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First Psystar Mac Clones Ship

An anonymous reader writes "According to Gizmodo, Psystar has begun shipping its Macintosh clones, thus proving that the company is not a hoax. Initial impressions seem to be positive, though Software Update does not work."

466 comments

  1. Sure, they shipped... by CSMatt · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...but do they work?

    1. Re:Sure, they shipped... by CSMatt · · Score: 2, Funny

      Damn. Should have read the article.

    2. Re:Sure, they shipped... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but does it run Linux?

    3. Re:Sure, they shipped... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's a computer.

    4. Re:Sure, they shipped... by somersault · · Score: 5, Funny

      Surely it would have been easier just to buy one and find out, rather than to go to all that effort?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    5. Re:Sure, they shipped... by Lulfas · · Score: 3, Funny

      But will it blend?

    6. Re:Sure, they shipped... by vertinox · · Score: 3, Funny

      I've already saved myself the trouble of doing either by buying a Mac Mini and installing it inside a loud PC case with crazy glue.

      Oh wait...

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    7. Re:Sure, they shipped... by CSMatt · · Score: 1

      And risk getting caught up in Apple's legal actions against Pystar? I think not.

    8. Re:Sure, they shipped... by lucas+teh+geek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      let us know how installing 4-6 desktop SATA drives and a PCI express video card goes, will ya?

      most people interested in this dont want a cheap mac, they want an expandable mac that isnt complete overkill (like he Mac Pro). The number of people who'd install extra hard drives or replace their graphics card easily outnumber the number of people who can actually make use of 8 cores and dual sockets. the Mac Pro may be fan-fucking-tastic value for what it is, but its baseline configuration is ridiculously overspeced for the user who just wants a second internal hdd or an 8800 for bootcamp gaming

      --
      TIAEAE!
    9. Re:Sure, they shipped... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When Apple's lawyers are done with Psystar? Absolutely. Just wait a few weeks and then do a system update.

    10. Re:Sure, they shipped... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "most people interested in this dont want a cheap mac, they want an expandable mac that isnt complete overkill (like he Mac Pro). The number of people who'd install extra hard drives or replace their graphics card easily outnumber the number of people who can actually make use of 8 cores and dual sockets. the Mac Pro may be fan-fucking-tastic value for what it is, but its baseline configuration is ridiculously overspeced for the user who just wants a second internal hdd or an 8800 for bootcamp gaming"

      I dunno...you can get a base configuration, with one quad core processor...2G ram...one drive...it is only $2299...even less if you claim the 'educational' discount, which they don't really check up on.

      That's pretty easy to start with....the 2nd processor is only $500 more. And it isn't like anyone that knows anything about Apple boxes ever buys it from Apple loaded with RAM and harddrives...you add those on aftermarket to save a ton of $$$.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    11. Re:Sure, they shipped... by lucas+teh+geek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      no matter how you configure it it still has a quad core xeon processor and buffered ECC memory which is overkill for most, and hideously overpriced compared to the consumer grade equivalents.

      lets just say that the cheapest configured mac pro with edu discount is $2k (it's more, but lets stick with round numbers), and lets say that the psystar clone is $500 (it's less, but again round numbers). I can handle paying an apple premium, sometimes as much as 30-40% extra for the exact same components because it's from apple, but 300% extra is pushing it a little far. what's that I hear? the specs arent comparable? that's exactly my point. dont want or need a mac pro, it's complete overkill when I just want a graphics card and an extra internal drive. I'd be completely happy with an expandable mini

      --
      TIAEAE!
    12. Re:Sure, they shipped... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....who just wants a second internal hdd....

      A mini with an external firewire or USB drive is smaller and much quieter than some big, noisy clone box.

      Maybe Apple will come out with a smaller less capable brother to the Macpro as a response to this buzzing clone fly. It would probably be cheaper and much faster for them than paying an army of lawyers to use the slow as molasses legal system to put these upstarts out of business.

