Xander562 said:
really? is it ok to ask why?
or what makes it impossibe? not how to do it.
Three big reasons:
1. Apple's EULA (that license you have to agree to before installing/running any piece of software,) specifically says that OS X may only be run on an 'Apple labeled' computer. The exact quote is from section 2 part a: (emphasis mine) "This License allows you to install, use and run one (1) copy of the Apple software on a single
Apple-labeled computer, or to enable others to do so."
That means that installing OS X onto a non-Apple-labeled machine is in violation of the license agreement.
2. All Apple Intel machines use what is called a 'Trust Platform Module' chip (TPM) that the Mac OS uses to confirm that it is indeed running on an Apple system.
While it is theoretically possible to circumvent this, doing so violates the DMCA. (And no, I'm not going to tell you where you could find more about 'theoretically' how to do this.)
3. As all Apple Intel machines come with OS 10.4 Tiger on them, and on their restore discs, there is no reason to sell an Intel-compatible version of Tiger in stores. Therefore, the copies of OS X you can buy in the store only contain the PowerPC code, and cannot run on ANY Intel machine, not even Apple's own.
This means that the only way to acquire an Intel-compatible version of OS X is to either illegally download (a.k.a. "pirate") it, or get it with an Apple Intel machine, and illegally (against the DMCA AND license agreement,) modify it and install it on a second machine.
From a theoretical legal standpoint on the
license, it MAY be legal to buy a new Apple Intel machine, REMOVE OS X from that machine (run Linux, for example,) stick an Apple sticker on a 'generic PC' (After all, the license does not define 'Apple-labeled'...) and run your one legal license of OS X on that generic PC. But you'd still have to violate the DMCA to get around the TPM protection.