Title says it all. Once Apple drops OS support for Intel Macs in a future version will the idea of a hackintosh be dead? May be a few years before the Intel Macs are deprecated but we can expect it to happen sometime.
Title says it all. Once Apple drops OS support for Intel Macs in a future version will the idea of a hackintosh be dead? May be a few years before the Intel Macs are deprecated but we can expect it to happen sometime.
Not if Apple is using custom microcode in the processor.No expert here but couldn't they start hacking the ARM laptops that are out there: https://www.pine64.org/pinebook-pro/
Back then they were officially licensed clones made by other manufacturers.It's interesting to note that back in the days of Motorola and PPC Macs, no one was building a Hackintosh with a PC so they could run Mac software. I would expect the same thing will happen when Apple moves completely to the ARM.
Back then they were officially licensed clones made by other manufacturers.
It's interesting to note that back in the days of Motorola and PPC Macs, no one was building a Hackintosh with a PC so they could run Mac software. I would expect the same thing will happen when Apple moves completely to the ARM.
Assuming Apple doesn't put weird instructions in their chips it could potentially be hacked onto the Surface Pro X or a Chromebook.
Only one clone that I was aware of and Steve Jobs killed that very quickly when he returned to Apple. I don't believe we'll see a Hackintosh ARM machine.
A bit more than one... Maybe a couple dozen?Only one clone that I was aware of and Steve Jobs killed that very quickly when he returned to Apple. I don't believe we'll see a Hackintosh ARM machine.
No expert here but couldn't they start hacking the ARM laptops that are out there: https://www.pine64.org/pinebook-pro/
How exactly do you imagine running PPC OS on a PC?It's interesting to note that back in the days of Motorola and PPC Macs, no one was building a Hackintosh with a PC so they could run Mac software. I would expect the same thing will happen when Apple moves completely to the ARM.
Title says it all. Once Apple drops OS support for Intel Macs in a future version will the idea of a hackintosh be dead?
How exactly do you imagine running PPC OS on a PC?
Only one clone that I was aware of and Steve Jobs killed that very quickly when he returned to Apple.
I don't even think that Apple would have to build any particular safeguards agains running macOS on foreign hardware.
I do recall that you could run Mac OS Classic on an Atari ST (both 68000) - you just needed 'genuine' ROM chips from a Mac (I'm sure there were ways and means to obtain quote-genuine-unquote ROMs) - and if you could do it on an Atari ST then someone would have come up with a way to do it on Amiga with added bouncing beachballs and funky sound samples (it's the law!)
Also, back in the 90s, Windows NT briefly supported PPC (and other) alternative chips - if this had succeeded and the market was flooded with cheap PPC boxes then I'm sure we'd have seen PPC Hackintoshes. However, as it was, Macs weren't particularly expensive c.f. other low-volume PPC hardware.
Still - there was no x86 compilation of Classic Mac OS, so the only way to run Mac OS on an (Intel) PC was emulation, which was buggy and dead slow.
Things would look very, very different now, if Steve Jobs would have agreed to make a standard-compliant Macintosh with a 604 chip allowing it to run NT natively.
Intel vs. ARM as the primary CPU is irrelevant.
Once the whole range is on T2 - even with Intel processors - Apple will be free to make a future version of MacOS require a T2 chip (...yes, they have to support current iMacs and last year's Trashcans for some years yet, but 'support' needn't mean anything more than providing security patches for Big Sur).
Since everything but the iMac is now on T2 ...and it still sounds like Apple may release a new Intel iMac Real Soon Now - the writing for Hackintosh was already on the wall.