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OSX on a PC video ugh...
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(
Last edited by arng1; Oct 17, 2007 at 01:51 PM.
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Originally Posted by arng1
No?
No.
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Clinically Insane
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"The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." TJ
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Look, I am not saying I agree with it, nor am I saying I like it anymore than any1 else here does. All I am saying is that it is interesting to see it work. Strictly coming from a non-bias stand point(pc hatred emotions aside). I love my macs and apple products.
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Clinically Insane
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Why should we dislike it?
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Why should we dislike it?
Less Mac sales for Apple. Apple turning into MS, paranoid about hackers and pirates.
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Signature depreciated.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by C.A.T.S. CEO
Less Mac sales for Apple. Apple turning into MS, paranoid about hackers and pirates.
Why should non-stockholders care about Apple's sales? Apple already is paranoid about hackers and pirates.
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Clinically Insane
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Because it matters to the health of the company. I'm sure you know something about the brief period Apple tried to support a clone market and what resulted from that.
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"The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." TJ
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by Big Mac
Because it matters to the health of the company. I'm sure you know something about the brief period Apple tried to support a clone market and what resulted from that.
I do remember that, but most Mac users I know of are happy to think of their Macs as niche products. Apple has shown themselves that their core business is not competing against the Windows monopoly. So, how does slight growth or loss from the people that would be inclined to install OS X on a PC going to affect non-shareholder Mac users personally? It's not like Apple is in dire financial trouble...
If any, getting hackers interested in OS X might actually *help* Apple in the long run in case they ever do decide to compete against the general PC market.
The other question you need to ask is what percentage of these users are not going to buy a Mac no matter what? Within this population, perhaps some might be inclined to spent $130 for a Tiger/Leopard DVD?
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I don't want to have to enter a 34 digit activation code to register my OS X, so I don't like it being hacked and installed where it shouldn't be.
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Originally Posted by adamfishercox
I don't want to have to enter a 34 digit activation code to register my OS X, so I don't like it being hacked and installed where it shouldn't be.
How is this relevant to installing it on a PC? You could install an unlicensed copy of OS X on a Mac too.
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Yeah, and I don't like that either.
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Meh, I'll let Apple protect their interests, and I won't care about what other people do that don't affect mine. If you want to install OS X on a PC, have at it. You are on your own and it has its definite downsides - so much so that it will never be a viable platform as long as Apple doesn't support this setup. I feel the same way about the iPhone... you want to unlock it, have fun.
Why should we get upset and bothered about this? I just don't get it... If you want things to break in between releases, if you want to mess around with drivers, getting the thing installed, performing upgrades, staying one step ahead of Apple, why should we stop these people?
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Originally Posted by besson3c
How is this relevant to installing it on a PC? You could install an unlicensed copy of OS X on a Mac too.
That doesn't keep people from buying Apple hardware too though. If you're just installing an unlicensed copy of OS X on a Mac you already own, then you've at least paid for the Mac and will likely pay for another in the future.
If you're installing OS X on a non-Mac PC then Apple's getting nothing out of you. It may be the case that if this were possible more people would try it and then buy Macs later on (similar to people who download MP3s illegally and then later buy the album), but who knows.
In the end, I don't think this really hurts Apple. The people that install the OS on non-Apple hardware are generally either Apple enthusiasts who do it because it's cool but also have Apple hardware as well, or just general hackers who think it's cool but otherwise wouldn't spring for a Mac anyway. In neither case is Apple actually losing out on anything, and at least people are trying OS X who might not otherwise.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by nonhuman
In the end, I don't think this really hurts Apple. The people that install the OS on non-Apple hardware are generally either Apple enthusiasts who do it because it's cool but also have Apple hardware as well, or just general hackers who think it's cool but otherwise wouldn't spring for a Mac anyway. In neither case is Apple actually losing out on anything, and at least people are trying OS X who might not otherwise.
Agreed...
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Forum Regular
Join Date: Oct 2006
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Meh, I'll let Apple protect their interests, and I won't care about what other people do that don't affect mine. If you want to install OS X on a PC, have at it. You are on your own and it has its definite downsides - so much so that it will never be a viable platform as long as Apple doesn't support this setup.
That doesn't keep people from buying Apple hardware too though. If you're just installing an unlicensed copy of OS X on a Mac you already own, then you've at least paid for the Mac and will likely pay for another in the future.
If you're installing OS X on a non-Mac PC then Apple's getting nothing out of you. It may be the case that if this were possible more people would try it and then buy Macs later on (similar to people who download MP3s illegally and then later buy the album), but who knows.
In the end, I don't think this really hurts Apple. The people that install the OS on non-Apple hardware are generally either Apple enthusiasts who do it because it's cool but also have Apple hardware as well, or just general hackers who think it's cool but otherwise wouldn't spring for a Mac anyway. In neither case is Apple actually losing out on anything, and at least people are trying OS X who might not otherwise.
Yeah, these were the responses I was looking for. Thanks guys for putting it into better perspective for me. Couldn't agree more!
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