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Mac OS X on x86 Videos Get Apple's Attention

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wed Aug 17, 2005 06:01 PM
from the almost-getting-away-with-it dept.
RetrogradeMotion writes "The OSx86 Project is reporting that Apple has served a legal notice to MacBidouille, a French news site that posted videos and instructions on running Mac OS X on x86 hardware . You can find an English translation of the MacBidouille notice on the OSx86Project's forums. This is the first known legal action by Apple regarding the hacked version of OS X and calls into doubt the future of other news sites, similar to the OSx86 Project." Slashdot previously covered the story of hacking Mac OS X onto non-Apple hardware and followed up again a few days later.
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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:02PM (#13343495)
    Is that new-speak for duped?
  • So it starts... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by NickCatal (865805) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:04PM (#13343505)
    Apple is going to have YEARS of this ahead of them... I'm just waiting for Apple Jobs to have about 300 postings for "Piracy Specialist" to open up. M$ has to have an entire building just for their piracy group.
    • Re:So it starts... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by RAMMS+EIN (578166) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:22PM (#13343624) Homepage Journal
      ``M$ has to have an entire building just for their piracy group.''

      No, because most people pay for the OS when they buy a machine, and companies often take group licenses for software (MS Office, SQL Server, ...). I wouldn't be surprised if Microsoft had sold more copies of Windows than there were people using computers.

      Also, every computer that runs Windws, pirated or not, strengthens Microsoft's position. The people using that computer will be used to Microsoft software, and likely prefer to use that over alternatives. Thus, pirated copies of your software keep the users away from the competition, and may lead to sales further down the road. You don't want to alienate those users by trying to make them pay.

      Of course, if some group is massively pirating your software, it may be better to do something about that group. But even for that you don't need a whole building of drones; you can get the FBI to help you.
    • Re:So it starts... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jcr (53032) <jcr@ma c . c om> on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:27PM (#13343653) Journal
      Apple is going to have YEARS of this ahead of them...

      Maybe, but I doubt it. Running a shipping version of OS X on a generic PC isn't going to be as easy as using the old "Magic Sack", which let you plug Mac ROMS into an Atari ST.

      They can tie it to encryption keys on their mother boards, they can use custom microcode in the GPU, they could even get Intel to make them slightly modified CPUs that are only available to Apple.

      -jcr
    • Re:So it starts... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Concerned Onlooker (473481) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @07:03PM (#13343850) Journal
      This is all hilarious. Apple has at most 3% market share and everybody here wants to hammer them for trying to protect what they have. Until recently it seems Apple had a fairly decent rep on Slashdot. It is, after all, a really nice alternative to using Windows, which everybody also seems to hate.

      You can knock Apple wanting to control things as much as you want, but I can tell you that as an Apple consumer the reason I stay with Apple is because they control their hardware. Things work. I'm not interested in defending anything that leads to Apple quality going downhill because I want to continue using Apple products in the future.

      Talk about control, I see control freaks on the other side of this as well. If you want total control how about using Linux, which you can mod/change/hack to your heart's content. Or is it just more fun to try to do the "forbidden" thing?

  • Apple HQ (Score:5, Funny)

    by Musteval (817324) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:04PM (#13343509)
    "Terrible news, sir! People are installing our OS!"
    "Quick! To the Applejet!"
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:09PM (#13343542)

    Apple is not minor league engineering department attached to a powerhouse marketing deparment.

    It's also attached to a powerhouse legal department.

    Think Different !!!

    • by happyemoticon (543015) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:53PM (#13343789) Homepage

      Of course, you're referring to their hardware engineering, not their software engineering. Poopoo on their silicon all you want, I'll even help in a few areas. However, the mere fact that so many geeks are working desparately to run their OS on commodity hardware testifies to the fact that their applications and operating system departments are anything but minor-league.

      • by dr.badass (25287) on Thursday August 18 2005, @12:35AM (#13345468) Homepage
        I've always seen Apple as company selling pretty things to women who want to send email.

        And you've always been shallow and ignorant in making that assessment. They [apple.com] make [apple.com] some [apple.com] other [apple.com] stuff [apple.com] that you seem to have overlooked.

        They're picking on geeks with the desire to hack and make stuff work!

