![]() Drag it to the ‘desktop’ and then double-click to unzip. Open the “Downloads” folder, and you’ll find your ’AP Viewer Installer.SIT” file.On the MacOS9 ‘Desktop’, find the item “The Outside World” (Note: You may have to close some of the Sticky Notes to see it) and open it.The page will briefly darken as you drop the file but no other confirmation will appear. ![]() Locate the SIT file and unzipped sample photos you downloaded, then click once to drag & drop anywhere onto the MacOS9 interface.(Note: You must ‘unzip’ the included photo folder before moving on to the next steps.) Download SIT file and sample photos from above.Note that we cannot offer our usual personal technical support, but here are some tips for running this PMv1 on a popular emulator: note – PMv1 was initially called “AP Viewer”)ĭownload (Requires Mac OS 9 or emulation – see below)ĭownload DCS TIFF files ©1998 Dennis Walker See what it looked like for editors at the Associated Press at the Super Bowl 25 years ago! Take your own trip down memory lane…Īre you the type who wants to see it for yourself, and have the technical wherewithal to navigate the nuances of vintage OS emulation (Or, you have Mac OS9 installed somewhere?) If so, check out the installer for the original Photo Mechanic, along with some original photo files from a Kodak 1998 digital camera. ![]() Here’s a video of PM1 in action narrated by our longtime technical support mastermind and wizard, Bob R. To follow up on that, we’ve sifted through the basement archives and found the original installer for Photo Mechanic version 1 (!!!). ![]() Can you believe that Photo Mechanic turns 25 this year? If you missed it, check out this first-person account of the birth of Photo Mechanic in 1998 written by Dennis Walker, the founder of Camera Bits. ![]()
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