      --
      All theory is gray
    13. Re:Sure, they shipped... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....When Apple's lawyers are done with Psystar?...

      It would probably better, faster and cheaper for Apple to come out with a little Macpro brother for about the price of a mid-range iMac for those who want an expandable Mac computer. Many such potential users already have a serviceable monitor, mouse and keyboard. Lawyers are expensive and the legal system is slow.

      --
      All theory is gray
    14. Re:Sure, they shipped... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I could build a prety nice quad-core processor computer for half that. Sure, it wouldn't have a Xeon processor or ECC memory, but that's the point.

    15. Re:Sure, they shipped... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      I dunno, I guess I've never bought a computer that wasn't about $2K or so.....I've usually bought about the best I could get at any period, and that usually in the $2K range.

      I don't buy boxes that often, I try to get as good as possible at the time and make it last, with an upgrade here or there along the way....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    16. Re:Sure, they shipped... by daviddennis · · Score: 1

      Well, I can approach this in either of two ways ...

      First, that personally, I'll bet my bottom dollar that you'd really love having an 8-core Mac Pro(tm). Imagine the speed with which it crunches data, the envious glances you'd get from your friends, the gorgeous 30" monitor for just $1,750 more, and so on. Apple sells these things because they know their computer power loving customers really, really want them, bad.

      Right now, I'm using a PowerMac G5 that I paid $3,000 for in 2003. It's still a fantastic workhorse and I've definitely gotten my money's worth out of it. You might spend a lot of money for that Mac Pro, but it would also give you a long service life. I am running current software (Leopard, Aperture, etc) and it does just fine. A 2003 Windows machine would have long since been tossed in the attic.

      Now, I must say that when you look at Pystar's option list, and compare it to what Apple provides, the Pystar value proposition looks a lot less attractive then you are thinking.

      MacOS X Leopard costs $155. A wireless PCI card costs $90. FireWire is $50. Your total is $694.99. Add a cheap Wal*Mart 20" monitor for $250 and you have $845.

      Visit the Apple Store. Click on "Refurbished Mac". The previous generation iMac is on sale for $949. It has a real graphics card, which the base Pystar does not. Despite the "millions of colors" controversy, I think the monitor's a lot nicer than the Wal*Mart blue light special. And it has a keyboard and mouse included. If you wanted Apple's keyboard and mouse set for your Pystar it would cost you $90, and with that the much more appealing Apple product is within $15 or so of your Pystar.

      You would need an external drive, but external drives aren't that much more than internal ones nowadays.

      Even if you say, well, I don't need FireWire or Wireless networking, you're still talking about $555 for the cheapest model with no options save the OS. Add that $250 monitor and you have $705. A 1/3 price premium over $705 is about $900. So you can see that really, Apple - at least at their Refurb store - is giving you what you want at a more than fair close to 30% premium.

      That being said, I still want a 8-core Mac Pro. With the $1,750 30" monitor. Guess I'm a sad case :-).

      D

    17. Re:Sure, they shipped... by lucas+teh+geek · · Score: 1

      sure, I want a mac pro. but I'm (thankfully) not one of those idiots that live their lives on credit spending way beyond their means, so instead I built a hackintosh. while we're talking about wants, I want a macbook pro, but again, it's outside my price range so instead I settled for a regular macbook.

      now for the second part, you seem to be trying to convince me i want a non-upgradable laptop that looks like a desktop. can I replace the graphics card? nope. can I easily replace the processor with something faster once faster chips are cheap? nope. can I use the monitor for my next pc when the imac is no longer fast enough? nope.

      the imac is great for your grandma, and people like her who dont know how their computer works and will never consider upgrading, but this is slashdot. upgrading computer's is something most of us have been doing since high school. I know what I and many others want, and it's not an imac or a mac mini. it's something between the mini and the mac pro.

      --
      TIAEAE!
    18. Re:Sure, they shipped... by scorp888 · · Score: 1

      Why do you need an extra internal hard drive?

