http://www.hardmac.com/niouzcontenu.php?date=2005-08-10#4352http://www.concretesurf.co.nz/osx86/viewtopic.php?t=84&lighter=Looks like a little bit of effort to get it running, but it works.
8/10/2005 10:46:09 PM
not much effort at all.you left out http://www.research.gwgaming.net/wiki/[Edited on August 10, 2005 at 11:18 PM. Reason : .]
8/10/2005 11:17:13 PM
8/10/2005 11:28:32 PM
I've seen longer tutorials on how to remove spyware.
8/11/2005 8:28:21 AM
ooooooooooooooooooome likey
8/11/2005 8:40:20 AM
also, if you have a processor that supports SSE3 then there's really only one step.
8/11/2005 10:03:29 AM
Now someone just has to write the patches to remap sse3 instructions for non sse3 cpus. I give it a month max.And I called this happening long ago.And now yall watch, because in less than 2 years, Apple will release a vanilla OSX.x86 that is hardware indepedent.
8/12/2005 7:21:09 PM
^ Everyone saw this coming.I say 2 years is too quick though. Maybe 3 or 4 years.
8/12/2005 7:23:30 PM
Saw this running personally today on a Compaq Laptop @ 2.4Ghz with 512mb of RAM NATIVELY. Boot pc, it boots OSX. Amazing, really. I'm with Noen, I give this a month...
8/12/2005 7:32:50 PM
8/12/2005 7:39:19 PM
I'd like an iso with th sse3 stuff in tact. I'm sure there's someone running it on a venice
8/12/2005 11:12:02 PM
I don't think that anyone cracking this will cause Apple to release an issue of OS X for a generic PC.Most of the people doing this wouldn't buy Apple hardware anyway. It would require Apple to completely restructure their business model.If people pirating and forcing OS X to run on a generic box causes Apple to become another Microsoft, selling their operating system through Dell, HP, etc. machines, then what is the next transition after that? Tons of people pirate Windows as it is, how is Apple helping themselves by making it easier to pirate the software?I don't think it makes good business sense to make your OS easier to pirate.
8/13/2005 7:16:01 AM
psst. stop believing the hype on piracy.The amount of money "lost" by the very small percentage of people that pirate software is hardly relevant.cue Noen...
8/13/2005 9:14:51 PM
^^ how exactly does making your os more compatible and function natively on more hardware make it more or less secure, in the piracy sense?
8/13/2005 9:46:26 PM
8/14/2005 2:14:58 AM
i know right. like it takes a lot of insight to realize people were gonna get around the hardware restrictions
8/14/2005 3:03:42 AM
that last post signifies the beginning of unending mindless drivel from Noen about how he can see the future and predicted the birth of Bill Gates before the latter's mom was pregnant.
8/14/2005 3:09:51 AM
the continuation of mindless drivel, you mean
8/14/2005 2:26:25 PM
No, this is the first part of my prediction that Apple will release a vanilla x86 version.Which, according to the last thread about Intel and Apple, not very many people agreed with.
8/15/2005 7:41:38 PM
http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/06/14/1322208&tid=181&tid=3
8/15/2005 7:46:26 PM
Noen, I take issue with your choice of phrase: "per capita."
8/15/2005 10:49:00 PM
Incidentally, apple users spend more per capita on software than PC users, too. That doesn't conflict with the more piracy per capita claim.i dont even know why this point came up, but drivel on.
8/16/2005 12:25:51 AM
It makes sense to make your software easier to pirate.But NOT A FUCKING MATURE SOFTWARE PRODUCT.I don't think making Photoshop easier to pirate would help Adobe.Not that anyone is stopped anyway.
8/16/2005 12:28:29 AM
8/16/2005 9:34:28 AM
I like how you just pulled that business analysis out of your ass.
8/16/2005 9:45:27 AM
^Posturing as an expert on any matter is nothing new for Tech Talk, why can't I get away with it?
