The user Uniserver on 68kMLA? Here is his website. Apparently he has made a number of his own schematics, but he requires payment before you can download it.
20200805/http://www.maccaps.com/MacCaps/Schematics.html
The available schematics mostly focus on newer classic Macintosh models, pretty much the oldest one on the list is the Macintosh SE/30. And that one, well nowadays that has a more openly available schematic.
Good news, RaSCSI has plans of adding support for SCSI network adapters! In the meantime, there is Scuznet, available as a standalone board project.
https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?app=forums&module=forums&controller=topic&id=30399&page=6&app=forums&module=forums&id=30399
https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?app=forums&module=forums&controller=topic&id=59044&page=2&app=forums&module=forums&id=59044
Here is the GitHub for the 68kMLA version of RaSCSI.
20200805/https://github.com/akuker/RASCSI/wiki/OLED-Status-Display-(Optional)
20200805/https://github.com/akuker/RASCSI/wiki/Setup-Web-Control
20200805/https://github.com/akuker/RASCSI
Here is the GitHub for Scuznet. It uses, and provdes good documentation on, the protocol used by an existing historic Macintosh SCSI device, so the same drivers can be used. Namely, the Nuvolink SC.
20200805/https://github.com/saybur/scuznet
20200805/https://github.com/saybur/scuznet/blob/master/PROTOCOL.md
This 68kMLA forum thread has some good advice on working with floppy disk drive repairs.
20200805/https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?app=forums&module=forums&controller=topic&id=60268
Wow, this is interesting. Discussion about issues setting dates after the year 2020, due to a bug in the system 6/7 control panel. There is a handy open-source SetDate utility you can use to work around this.
Nevertheless, there is still the year 2041 problem. But, a very interesting plan of attack has been discussed, you can just patch the Macintosh toolbox date/time conversion routines to gracefully handle dates after the year 2041.
Interesting, as early as Macintosh System 6. Way back in the 1980s, and ona 32-bit CPU at that! Not even 32-bit, to be punctually technical.
20200805/https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?app=forums&module=forums&controller=topic&id=60343
20200805/http://www.synack.net/~bbraun/macapps.html
20200805/http://mirror.informatimago.com/next/developer.apple.com/documentation/mac/OSUtilities/OSUtilities-99.html#MARKER-9-89
Also interesting, from the synack.net
website. Seiko RC-1000, a
smart watch from the 1984? Yes, 2K of user programmable memory.
20200805/http://www.synack.net/~bbraun/rc1000/
Notes on classic Macintosh programming? Here is one good site, written in the modern context, for sample programs.
20200805/https://mu0n.github.io/ForayInto68k/index.html
Finally! It’s what I’ve been looking for, a modern GCC toolchain compiler to cross compile vintage Macintosh software. Even better, there is now an open-source Mac OS Classic API library called Multiversal Interfaces. Wow, that’s great, that means I don’t have to write it all from scratch on my own.
20200805/https://github.com/autc04/Retro68