      External is fine, just stick it under the desk, or here isa revelation for you.

      Buy a larger hard drive, put it in your IMAC...put the smaller one in an eternal drive, and a new install of the OS will pull ALL of the apps and ALL of the user data off the old disk.

      Note, excludes drivers for printers and the like.

      So apple does give you what you want, it's a 24" imac.

      When I specced up a phake mac it came to a lot more than a mini, in fact damn close to the 24" imac minus the 24" screen.

      So external drive and 8800 gfx card are available same as psytar, except the mac comes with a free 24" screen...

    19. Re:Sure, they shipped... by daviddennis · · Score: 1

      I'm a software-oriented Slashdotter - I open up my hardware as infrequently as possible, and buy new hardware when I can afford to pay cash for it.

      I'd rather have a completely new machine where every single part is upgraded and improved over the old version than upgrading an old machine incrementally.

      A brand new machine works well under those conditions, but I can understand your point of view about upgrades. I would simply ask the question of how often you upgrade your machine, and how much you pay versus the cost of a new machine with all new components?

      D

    20. Re:Sure, they shipped... by lucas+teh+geek · · Score: 1

      I would simply ask the question of how often you upgrade your machine, and how much you pay versus the cost of a new machine with all new components?
      I couldnt give you a fixed date the last time a built a computer from scratch, probably 7-8 years ago. it's all just been a stream of small incremental upgrades, slowly replacing every bit of it. i dont think there's a single component in my computer that's been their since the initial build, aside from maybe one of the hdds. mostly it's a result of components becoming faulty, or getting hand-me-downs from friends who game. I'm not a pc gamer anymore so I always by the low to mid range stuff, cutting edge is a waste of money for my needs. I've probably spent AU$200 on it in the past two years and the specs shit all over a mac mini (which would cost me about ~AU$1000). I'd be happy to spend AU$1500-2000 on a headless, properly upgradable mac, but until they offer it I'll just keep on buying mac laptops and keep my desktop hardware compatible with the osx so it can stay a hackintosh. admittedly they'll probably never sell what i want because people like me would buy it and then upgrade it for the next 5-10 years, which means no more income for apple over that period
      --
      TIAEAE!
  2. Operation Unsuccessful by AmonEzhno · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that honestly if Software Update doesn't work, the machine can't be considered to be a successful model. If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install?

    1. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While the auto update will not work, they (well any "custom" OSX box) can be updated.

      Download the full update from the Apple developer site, do some major moving and backup magic with some of the kext's (apples loadable modules), and run the install. Some people have scripts out that will resolve the issue, but its a doable manual process.

      The major issue with the updates, is that some of the modifications (even when using EFI installed OSX with a stock kernel) to the modules that Apple does, breaks the hardware drivers (this was my issue), usually related to power management and ACPI, which causes the dreaded rainbow circle of death and a reboot loop :(

      --
      I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    2. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      I think that honestly if Software Update doesn't work, the machine can't be considered to be a successful model. If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install?

      That is a very bug issue. Not only that but if something doesn't work, who are you going to turn to. Psystar will probably blame Apple and Apple will say you have an unsupported system. Sure, you save $200 (the price difference for a Mac mini), but are the headaches you are getting for saving the money worth it?

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    3. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Sure, you save $200 (the price difference for a Mac mini), but are the headaches you are getting for saving the money worth it? If the Mini was in a tower case with expansion slots like this thing had, I'd gladly pay extra (though I'm not buying a Pystar either - I made my own). As it is though, the Mac Mini is a laptop with no keyboard or screen. Non-officialness aside, I'd consider the Pystar a better system if it has Apple's blessing. I'd actually be willing to pay more for it than a Mini.
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      more like you save $1000 - $1500 to get a mac with a real VIDEO CARD and DESKTOP PARTS the mini is has laptop parts and no dvdrw in the base system it is also stuck it the POS gma 950.

      apple does not make a HEAD LESS mid-range system.

