19 Getting Started
Eric Helgeson edited this page 2024-06-17 09:34:17 -05:00

Important

If you are looking for BlueSCSI v2 documentation please go here: https://github.com/BlueSCSI/BlueSCSI-v2/wiki

Start Here

This page is split up into links so you can "choose your own adventure"!

Follow the questions and links on this page to guide you through everything you need to get up and running.

My BlueSCSI is :

Assembled

Great! Everything has been tested and is ready to go.

Do you want to:

Kit

You can do this! Get your soldering iron out and head over to the assembly instructions.

Afterwards, continue on to assembled.

If you're having trouble check out the troubleshooting guide

Somewhere Else

Oh no! If you purchased from someone that is not listed on https://scsi.blue they are not supporting the project and are violating the non-commercial license of this project. Please let us know.

Premade & Blank Images

Premade images are great for getting started - just drop the file on your SD Card with the correct name and you're all set.

Go here to checkout our premade images.

Now that you're up and running you'll probably want to load some software on your image.

If you're having trouble check out the troubleshooting guide

If you want the full vintage experience of installing and configuring your OS this you're in the right place. You can grab pre-formatted blank images here and drop them on your SD card. Note any blank file will work, these are just pre-formatted HFS and ready to install.

For Macs running at least Mac OS X 10.11 and for machines running Windows 7 and up, Disk Jockey allow you to create properly formatted blank disk images and partition them.

For PPC and Intel Macs running Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and up, its sibling Disk Jockey 1999 (page accessible from a vintage machine) creates blank disk images ready for use with BlueSCSI.

Now that you're up and running you'll probably want to load some software on your image.