
This concept of visiting a website would be a decent idea in the ideal world but must be a complete headache for the modem users, the people that lack a constant internet connection and the people who actually want to play these emulators. So all we, the users, are to the author is traffic. Has to be paid for - and is a relatively minor issue as anyone who looks at my web page can quickly see what the latest versions are." "I see no need for automatic updating, as such a feature provides a whole lot of dead traffic to my web site - which This is the reply that I recieved when I voiced these concerns: It gets even more complex with the Emulator Enhancer add on which also needs regular updates. Your antique software would need an antique Mac, now quite hard to find.I asked the author why I had to continually update their software and if they could do a software update program for their software to make the lives of their users much easier instead of having to download a new copy almost monthly, unstuff it and replace the old version. So, Apple have thrown out all old apps at least 3 times since PageMaker 6.5 ran, and it won't have run for 15 years at least. PageMaker 6.5 ran under Classic (though some people were having severe problems already in Tiger Mac OS 10.4 from 2005.

This didn't include "Classic" which allowed some apps written for Mac OS 8 and Mac OS 9 to run. In 2007, Apple released Leopard Mac OS 10.5.

But PageMaker 6.5 wasn't one of them and wouldn't run before.

This didn't include "Rosetta 1", which allowed Mac OS X users with Intel computers to run "Carbon" apps written for Power PC processors. In 2010, Apple released Lion Mac OS 10.7. It blocked all old apps from before 2019, including (but not only) all Mac OS X 32-bit apps. In 2020, Apple released Catalina Mac OS 10.15. Apple regularly change things completely to throw out all the old apps.
