sounds like the hacked together versions you could do with a windows
computer to make it into a mac would indeed be very painful.
On 8/29/2015 10:07 PM, 'Chris Blouch' via MacVisionaries wrote:
Nope, Apple doesn't allow it as per their license but lots of folks
have made "hackintoshes". The recipies I've read made it sound rather
painful and buggy. You have to have pretty decent hardware and OSX
assumes certain things so there's lots of driver fiddling to make it
all work well. For some it's a fun puzzle to solve. For me I'd rather
spend my time doing stuff with the computer, not debugging it.
As far as the other way around, MS seems to not care if you virtualize
their OS and Apple is fine with you virtualizing OSX on Apple hardware
so you could, say, run OSX 10.7 on an OSX 10.10 machine.
CB
On 8/29/15 7:19 PM, Jonathan C. Cohn wrote:
Does the Apple license allow this? I would also expect issues with
the recovery partition
Jonathan Cohn
On Aug 29, 2015, at 1:57 PM, george b <gbma...@gmail.com> wrote:
You now can buy v m fusion for windows to run osx mac as a v m machine
-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Sabahattin
Gucukoglu
Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2015 10:56
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: all in 1 pc or I mac that is the question.
Well, of course, you won’t be running OS X on non-Apple hardware (a
PC) without some serious hacking. So, if you intend to run OS X,
you’d better have that iMac. You can always run Windows on your iMac.
I recently got one. Relative to other machines on the market, they
are by no means the fastest or most powerful, but it’s hard to argue
with the robustness of the design, OS X (compared to present-day
Windows, anyway) and the overall experience. Macs have great resale
value and there’s a good reason for that—they’re great value in the
long term, whereas many Windows boxes purchased are penny wise and
pound foolish and tend to deliver fairly frustrating experiences.
JMO.
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