apparently the new g6 macintoshes will run with intell processors
using windows
is it time to sell up and change over right now.....
or do we wati and see????
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apparently the new g6 macintoshes will run with intell processors
using windows
is it time to sell up and change over right now.....
or do we wati and see????
love your mum
wait and see , i couldn`t afford a new computer now . I have also heard you can run logic 7 on a pc now with some kind of adapting software .
STAR WARS IS ALMOST AS CRAP AS TOLKIEN
This goes even furtherOriginally Posted by FILTERZ
In the latest FM I read that there are some computerboffins who managed to get OsX running on a pc laptop. I don't think it would be stable but in the future my guess is that we'll see more of this type of stuff
The Mac will still be a trusted platform. i.e. even though future Macs will run on intel, the internals of a Mac will still be locked down by Apple, and most likely that is all they will support. I severely doubt that Apple will ever sell them with Windows, though in theory there's no reason why Windows wouldn't run on them. You might be able to get OS-X running on a PC, but prepare yourself for some serious hacking around - and Apple is never going to support it. Though, to be honest, since OS-X is built on top of a POSIX kernel (some flavour of BSD, I understand) this has probably been possible for a while.
nah you've got completely the wrong end of the stick there!!! Apple will be changing processors from motorolla to intel. The Intel chips will be specifically built to run under os X and will not be comptaible with windows. Exactly the same as they are now, but different manufacturer. Its not the hardware that makes mac's great its the operating sytem
My understanding was they were leaving the PowerPC architecture, and going to the PC standard of x86?Originally Posted by fresh_an_funky_design
what made macs so good was the components inside and the operating systems.
but pc compenents are much better now things like isa have gone, so its not about the components any more, its about the operating systems.
if they do go the windows route, then there isnt much point sticking with a mac imo of course
Life is "trying things to see if they work"
Finally getting around to updating my site
http://www.plus27design.co.uk/
Dave knows scooter lyrics
they are just dropping the amd chips in favour of the intel as IBM couldn't produce what was asked of them. The new intel machines will be able to dual run XP and OSX. But OSX will not be supported for PC machines. Their is a version of the OSX been hacked to work on pc's floating round, but at best can use i-tunes and thats about it. plug ins and drivers etc will not work and doubt there will be any support for them.
The strength of Macs was the closed system.
They will still be a closed system.
#Originally Posted by FIK
i read this too! it actually says that OSX is rumoured to be just as, if not more stable on a PC. Unlikely, but thats what FM were saying!
Originally Posted by Electrictribe
The article in Fm said that they had Logic 7 express running with full instrument support and multiple audio tracks
Apple dropped the IBM PowerPC chips because the PowerPC roadmap wasnt what they wanted. Intel has some SICK chips in the works that consume far less energy than the chips of today, and also feature a 45nm manufacturing process which will allow even more system bandwidth than the PPC chips we have in macs today.
OSX 10.4 can and will run on any x86 machine...however apple is expected to launch OSX 10.5 Leopard along with the Intel-Macs which will ensure that the Mac system will remain a closed source.
So what advantage will apple have on other x86 machines in the future? Lets not forget how much you pay for a mac and how well it runs. HP, Dell, and Gateway will most definitely not be utilizing the higher-end x86 offerings from Intel. Expect dual-core powerbooks, ibooks, and mac mini's running dual-core 2.0ghz chips in mid 06, with imacs and powermacs following close behind.
BTW, OSX 10.5 will support both PPC and x86 systems for many many years to come. My advice would be to purchase one of the final revision PPC Macs, as the first few generations of Intel-Macs are likely to be buggy.
OSX does and currently will run on a x86 platform. You should just need the Mactel (Macintosh Intel) Developer's Kit version of Darwin (OSX for x86's). Look around on the internet and you be able to download the .dmg, burn it to disc and go from there.
There's a couple of things you need to fiddle with and compile something else but its pretty bread and butter to get it working.
Also, here's a little secret:
OSX has been runnable on x86's since the first version of OSX was ever released, but that version of the OS was never released from Apple's headquarters and that's why OSX runs stable as all hell on anything you install it on, they've had a PC version of the OS since the OS came into existance (not like its that hard really, all OSX is a POSIX/UNIX with a really well developed X11 variant GUI).
They will also be releasing Rosetta with the x86 incarnations of OSX, its a emulator similar to the one that emulated the OS9 Classic environment for older Mac applications but is much better optimized to run PPC code, and actually runs most OSX applications pretty well.
That's all I know for now :cry:
We already do , there's tons of Emulators out there.Originally Posted by FIK
Things like Virtual PC that allows you to run other operating systems in emulation.
As well as game emulators etc.
There's always the discussion of Mac more stable than windows and it's because windows has been scarred with there 9x fat file system based operating systems.
Since Windows went to an NT kernel stability problems are far gone.
The Hardware, device drivers and the operating system deterimines your stableness.
I dont know what to think bout the Macintosh/intel thing, first i've heard of it and whoa.
Macintosh currently runs under RISC....
http://www.amigau.com/aig/riscisc.html
also...
http://cse.stanford.edu/class/sophom...risc/risccisc/
Specifically, OS-X was built on top of Darwin, which is Apple's own POSIX Operating System - and open source, which is fantastic. Darwin's kernel is a Xnu, which is a hybrid based on the Mach 3.0 and FreeBSD 5.x kernels. The fact that almost everything in OS-X's family tree is open source apart from OS-X itself, means that most of it will run on x86 - and if it doesn't, then some geek somewhere will be able to make it.Originally Posted by UngratefulNinja
Open source is definitely the way forward.
you clever programmers you :lol:
Life is "trying things to see if they work"
Finally getting around to updating my site
http://www.plus27design.co.uk/
Dave knows scooter lyrics
Why thankyou.Originally Posted by dan the acid man
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fecking hell
a science lesson?
so in laymans terms
don't worry about it right??![]()
love your mum
^The way computers are always evolving, no. lol
Yes, the geeks are always two steps ahead.Originally Posted by davethedrummer
You'll be fine.