    5. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Of course, it helps if you're deaf too - the Pstar has to be one of the loudest fans I've heard in years. Not even the my G5 tower at full blast was that loud. I think the expansion slots argument is overrated. If I had to guess, I would say that the % of people where slots are actually used is in the area of 20% max.

    6. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Smidge207 · · Score: 1
      If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install?

      You bet I would...especially if I try to update to Vista and the machine flat-out refuses. :-D

      =Smidge=

      --
      Is it just my observation, or is eldavojohn an idiot?
    7. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

      I think that honestly if Software Update doesn't work, the machine can't be considered to be a successful model. If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install? No, I guess not. On the other hand, if you pirate Mac OS X and never run updates, how different are you from the typical clueless Windows home user?
      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    8. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except that in the MacMini, the expansion slots are needed OUT OF THE BOX if you want to do anything remotely graphics related. Your argument would carry a lot more weight if the machine wasn't so crippled in the first place.

      The sad truth is that if you want a Macintosh with upgradeable graphics hardware, it's going to cost your $2200+. I can upgrade the graphics card on virtually any $199 Wal-mart PC. There's a problem here.

      Me personally, I've put almost as much money into my homebrew Mac as a Mac Mini would have cost. I have a slightly bigger hard drive (160gb) and more ram than the base (2gb), but those are both options that could be accomodated. The difference is that my system is running an 8600GTS video card. You can't get that out of a Mac Mini at all.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    9. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

      Download the full update from the Apple developer site, do some major moving and backup magic with some of the kext's (apples loadable modules), and run the install. Some people have scripts out that will resolve the issue, but its a doable manual process.

      This is stupid. There are very few things that require continual modification of OS X after each update. The one big one is if your CPU is not supported.

      Psystar as far as I know ships a machine with a supported CPU and a supported chipset. So why the hell can't they make it update proof?

      I keep a Pentium 4 box around for research purposes. It is almost upgradeable without thinking about it. The only issue it ever has is that Apple's kernel source has checks for an Intel CPU with family 6. The Pentium 4 reports itself as family 0xf so you have to change the source and recompile or alternatively binary patch the kernel to nuke the check against family 6.

      Everything else, including the GMA900 video (note: NOT 950) and ICH6 (note: NOT ICH7) ATA controller, can be handled with additional kernel extensions. That is, I don't ever patch an Apple kernel extension.

      It is supremely stupid to patch Apple kexts. They are "owned" by Apple which is to say that Apple supplies them and keeps them updated. If you don't modify them but instead add new ones that are not owned by Apple then you don't have problems when Apple updates their kexts.

    10. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Presumably they disable the updater so that if/when Apple starts shipping updates that bork the EFI emulator it won't get installed by users who don't check the compatibility first. You're right, there's no reason it shouldn't be using all vanilla Apple code with extra kexts, but the EFI layer is where incompatibility can cause problems.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    11. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, do Macs show a PC boot screen like that, with the energy star and all? Because it isn't anything I'd call beautiful, which is why even most PC OEMs use a logo to cover it up ... But I'm not sure if that logo also covers up the PCI scan etc. table ... In any case, if Macs don't look like that when booting, it's not a very well-done clone, IMO.

    12. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Then the argument should be that the mini needs better video card support, not that Macs need slots. That's a big difference.

      As for video upgrades, even on Macs that have sep. video cards, I've never found the need to upgrade after the fact. I usually by the video card with the most amount of memory available at the time and it serves me for the life of the machine.

      Integrating the video chip onto the motherboard is going to reduce costs and space requirements- so creating a separate slot for a video card is going to cost both money (and space).

      Again, I don't think the % of people that would benefit from this is significant enough to warrant it.

      I'll buy the argument that the mini should offer a beefier video card. But slots seem like major overkill.

    13. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      I'll buy the argument that the mini should offer a beefier video card. But slots seem like major overkill.