        No, they're picking on geeks with a willingness to break NDAs, pirate pre-release operating systems, and not pay for anything.
  • by ndansmith (582590) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:09PM (#13343544)
    Is it illegal to post this sort of information? If not, can Apple convince a judge that posting this information is harming them, and thus win a civil suit? I doubt it.
    • by wankledot (712148) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:16PM (#13343581)
      I'm sure it is. The only copy of OS X for x86 available right now is the one provided to developers with the x86 dev boxes. I'm almost certain that it's against the rules of the NDA to talk about it publicly like this.
              • by Rude Turnip (49495) <valuation&gmail,com> on Wednesday August 17 2005, @07:41PM (#13344096)
                I swear to God we need a "bullshit" tag for moderating /. Your ignorance wrt EULAs, the GPL, licensing, copright law and basic tenets of private property is astounding. That or you are trolling. Please quite while you're ahead.

                1. Software is no different than any other intellectual property like a book or music CD.

                2. You own your copy of OS X, Windows, Linux, *BSD, including the physical media. It is only copyright law and nothing else that prevents you from distributing copies. However, the GPL is the author's public declaration that you may distribute.

                3. There is a whole wealth of information of what consititutes a valid contract, and a EULA is not one. If you press a "button" on your screen that says "I Agree," that does not mean you have agreed to anything in a legal sense.

                4. Apple, Microsoft, Linus own the *copyright* on their respective works. It means they get to dictate the terms of *distribution* and nothing else. Otherwise, you can use the software any way you want.

                5. The GPL only pertains to distribution of code and has nothing to do whatsoever with usage. If you don't agree to the terms of the GPL, you can still use the software.

                Bottom line is that anything you buy in a retail transaction is yours to own and use, although you are restricted from distributing copies per copyright law. There are *real* software contracts out there (ie Microsoft site licenses, Bloomberg feeds, etc), however.
                • by ndansmith (582590) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @08:37PM (#13344386)
                  Wow, did you read the article summary, the linked articles, or my post? The point of this article is that Apple is suing a news agency for documenting the OSx86 phenomenon. They provided information on how to install Mac OS X on a normal PC and they provided video to demonstrate that it can be done. Apple is not going after MacBidouille because they illegally distributed the Developer Kit DVD; they didn't. Apple is going after them for reporting the information.

                  Furthermore, Apple has no legal oversight of all the documentation which has been generated by OSx86 hackers. The installation docs belong to those who prodeced them; Apple does not own them just because the notes concern their product. As we all know, these installation guides have been distributed freely on the net, and MacBidouille posted these notes on their site. Also, the video depicts something that may or may not be a crime. As we all know from watching the news, distributing a video which documents crime is not a crime in itself. Apple did not produce the video, so they do not own it. The usage of their trademarks should be covered under fair use. It is not illegal (nor should it be) to document crime, even by telling exactly how it can be done and showing the crime being comitted.

                  The point is that this story and my post have nothing to do with EULAs, the GPL, licensing, copright law and basic tenets of private property. It has to do with news, freedom of information, and free speech rights.

  • by Logic Bomb (122875) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:10PM (#13343553)
    This is the first known legal action by Apple regarding the hacked version of OS X and calls into doubt the future of other news sites, similar to the OSx86 Project.

    Given how fast Apple's legal department is capable of acting, it's a little odd that it took this long. I was speculating with a friend that Apple probably wants to make sure that the hype has time to take hold before it cracks down. It's interesting how they have to do a balancing act between being too heavy-handed and making sure that people keep talking about their products.

    It would have been relatively simple for Apple to personalize each copy of OS X Intel that it sent out to developers. I find it pretty strange that we haven't heard about legal action against whomever distributed their copy. Perhaps Apple purposely didn't watermark the installers so the balance could tilt towards hype without them having to sue a developer.

    • by soma_0806 (893202) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:37PM (#13343718)

      It's additionally fishy that they took their first action against a French site when so many American sites were doing the same thing. It's like they waited for the info to get out, wanted everyone talking about it, then made some sort of action against a foe far from the center of the limelight and in another country, which only steps up the difficulty in achieving success.

      It's pretty clear that Apple, usually quick draw McGraw with the legal complaints, sat on this one because they saw the benefit of these copies getting out and getting people talking and excited about OS X.

  • by SeaFox (739806) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:13PM (#13343566)
    it should be noted there is an English translation [hardmac.com]version of MacBidoulille always available. Just go to www.hardmac.com instead of MacBidoulle.
  • Unfortunately... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Sheetrock (152993) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:13PM (#13343568) Homepage Journal
    This is the kind of thing, ironically, that will hurt Apple's adoption on the x86.

