Preston,

I second this, you really need a test machine (as well as one to do builds on properly) for all the platforms you are intending to ship with. Also if you are aiming at os9 you should also test on an os9 native machine, just to be sure all things are kosher. I had a strange problem with an earlier version of rev with the classic build. its a pain, but there is no real substitute to testing on the platform that you intend to deploy on. I know thats a pain, but if you plan to have folks use your stuff its just the way that you need to do things in order to make sure your software functions as you designed it and doesn't leave your users blowing in the wind.

I just shipped a cd with win, osx and os9 rev apps with rev and all was great with them, in the end there were no platform specific bugs that cropped up.

OS9 is still alive and kicking (and will be for some time) in the education environment, especially in the K-6 world, where they dont get the same level of funding for upgrading as there is in the higher levels.

cheers,

jeff reynolds

On Dec 22, 2005, at 4:07 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Preston-

If you really really need to target the Mac OS you will need an OSX
machine in any event in order to make sure that things don't go wonky
when you're running in Classic mode. It's been quite a while since
I've had any reason to target OS9 for a build.

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