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To: Knitebane
Well, to be perfectly honest, OSX already runs on generic hardware.

Generic, technically yes, but EFI is pretty much non-existant on cheap PCs, actually on most PCs. The hack in large part involves getting OS X to run on an antiquated BIOS system.

16 posted on 07/22/2008 3:13:28 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
Generic, technically yes, but EFI is pretty much non-existant on cheap PCs, actually on most PCs. The hack in large part involves getting OS X to run on an antiquated BIOS system.

Correct. Here's the requisite car analogy.

I recall several years ago seeing numerous Nissan sports cars in the "for sale" section of the want ads for amazingly low prices. These cars had about 20K miles on them and were going for several thousand dollars below blue book price.

So I started looking into it. It seemed that they were a good deal up front, until you find out that they all needed tires.

Seems Nissan sold some cars with a proprietary wheel rim size. You could only get tires from one company and they wanted nearly a thousand dollars a tire.

Nissan created an artificial scarcity by introducing a proprietary requirement with no good technical reason.

Likewise, Apple requires EFI to boot OSX, although there isn't any technical reason to do so. They could have used the standard IBM-type BIOS or something like OpenPROM, but they chose to introduce an artificial, non-technical requirement in order to restrict what PCs their OS would boot from.

This is quite apparent when you see the hacks that allow OSX to boot on generic PC hardware.

27 posted on 07/23/2008 6:32:55 AM PDT by Knitebane (Happily Microsoft free since 1999.)
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