      Do consider that a large proportion of the people who find the Mac mini attractive are applying it to home theater sorts of applications. Many such people want it to have TV tuner capabilities, which would be a good reason to have at least one slot. The alternative is a separate box.

    14. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Except that there are no tuner cards for Mac.

      And if you're looking for TV tuner options, you're going to be limited to a limited # of channels due to the satellite/cable companies. You either need a box or cablecard (which only works on a couple devices and sucks in general).

      Mind you, I do wish the cable/satellite companies would do something that actually benefited their customers ability to watch all that TV they are paying for -- but the chances of these companies doing anything that's good for the customer is next to nil.

    15. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

      My particular issue was that when I first started messing with it, I had an unsupported video card (geforce mobile 9600 GS), and I had a intel wireless card that is not supported. Granted, I bought my laptop, then decided to mess with OSX, had I don't it the other way around, I would have selected the hardware to match. That was never my intention, as the laptop is primary for my wife to work from home and requires XP. I also had ACPI issues.

      The major kext issues I was talking about, was more along the lines of deleting (or moving to preserve backups) the ACPI and power management kexts out of the libraries so they did not load, this resolved the crash on boot issues, but of course I lost power management functionality that a laptop should have.

      Currently, I have a stock 10.5.2 kernel and custom nvidia drivers, I have no wireless yet, but the wired works just fine.

      You were correct though, if they are advertising a beige box with OSX installed, they should be selecting hardware identical to whats in the intel based macs, which is not that hard, and should not result in a broken update system.

      --
      I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    16. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I never auto-update anything, if I have a choice, so as far as I'm concerned, it's fine.

      I'd consider it successful if:
      1) It's cheaper than an apple
      2) It works as well as a PC
      3) The only money apple is being paid, is for their OS (which is the only part of the system many of us have any interest in)
      4) They don't get sued out of business, or forced via court action to violate #3.

      The idea is successful if:
      5) Many other people can do it too.

    17. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      Except that there are no tuner cards for Mac.

      I believe a number of the available tuner cards can be made to work with a mac.

      And if you're looking for TV tuner options, you're going to be limited to a limited # of channels due to the satellite/cable companies. You either need a box or cablecard (which only works on a couple devices and sucks in general).

      You'll need a cable box, sure. But with a tuner card (and an IR repeater) that's still at least one less box.

    18. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      If you beef up the integrated graphics, you've applied a bandaid fix rather than truly addressed the problem. The current graphics card market essentially operates on a 6 month cycle. Now I personally don't buy cards that often, and I never buy the most expensive on the market, but most people that want to maintain competitive capabilities for 3d apps are going to replace the card (even if it's replacing budget cards with another budget card) every year and a half to two years. Now consider that most computers these days (EXCEPT for the video card) are good for 3, sometimes even 5 years. This means that even good integrated graphics will be outdated well before the rest of the computer is. In the case of the Mac Mini where the graphics are already WOEFULLY outdated, you better be satisfied with using almost nothing 3d oriented for the life of that purchase.

      The simple solution is to seperate the graphics cards out. It's not a radical idea, and it's not a "niche" market: the vast majority of computers manufactured have the capability to accept a graphics card as an expansion; even most of the ones with integrated video have some form of expansion slot. I'm sorry, but like most Mac fanatics, you're trying to go with the argument that something so incredibly simple and mainstream is a niche market. I'm not buying it.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    19. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by niteice · · Score: 1

      They do not, the use custom firmware on top of EFI, unlike the BIOS that everyone else uses.

      --
      ROMANES EUNT DOMUS
    20. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If you download Windows ... and could never update, would you consider it a successful install?

      Yes : )

    21. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install? You know, there was a time before we all updated our operating systems on a daily basis. And I recall being able to do some pretty successful things with my computer back then.

      There are some of us (music and video producers, artists, etc.) who even occasionally work on computers that are not connected to the Internets.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    22. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Unless you're a hardcore GAMER, you're not changing out your video card. In fact, I know of no one that has replaced their video card (unless it specifically died on them) after their initial purchase -- but I don't hang around hardcore gamers.