    Ubiquitous piracy made Microsoft Windows big and Linux a contender. It's hard enough to get people to try another operating system when it's free.

    Not that I'm supporting piracy, because I'm not, but at this point you'd have to be a nut to grab something like this (not necessarily stable, anybody could have altered it) and install it on your system, with the risk of losing whatever else you've got on there. The kind of nut that could be an excellent customer down the road if Apple capitalized on this fanaticism and offered legit demos of the technology in lieu of the illegal downloads already out there.

    I suppose it wouldn't jive with their strategy of keeping their innovations under wraps until release, but as long as the toothpaste is out of the tube you get better results with the carrot than the stick.

    • by FLAGGR (800770) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:29PM (#13343661)
      Apple isn't trying to take over the x86 market with their switch. Apple sells hardware. OSX is the OS that happens to be made by them and bundled with said hardware. Although I'm sure Apple would like 90% market share, that's not what they are going for. Nothing has changed in Apple's market strategy. They're still going to be different from your run of the mill Dell pc's, it's still the old Apple, just with a different cpu. The CPU is one chip in the computer. They'll still make custom motherboards and everything. They will continue to be the underdog marketshare wise, and Steve Job's will still make a assload of money to buy fuel for his private jet, just like it is now with powerpc.

      Attributing Windows' success to piracy is a common but retarded argument. What else was there for x86 that was competition for Windows in terms of ease of use? Yes, I hate Windows, but MacOS never ran on the open hardware, only on apples. Windows simply suited the typical computer-idiot person, and with Microsofts marketing and shoddy buisness deals, it won out. If Windows success was because of piracy, then why are they so rich? Average Joe doesn't get a friend to burn him a copy of an OS, and then go gee whiz this is good, I'll buy the 300$ copy to support the cool guys that made this!
  • by blibbler (15793) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:17PM (#13343586)
    When has Apple been frivolous with their IP? They have already sued people for distributing Tiger over BitTorrent, and that was for an OS that would only run on hardware that they had sold.
  • by levram2 (701042) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:19PM (#13343602)
    OSx86 Project's CEpeep researched building a x86 machine that will run Mac OS X for Intel for under $200. The machine has the same Intel chipset on the motherboard and a processor with SSE3. Total includes CPU, MB, RAM, Case, HD, and DVD drive.

    http://www.osx86project.org/index.php?option=com_c ontent&task=view&id=27&Itemid=2 [osx86project.org]

  • Tempting Apple (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Doc Ruby (173196) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:19PM (#13343606) Homepage Journal
    I know Apple likes DRM, but usually not just for an empty power trip. As a business risk, the hype about OSX86 threatens Apple only by possibly inhibiting buyers of new Macs who might wait to reinstall over Windows on their existing HW, or some other cheap (commodity) x86 PC. Otherwise, the hype is making Apple seem much more "with-it" than its specialty x86 port would justify. Boosting its stock price, getting new customers who will get a Mac now, or a Mac86 when it's out, getting aboard the train as it passes their station, now that it looks like their kind of ride.

    However, Apple is always most jealous of rumors of actual product intros. If they were planning to release OSX86 for generic PCs, they might very well go after these sites to manage the launch better with prelaunch secrecy. The intense interest in commodity OSX86 generated by these videos also serves to increase the demand, which therefore increases Apple's likelihood of releasing such an unbound OS.

    This move offers all kinds of reasons to believe that dualbooting Windows/Mac will be reality in the foreseeable future. That also means VMWare Mac/Windows/Linux instances, all onscreen at once, on some kind of 14THz P12.
  • by Humorously_Inept (777630) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:22PM (#13343622) Homepage
    With its latest cease and desist order, Apple demonstrated its new iLawyer program. A method the corporation hopes to use for protecting itself against any forseeable legal disputes in a method that's easy for users to understand. The new, friendly interface speaks English instead of lawyerese and comes dressed in a soft white suit.

    Elsewhere, Microsoft claims to have patented the underlying concept of using lawyers as a high-level communications protocol.
  • Burn, karma, burn (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dr00g911 (531736) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @09:09PM (#13344550)
    I doubt this will be a particularly popular view on the situation, but here's how I see it:

    - People with the Intel transition kits are under NDA

    - The VAST majority of people installing Tiger on off-the-shelf Intel hardware are doing it using pirated copies

    - Installing OS X on said Intel hardware is against the clickwrap license

    - Instructing people how to obtain said pirated goods and then specifically do something that's against both NDA and license agreements is quite far over the top.

