I don't know what a cube is and can do but it sounds strange that you
are able to partition PowerPC OSs and Mac Intel OSs on a single
computer.  How does this work?  Looking at Disk Utility's partition
options, the two main options are:

1.  GUID Partition Table to start up an Intel-based Mac computer
2.  Apple Partition Map to start up a PowerPC based Mac computer

These options look to be mutually exclusive as either option appears
to apply to all partitions when using Disk Utility and looking at an
external HD.  I don't know if you can choose combinations of 1 and 2
if the partitions are done on an internal HD when installing multiple
OSs.

Thanks

Paul

On 1/6/07, Christian Schmitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Paul Rehill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hi all
>
> For reducing the time to test software, is it possible to have two or
> more versions of Mac OS X installed on a single mac to limit the
> testing time on different computers.  I have googled this many times
> and can't find any information on how this is done or if there are
> virtual machines that would allow running Mac OS X v10.1-10.4 on a
> single computer.

I've a cube here with Mac OS X 10.2, 10.3, 10.4 and 10.5 installed for
testing :-)

Gruß
Christian
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