      But if you're a hardcore gamer, you're going to find other reasons not to use the Mac.

      What a separate graphics card does guarantee is a larger form factor (and in some cases significantly larger) and more cost (along with the complains of customers who don't care about video card options and don't want to pay extra for it).

      I'm not looking at this from a Mac fanatic standpoint, but from an actual user's point of view. You seem to think that EVERYONE wants to swap out their video cards every few months -- but I hardly even saw that in the Windows world. I'm sure there are plenty of folks that do it (even though that might still make a small niche market). But MOST people aren't changing out video cards. In fact, MOST people don't change anything in the PC they order from Dell or HP. Whatever they bought on day one is what they continue using.

    23. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      the Pstar has to be one of the loudest fans I've heard in years
      My god, if I'd known it had a loud fan I wouldn't even have bothered reading this article. We all know that a loud fan is something that can never, ever be corrected, and is an absolute death sentence for Pystar.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    24. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by ickoonite · · Score: 1

      Many such people want it to have TV tuner capabilities...

      Indeed. See here. No "slot" required.

      :|

    25. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by ickoonite · · Score: 1

      Except that there are no tuner cards for Mac.

      Except that you are hopelessly misinformed. See here.

      Sigh.

      :|

    26. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by eldepeche · · Score: 1

      If someone cared that much about stuff that needs a dedicated, up-to-date video card, they wouldn't buy a Mac Mini. Its success shows that there are way more people who can make do with integrated Intel graphics than you think.

    27. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Any level of gamer is going to be changing out their graphics cards every now and then. As someone who does a lot of troubleshooting and support, I've had to do it for other people (many of which were no where near a "hardcore gamer") many times. Prime examples are "I bought a computer game for little Johnny for his birthday. It doesn't run right though. Can you make my computer run it?". A $75 graphic card later they're usually going along just fine again. If it's all integrated though, they have to buy a new computer.

      As stated, the VAST majority of other computer manufacturers can accommodate this request, and do so at little to no additional cost. I certainly don't see anybody tearing Dell a new one for including one of those damned expansion slots when they don't need them.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    28. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      yeah, the first thing someone wants to do is pull apart their Psystar and replace the fan. It is a sign of cheap engineering -- don't expect the other parts to be any better in quality.

      But if you're happy doing that -- why not just build your own hackintosh?

    29. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Actually -- I'm quite informed. I have en eyeTV connected to my Mac. What it isn't, however, is a VIDEO CARD. It's a tuner connected via USB.

      My response was that there are no Tuner CARDS (as in video cards) for the Mac that you would be replacing your old video card with. After all, the whole discussion has been on how Mac needs a video card slot.

    30. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Maserati · · Score: 1

      Amusingly enough, Apple has only just, finally, squeezed a decent graphics card into an iMac. The 24" model now has the Nvidia 8800 GS as an option. I've been checking reviews on that card this morning, and it looks like a solid gaming card. Not as fast as the 8800 GT models, but still in the same class. Not a cheap machine, at about $2100 for one with the 8800 GS, but it's finally an option other than a Mac Pro.

      Card review:
      http://en.expreview.com/2008/01/21/review-palit-8800gs-384mb-768mb/

      new iMacs:
      http://www.apple.com/imac/

      Naturally, like everyone else, I want roughly $1k tower with an upgradeable graphics card, but this is a nice step.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    31. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mmeister · · Score: 1

      Then my advice to you is to still with Dell.

    32. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      why not just build your own hackintosh?
      A couple of weeks ago, I saw a hackintosh based on a Powerspec computer that was running Logic using Mark of the Unicorn audio hardware. There were still some problems, of course, but if it gets better, I might just take your advice and "build my own hackintosh".

      After all, if it doesn't work out, I would have just built myself a really nice Windows machine anyway, so I'm not really out anything.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    33. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by ickoonite · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that I get it. If you want a tuner, then yes, the EyeTV does the job, but why does it matter whether it a card or a stick?

