks to a document contained in the project, it is possible in dual-boot to place the fastest (bare-metal) Commodore 64/128/PET emulator BMC64, thus building an interesting retro package on a single SD card. Installation requires running a single script "build_all.sh" on a clean Raspberry Pi OS Lite and waiting about two hours for the packages to compile and install. Launch BalenaEtcher Select the extracted Twister OS ISO file Select the microSD card Click Flash to write the image Wait for completion, then safely remove the microSD card from your PC's card reader When you're ready, insert the card in the Pi, and boot up.

This lets emulators use full power of Raspberry Pi, making them more stable and useful in combination with additional retro-software. All this without the X.org manager, only a multimedia SDL2 library and from the CLI / Raspberry Pi OS Lite. Batocera.linux is an open-source and completely free retro-gaming distribution that can be copied to a USB stick or an SD card with the aim of turning any. MacintoshPi is a small project that allows running full-screen versions of Apple's Mac OS 7, Mac OS 8 and Mac OS 9 with sound, active Internet connection and modem emulation under Raspberry Pi.
