Posted on 04/25/2010 6:36:25 PM PDT by dangerdoc
Last week, planetbeing claimed he'd ported Android to the iPhone. This week, Android A Lot says you can, too. If you've got an original iPhone 2G handy, there's now a 68-step guide that can walk you through the entire process. In a nutshell, you'll use iPhone Explorer to copy over the Android files, then turn your Mac or PC into an Ubuntu virtual machine to install the OpeniBoot software. When you're done, you'll probably have a dual-booting iPhone that can swap between iPhone OS and an experimental version of Android 1.6 at startup, but don't quote us on that -- we haven't had a chance to test the unholy matrimony for ourselves. We're going to try to give this a shot next week, and we'll report back from the other side... if there is another side. Blurry video walkthrough after the break, useful step-by-step text at our source link.
Count me among them.
Im posting this from a MacBook Pro running Win 7. It has Ubuntu 9.10 on a third partition. ;-)
That's one of the wonderful things about getting a Macintosh and using Mac OS X ... you can "use it all" ... what a deal! :-)
And that's a very good selling point for those Macintosh computers ...
I guess you could be the first to install Android on a MacBook. Get your 15 minutes of fame and all.
For sure ... and me, too ... :-)
Windows and Linux will run on damn near anything.
*bad idea generated*
;-)
Not as much as you might think. OSX will install on a PC, but Apple makes it almost impossible to run their code on anything not theirs.
No..., I think you got it backwards from what I was saying ... :-) When you run Mac OS X on a non-Macintosh machine -- you don't have a Macintosh. What I was talking about -- is -- when you have a Macintosh -- and that's when you find that you can run it all ... you see. That's the machine to get... doncha know ...
And, as far as Apple making it near impossible to run their software (the Mac OS X) on any other machine besides a Macintosh -- that's exactly what Apple should do -- make it literally impossible to run their operating system software on any other machine not made by them.
That's because Apple is in the business of making hardware -- and the software is a "give-away" item to support their hardware and make it something with a better user experience than other machines.
It wouldn't "pay" Apple to have "give-away software" (like the Mac OS X, which is not their main line of business) -- and hand that software out to other generic boxes which they don't make. To do that is a sure way for a company like Apple (who has designed their business around "hardware") to go completely bankrupt in short order. That wouldn't do them or their customers any good ... doncha know ... :-)
Remember Orange Computer and the Mac clones of the mid-1990s?
Remember Orange Computer and the Mac clones of the mid-1990s?
Well, what I do remember is Steve Jobs coming back to Apple and promptly "shutting down" all cloners ... LOL ...
That seems to stick in my memory... and not because I ever wanted a clone, because I never did. I was glad Jobs shut them all down, actually. And it's turned out to be a real good decision on Apple's part (or Steve Jobs' part... that is...).
What warranty? The iPhone 2G hasn't been sold in long enough, there shouldn't be any still under warranty in the first place...
Also true for the Google/Yahoo/etc. browser toolbars - they are voluntary spyware that use resources and dump your personal info directly to a server in the "netherworlds" of those developers for sale to whoever...
But hey - it's "free" and "fast"...
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