    There's a lot of sites out there that are posting Torrent links and how-to videos that are basically forcing Apple's hand in this matter.

    What the hell do you expect Apple to do? Not defend their IP when sites get that far out of line? The way the legal system works, Apple *has* to respond, even if they don't want to.

    Anyone who doesn't think that the Intel compiles of OS X over the last 5 years hasn't been running on off-the-shelf boxes in Cupertino is seriously naïve. Of course Apple knew it was possible to do this.
    • Re:embrace it! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by FLAGGR (800770) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:14PM (#13343570)
      Yeah, even though they make so much money of their hardware, I'm sure they'll realize how cool it is and embrace their os, most copies of which are stolen developer previews, running on hardware that they make nothing off of.
        • Re:embrace it! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by aristotle-dude (626586) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @07:11PM (#13343899)
          Well Apple is not a software company. They are a hardware company that also makes software.

          I'm thinking that the majority of slashdot readers have never actually worked for a proprietary software company.

          Contrary to popular believe on slashdot, software is not a money printing machine. On the surface it may look like software has a near 90% margin with economies of scale but the readers here seem to forget about hidden costs such as support and "free" upgrades and patches.

          Compared to hardware, software has a great deal of after market costs associated with it.

          I would argue that software can end up having a lower margin than hardware after all of the after market costs are factored in.

          I've worked in technical support dealing with software issues in the past and I'm also a developer of in-house software for a major multi-national organization. I can tell you that software is neither cheap to develop or maintain.

            • Re:embrace it! (Score:5, Insightful)

              by UniverseIsADoughnut (170909) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @08:35PM (#13344368)
              Wow, you are so out of it.

              Apple is a hardware company first and foremost. But they also have a part of them that makes straight up software like the apps you mentioned. OSX does not fall in the later.

              OSX is made to sell the hardware. They make the other apps to make money and maintain viability.

              If they were to ditch the hardware and sell OSX as a stand alone, it would carry prices higher then their pro-apps. OSX is priced simply to keep things moving and selling hardware.

              And no, the benefit of going intel is not to repackage other peoples mainboards in a pretty case. They did it so they can have a real supplier who delivers product. Apple will still make very custom boards just like they always have. They do that for a reason, to make a good box. They have no interest in making ATX hack jobs like the developer boxes. Besides, creating their own boards is a non-issue to them. It's not hard for them, they have done it for ages, and they still use companies like ASUS as manufactures for them anyways.

              Its doubtful you will even see intel sockets in the intel macs. Expect cpus to be on daughter cards and such the same as they are today.
    • Re:Hrmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by wankledot (712148) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:14PM (#13343571)
      Probably.

      Suing someone to stop them from doing something sometimes means they actually don't want anyone to do it. Apple has a very obvious reason to keep OS X off of generic PCs, and I'm sure they're happy to flex a little muscle when someone obviously broke their NDA and provided OS X x86 to someone else, gave a public demo of it, or provided info on it.

      • by joetheappleguy (865543) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:18PM (#13343596) Homepage
        I don't see how Apple can hold people legally accountable for something that they should have predicted.


        So let me get this straight...According to your line of thinking, If I park my car in a shitty neighborhood and it gets stolen, even though I knew there was a chance and put an alarm in my car, I shouldn't have any legal recourse and the thief is not legally liable??

        It's obvious YANAL...
      • Re:Yes but... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by jocknerd (29758) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:23PM (#13343629)
        I would still buy another Power Mac over anything put out by Dell. Just open the cases of each and tell me which one you'd rather have.
        • Re:Yes but... (Score:4, Interesting)

          by sterno (16320) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:31PM (#13343675) Homepage
          Not sure. Which one costs more? :)

          In the end, most people go shopping based on the sticker price. That's why when you open up a dell it's not nearly as elegant.

          I used to sell computers at an OfficeMax. We offered, amongst others, Compaq, and Packard Bell. The compaq system were always more expensive than the Packard Bells. When you opened up a Compaq, it was very cleanly layed out and labeled, and the Packard Bells were just frightening. In general the Packard Bells were the source of endless hardware problems.

          But which one do you think we sold more of?

          Now granted, Packard Bell was so poorly made that it's not an apples and oranges comparison here. But if Dell's are cheaper can run the same software, it could seriously hurt Apple's bottom line.

          Remember that the clones almost killed Apple.
      • Yes but... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by william_w_bush (817571) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:36PM (#13343716)
        Conversely, selling 20 million $200 operating systems every 2 years is better than selling 1 million $1000 computers, considering the margins leave about $250 profit.

