The software update for Windows XP compatibility is still available on Canon's website: http://web.canon.jp/imaging/ELS/PC/ese1_pc02W-e.html
I'd venture a guess that there are a few used Windows XP computers around that could be had for very little money.
And the Windows emulators for Mac aren't really separate operating systems.
And by the way, Macs are the new growth industry for viruses.
if nobody else will say it, I will...bito**ent?
In other words, get a pen (the kind with ink, or perhaps a pencil...) and a notebook (the paper kind). Cameras that print spreadsheets...
+1The cheapest solution would be to install Virtual Box, and some old Windows on it, and then install old software on that Windows.
+1
Virtual Box works surprisingly well. Probably the thoughest question is: does you Mac have a place to plug your "old" cable?
I use this software on my Mac. I run it inside a Windows 7 VM, using VMware fusion five. It works fine.
Oh, and don't forget that whoever is doing this programming job for you would have to have the camera in their possession the entire time they're developing it. So you'd be without the camera for at least a month.
I'll echo the idea of Virtual Box:
virtualbox.org
You'll need a windows disc to install windows onto a virtual machine. You can pass ports into the virtual machine (USB, rs232, etc.) - sometimes it's easy, sometimes it takes a bit of work. You can also look into "linux-based" camera software. Some are feature-rich and ported to OS X. If not ported you could always compile the source code on your Mac so it will work.
You are not partitioning your drive, Virtual Box (like most VMs) will create a virtual computer and virtual drive. These are basically files. No dual-booting (no boot camp) or anything like that.
Just for kicks have you connected the camera to the computer? Maybe you will get lucky and it will show up like a flash drive and have a CSV file with the data that you can copy off and open in Excel or Apple's Numbers.
If that does not work you are going to need to install WinXP in a virtual machine and run the old cannon software to access the data.
You say you don't want to put windows on because you might get a virus well you should know that simply running windows won't get you viruses, simply DONT use the internet inside the virtual machine, in fact you could even disable the network sharing to the virtual machine.
Stone, everything will be contained within the virtual environment. Nothing will happen when the virtual machine is off.
When it is on, the windows VM can only bother the USB stick if a stick is plugged in AND the VM is given access to it. This is something you can control. You would only give access if you were to transfer data to/from the real hard drive or an USB stick.
As posted above, if you keep the windows VM from connecting to the internet, you'll be safe. If you do have an unknown virus on your USB stick, then you don't deserve to have one. Seriously, though, if an USB stick were to infect the windows VM, you just revert the VM to a snapshot (you'll make that after you are all set up, but before doing any work). Of course, you'll also clean the USB stick.
If you are really paranoid, install ghostscript printer on the VM windows installation. It is a free PDF printer. You "print" to it and it makes a PDF file (there are other similar programs). Then just transfer the PDF.
This is all true whether you house the virtual machine on your hard drive or on an USB stick.
Here are some virtualbox links for you:
https://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch01.html
(notice the "1.7. Creating your first virtual machine" link)
https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/User_HOWTOS
Now, depending how similar your camera's firmware is to the canon digitals, you may be able to get the information the hard way. Mac is an UNIX system, so you can try connecting the camera and see if you can "cat" data from the device - command line stuff. This is advanced, but if the firmware is simple, it might be doable.
Also, although for digital cameras, gphoto2 (http://www.gphoto.org/) may help - though I doubt it. You could try to compile it on your Mac (advanced), or install a Linux system in the virtual machine. If doing a VM, though, might as well make it windows.
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