8/16/2005 9:59:38 AM
part of the problem
8/16/2005 10:08:15 AM
There's actually two reasons why Apple would never release a vanilla x86-based OS X.1. Back in the early 90's, Steve Jobs tried this while he was the CEO of NeXT. Their slick, high-end hardware wasn't selling well so they tried to compete against Windows and OS/2 in the OS market by releasing a vanilla x86-based NeXT OS. Needless to say, this strategy failed, as most of the user base wanted the functionality of Windows and weren't willing to pay the 150 dollars for what would've equated to a more usable but less functional operating system. In short, there was no market for it, and as Jobs has been following a lot of precedents set by NeXT in his stewardship of Apple, you can be assured that he won't repeat this same mistake.2. Apple's always been a brand that focuses on quality, and you can tell that lots of time and effort went into creating the hardware and software that they release. Part of this quality comes from designing the software to run on a specific kind of hardware. Unlike in a PC, where the processor, bus, peripherals, cards, and other devices can vary, Macs have a particular combination of hardware that Apple dictates and writes its software for. The benefit of this is that you don't have a lot of conflicts between software and hardware and you don't have to worry about third-party hardware drivers screwing up. If Apple was to release a vanilla x86-based Mac OS X, they'd have to write thousands of different drivers to ensure uniform quality on all computers. On top of this, they'd most likely run into the NeXT quagmire of having a superior OS but no market or user base to sell it to. Apple makes its money based on hardware sales, and there's simply no good reason for them to release a PC-based Mac OS X.However, if you're interested in giving it a shot, it is possible, even if it runs a little unevenly. If you have an SSE3-compatible processor, it's as close as you can get to having a Mac without having Apple hardware.
8/17/2005 11:54:38 AM
^ i stopped reading after "early 90's"
8/17/2005 3:50:16 PM
8/17/2005 4:06:30 PM
I told yadrivel
8/17/2005 4:27:41 PM
8/17/2005 5:53:27 PM
http://media.corporate-ir.net/media_files/irol/10/107357/reports/10QQ3FY05.pdfFun reading starts around page 25
8/17/2005 6:00:11 PM
8/17/2005 6:47:16 PM
if you click on the link I posted, you'll realize that software alone is like 10% of their total sales.Their major sellers are the Mac hardware, followed by the Ipods...Itunes is like 10%
8/17/2005 6:49:45 PM
Total Mac Sales: $1,565iPod Sales: $1,103iTMS, iPod accessories: $241Peripherals and other hardware: $266Software and services: $345Total net sales: $3,520Software, services, iTMS and iPod accessories add up to $586 = 16.6% of total sales.Net sales: $3,520Cost of sales: $2,476Gross Margin: $1,044R&D: $145Selling, General, & Administrative: $472ummmmm, I suck at this stuff. what's it all mean?
8/17/2005 7:03:26 PM
8/17/2005 7:57:15 PM
DudeYou'd be a fucking faggot if you think you can differentiate between profits from software and profits from hardware. They go hand in hand.And developing software isn't cheap either...Seriously...ARE YOU FOLKS SANE?OK...time for Noen's side of the drivel.
8/17/2005 8:42:20 PM
^ then there are a shit-ton more quotes coming.