        M$ learned this lesson a long time ago, only chumps sell hardware. The profit margin on a cdr and small pamphlet is much higher.
        • Re:Yes but... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by GlassHeart (579618) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @08:24PM (#13344309) Journal
          it should be much easier to convince people to put up $100 to try an alternate, superior OS

          Linux doesn't beat Windows in every respect (and neither does MacOS X), but it's quite a bit cheaper than either. Why has it been so hard to convince people to even try Linux, and why doesn't MacOS X suffer the same problems?

          Most people would probably more readily dive for Linux than want to go out and buy all new hardware

          Nonsense. If this was the case, everybody would be running Linux now. The fact is that people are far more willing to continue using their old computer (which is why Windows 98 is still not quite dead), or buy a new computer. Linux is a distant third choice (and so is a Mac), in terms of popularity.

          for people with small budgets -- getting an off-the-shelf x86 system and slapping Apple's "starter" OS on it would be good for basic needs.

          Wouldn't people with these really small budgets rather run a free beer OS? Besides, even $300 Dell boxes come with Windows.

    • Re:What the? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by FLAGGR (800770) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:38PM (#13343725)
      Then they go Intel and complain when someone figures out how to use it on Intel hardware.

      You don't understand. Apple is only switching to Intel because they were getting jacked in the ass by IBM, and Intel had a good roadmap. It's not like they're advertising it as becoming compatibile with PC hardware. The idea is to have it all the same as before, closed hardware and everything, just now Intel happens to be making the cpu's. What these people are doing is getting it to run on PC's instead of 'Macs'

      OSX would never survive as an OS if it went open to the x86 platform at large. Windows has too much market share, and o one cares enough to relearn things. Apple makes boatloads off of their hardware, and if they switched to being just a software company with an initial 0% marketshare, they would be fucked. Also, hardware support is a major issue. Everything would cease 'just working', which is a very nice benifit of osx.

      If you have a problem with Apple wanting THEIR os which is designed to run only on THEIR hardware, and to take advantage of the less open architecture for greater interoperability with hardware, and putting it all into a complete package, then shutup and just don't buy it, and I'll enjoy OSX for myself thank you very much.
      • Re:What the? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by arkanes (521690) <arkanes.gmail@com> on Wednesday August 17 2005, @07:28PM (#13344021) Homepage
        Apple is only switching to Intel because they were getting jacked in the ass by IBM

        In fairness, signs point to the reason having more to do with Apple throwing it's weight around like it was still 1997. Note that IBM announced improved PPC chips just weeks after Jobs revealed the Intel Macs.

        The idea is to have it all the same as before, closed hardware and everything, just now Intel happens to be making the cpu's.

        Every sign points to this not being the case. There's essentially zero closed hardware in a Mac as is anyway - you can, if you're determined enough, build a generic PPC machine and install OS X on it.

        OSX would never survive as an OS if it went open to the x86 platform at large.

        I'm not so sure about this, assuming that they kept making Macs and didn't just drop them.

        A large part of Apples profits are from the iPod and iTunes. That won't go away. A signifigant portion of Apples current customers will stick with them, still buying Apple hardware, regardless of what they do. A portion will be upset of the switch to x86 and will ditch Apple for it - they'll be gone regardless of whether or not they support generic x86.

        So the only loss is from customers who would have bought Apple hardware, but now will buy generic and run OS X on it. The question is if this amount of people is large enough that the additional revenue from the greater amount of switchers (low cost of entry, just like the Mini - but without the performance penalty) won't offset it.

        I don't think Apple will do it, but I don't think it's an obvious cut & dried case of a loss, either. I think they *may* do it in a few years, if they see a market for it. They certainly wouldn't be starting over from 0 - the core of the Mac market won't be going away.

    • by Skuld-Chan (302449) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @09:41PM (#13344708) Journal
      This is such a stupid argument to me. One of the wealthiest companies on earth (Microsoft) didn't get rich selling hardware. You can say there different markets - but that doesn't matter - fact is Apple's biggest competitor is Microsoft and they don't make hardware at all.

      Look at the hardware companies who made money on just hardware. Commodore (don't knock them - they used one of the largest computer manufacturer in Europe ti'll the day they went backrupt), SGI, SUN, Compaq, Gateway etc etc - all of these companies are either gone or marginialized by cheap "windows" hardware.

