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Originally posted by Guy:
**Software doesn't need to be carbonised to run under classic. The whole point of classic is to run programs that haven't been carbonised. You get some programs that just won't run under classic for whatever reason but not many, so you should get away fine without an OS 9 partition. However, I have a 10GB drive partitioned into 8GB and 2GB on which I run OS X and OS 9 consecutively and have had no problems with disk space.
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I tried it!
Had a little problem with the partitioning. After I partitioned my 12G hard disk, I discovered that my Retrospect recovery CD had an older version of the app than I had been backing up with. So I had to load OSX alone and then use it to get to the web. Downloaded a 30-day trial of Retrospect's latest and used that to recover my OS9 (and everything else).
So I put OS9 in the second partition. I have already found one game which quits under Classic, but works if I startup with OS9. But I am wondering about my other applications. What determines whether an application runs under OSX or under Classic? I know that Nova can run under either, and I assume at least that some of my other applications can also.
I noticed when I started up Classic the first time that it said it had to make some changes in the Classic system folder. Although it said that they would not affect starting up from the OS9 system. Does it make a difference if you install OSX over an existing OS9? Should I clear everything out, reload my OS9, and then re-install OSX? Does the OSX installer move things like preferences and applications to new positions in the directories when it installs, which apparently you don't get if you put OS9 back in after you already have OSX installed?
I would appreciate any advice that anyone with more experience can give me. As usual Apple doesn't explain anything.
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