8/17/2005 9:26:54 PM
Apple does not make much profit at all on the iTunes. Yes, expanding iTunes to other platforms and markets increases revenue by volume but it also helps to sell fucking iPods where they make their profit!!!!http://www.yeald.com/Yeald/a/30911/will_itunes_ever_make_a_lot_of_money_for_apple.html
8/17/2005 9:42:08 PM
Gargs you need to learn some shit about basic business because it's obvious you have no fucking clue about the difference between MANUFACTURING and SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT.The FIRST thing you need to take into account is the HUGE cost of the Apple stores, which are only necessary to sell hardware.Based on your OWN PDF here are the damn numbers you need to know:Retail operating costs run $83 million and lease costs are at $583 million(pg29).Next to take out is warranty costs of hardware, $174 million (pg17)Hardware R&D is $343 million (387 total (pg2) -44 for software (pg9))Cost of sales is at $7245, of which we can eliminate 1776 from operating expenses (pg2)and 1593 from from accrued expenses (pg9) leaving us with Leaving ~3876 million in costs for hardware directly.Adding in the other associated costs for hardware we get a grand total cost of ~5059 millionNet sales of hardware were $8822 ($4,664 (computers), $3,328 (ipod) and $830 for peripherals (pg27))Thats a profit margin of 42%Software sales on the other hand have an operating cost of 44 million in R&D. That's it. They made $1431 ($797 General software, $634 from iTunes et al music products (pg27)) Profit margin of 96.9%Now lets look at the market ability for their hardware. Ipod has 95% market share. So it aint going to sell much more than it is already and sales are going to decline SWIFTLY over the coming 3-5 years. It's a saturated market. That alone accounts currently for damn near HALF of their hardware sales. Without ipod, Apple is NOT a hardware profitable company. Take a look at their numbers before the ipod launch for absolute proof of that.I am really glad gargs posted that link, because I will admit I am suprised at the actual profit from hardware in pure numbers, but I'm not at ALL suprised about the profit percentage.I will absolutely admit that I am dead wrong on the percentages of profit.Looks like its more like 25% profit from software and 75% hardware.What I am DEAD RIGHT about though, based on those numbers, is that the hardware sales are going to decline. Ipod accounts for nearly HALF of total hardware sales and with total market dominance there is no room to grow. You have 40ish percent profitability on hardware with no market left and 97 percent profitability on software with a VAST untapped market.If you can't see the difference in these, and realize that software is the only fucking way that Apple is going to continue to be profitable, you dont deserve to be in college.
8/18/2005 1:06:58 AM
dudeyour original drivel was not about profit margins.
8/18/2005 12:18:29 PM
8/18/2005 12:23:07 PM
Replace the battery every two years.But even then, IF that happens, that means they will only be making money every two years from it. It's a stagnant market.Windows is much the same way, except they make a shit ton higher margin on windows. Which is why you see Microsoft branching out into every damn industry they can compete in (xbox anybody?)
8/18/2005 4:47:01 PM
you're dumbbut carry on
8/18/2005 4:48:09 PM
How am I dumb? In the damn SEC filing YOU posted, apple says that earning will likely fall due to waning sales in LOW MARGIN products like the ipod.This is business 101 man. profit margin is much more important long term than gross sales.
8/18/2005 4:51:30 PM
drivel drivel drivelmindless mindless mindlessNoen Noen Noen
8/18/2005 5:04:52 PM
Noen,You provide salient points of argument with plenty of facts to support your views, but I must disagree with you on several of these issues.
8/18/2005 10:13:40 PM
8/19/2005 1:26:18 AM
I didn't read that post above after a few lines.So I'll add my own drivel.You f00ls are NOT EVEN CONSIDERING the importance of MS Office for Macs before typing inane BS like ^ above who compares a service oriented server software company like RedHat to a predominantly desktop oriented company like Apple.MS Office for Macs isn't Microsoft's fav product...it isn't even technically under any contract/negotiation to keep up the development. If Apple introduces a direct competitor to Windows, MS stops developing Office for Mac, and yes, no one wants to buy OSX.Ofcourse, I am sure in his next post, Noen is gonna talk about Apple's own productivity suite or OpenOffice...but dude...Office for Mac is one of the most used applications on it.Microsoft is a force to reckon with...you cannot just compete with it. Also, Dell sells PCs with no Windows installed, and I am sure you believe that they are all top notch high end systems with the latest hardware technology...not to mention that they are really sold in huge numbers.OK...time for noen to reply.
8/19/2005 1:39:28 AM