      Finally - Apple should just raise the price of their OS until it is profitable.
      • by mstone (8523) on Thursday August 18 2005, @02:17AM (#13345749)
        Try this: Apple is neither a hardware company nor a software company. Apple sells a service called "vertical integration." The hardware, OS, middleware, userland, and network services all fit together in a single package that Just Works, Right Out Of The Box.

        IBM is in the same business in enterprise space, and it's done pretty well for them. For that matter, Red Hat also sells vertical integration, it just services a shorter stack.. only OS, middleware and userland.

        Yes, Apple makes most of its profits from the hardware, just like Red Hat makes most of its profits from circles of plastic. That doesn't make Apple exclusively a 'hardware' company, though. It does, however, mean that Apple wants to protect the part of its integration stack that brings in the bulk of the money, and supports development across the rest of the stack.

      • by jcr (53032) <jcr@ma c . c om> on Wednesday August 17 2005, @06:51PM (#13343775) Journal
        you're assuming there's no profit from stamping OSX on a circular piece of polycarbonate plastic and putting it in a cardboard box and selling it for $129.

        You're assuming that people will pay for the OS, instead of pirating it.

        Piracy doesn't dent MS's revenues, since they get the Dells and HPs of the world to pay them for every box they ship. Apple doesn't have that luxury.

        -jcr

    • by RatBastard (949) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @07:30PM (#13344035) Homepage
      After years of living in large cities I can tell you a basic truth about a great number of people: people will put great effort in stealing what they wouldn't pay a dime for. I've had numerous posessions stolen that I could not have sold at any price, that I could not have given away. Hell, I used to get rid of my old crap by "accidently" leaving it unsecured in places where it looked like I might be back any second.

      But you miss Apple's entire point. They don't want people running OSX on any computer save an Apple brand computer. Period. Why is that so hard to understand? Poeple unwilling to buy an Apple computer are obviously not wanting to run OSX bad enough.

    • by hacker (14635) <setuid@gmail.com> on Wednesday August 17 2005, @08:49PM (#13344452)
      So Apple doesn't want people running their OS. What a surprise. Attitudes like that probably explain their current market share.

      [...]

      Here Apple has people wanting to run their OS so badly on Intel hardware that they're hacking apart betas to do it, and running systems with no native applications yet.

      So let me get this straight:

      1. Buy an Intel Dell PC ($999.00 from Dell)
      2. Wipe Microsoft Windows from the machine (Microsoft gets paid, Microsoft tax)
      3. Download this hacked-up OSX/Intel pirated image (costs nothing to download, $0.00)
      4. Image your blank Dell machine with this image (costs nothing, $0.00)
      5. Now you're running OSX on your Dell.

      Totals:
      Dell: $999.00
      Microsoft: $15.00 (or whatever)
      Apple: $0.00

      So you think Apple should let you pay Dell and Microsoft to run their OS, all while giving Apple not a single cent? You think this is what they should allow?

      Don't you understand? All of this "running-OSX-on-Intel-today" means ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to the end-result of running OSX-for-Intel on the customized hardware Apple is designing with Intel.

      All this does is provide Apple with an exact blueprint of where to lock down the OS even tighter, to prevent 'hacking' when they release it. Besides, with Intel's LaGrande chipset, the whole OS runs in a silicon-locked sandbox, separate from anything else, and strongly keyed to the silicon itself. You literally CANNOT get inside without the proper key.

      All of this hacking around with OSX today on Intel today, is going to rapidly become very irrelevant when they release their own boxes.

    • by One Childish N00b (780549) on Wednesday August 17 2005, @09:12PM (#13344569) Homepage
      Because if Joe Blow goes round to his cousin John Doe's house to watch a game, and is looking to buy a new computer, is Joe going to be more or less interested in Apple if John tells him OS X has been nothing but trouble on his white-box x86.

      Apple's whole philosophy is "it just works" - they want to be able to control the hardware so they can be 100% sure that all their boxes work as they should without having to support every piece of hardware under the sun, especially as this would mean running into the same problems with a lack of support or hardware specs from manufacturers that Linux has over the years.

      To your average man-on-the-street, all computers are the same - Apples might come with shinier boxes, but a computer is a computer - and if he sees OS X running poorly on a white-box x86, he's going to assume it's the fault of the OS.

      Apple don't want that. It damages their image.

      You could argue that they could, quite easily, make more money selling OS X to all and sundry than they can by guarding their 5% of the market and locking the OS to the hardware, but that's just the Apple way, and they're being successful with it. Why should they change a profitable business structure?