      If you want a video card, i.e. something with an NVIDIA or ATI chip on it, something which slings graphics onto the screen, something with, these days, >128MB of RAM on it, then, yes, with the Mac mini you are fucked. But I don't see what that has to do with TV tuners...

      :?

    34. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I've never bought a Dell in my life. I build my PC's myself, and since Apple doesn't make a machine that appeals to me, I built my mac too (I have a "real" mac but it's an older G4 that I bought used for $150). It works well and I enjoy it. If Apple doesn't like that tough shit - they had their chance.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    35. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      I would say replace "if" with "when" for #4. The last time Apple decided to license its OS back in the 90's nearly killed them. Apple may wait for them to make enough money from this to really sue them big. Or it may happen soon just because it is a proof not some people trying to do a quick overnight scam. I would think for the first. Make sure they get big enough so when they do get suied to death. They have enough money to pay off Apples legal costs plus some profit.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    36. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Your argument doesn't make sense. Of course everyone who bought it lived with it's flaws. You nor I know how many people would have bought a version with expandable graphics though.

      If version A (which is current version) has sold say 10 million units, but version B (expandable version or better graphics version) would have sold 30 million, then naturally the fact that version A still sold well in no way implies that it was or is the better approach.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    37. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even though the automatic update doesn't work, you can download updates hacked for OSx86 computers.

    38. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

      "You know, there was a time before we all updated our operating systems on a daily basis. And I recall being able to do some pretty successful things with my computer back then."

      True. A few decades ago the internet wasn't nearly as ubiquitous as it is today. And yes, you can still do "pretty successful things" with computers that have not had updates applied. But why in the world would this be an excuse to not want to update applications that fix issues and add functionality? "There are some of us (music and video producers, artists, etc.) who even occasionally work on computers that are not connected to the Internets."

      Really? Why not? My job is supporting the "artist" community, and has been for over 10 years now (all Mac based), and I've never known any of them to be always internet free. Not sure why you think your particular line of work prevents you from gaining internet access.

      Seriously strange comments, please explain. Thank you.

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    39. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by CastrTroy · · Score: 2, Funny

      It worked for SUSE 10.1.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    40. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Saying the the Mini should have a removable graphics card is like saying your laptop should have one too. Most graphics cards, even my old ATI Radeon 9800 are actaully longer than the Mac Mini. Have fun trying to fit an NVidia 8800 GTS in there. The Mac Mini makes a lot of compromises to fit into the extra small form factor. If you can't live with those compromises, then don't buy one. But I think that asking Apple to Redesign the Mac Mini to have interchangable video cards goes against the whole point of the machine.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    41. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by doob · · Score: 1

      I don't see why Software Update shouldn't work. I installed 10.5.1 on my laptop and updated to 10.5.2 using Software Update, as well as installing various patches, it's all worked fine. Granted my laptop is fairly close to a real Mac (runs the vanilla Apple kernel with the EFI emulator), but I also had Tiger running on an AMD machine, and I'm pretty sure I used Software Update then too. The only thing you have to be careful of is that certain updates will break the system if it is too different from official Macs. I wonder if Psystar have intentionally disabled it somehow to prevent accidental breakage?

      --
      In the spoon, there is no Soviet Russia!
    42. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 4, Informative

      What "EFI layer"? Netkas's PC EFI is a marketing name that Netkas put on his branch of my branch of the Apple-supplied Darwin/x86 bootloader.

      The only thing EFI about it is that he supplies some of the runtime services functions. I do this as well except in my version everything returns EFI_NOT_SUPPORTED. It is enough that the EFI system and runtime services tables exist and have halfway-valid information and that where a function pointer is expected that it point to some function. The implementation can be as simple as mov $EFI_NOT_SUPPORTED, %eax; ret.

      Nothing bad happens when the runtime services functions do not exist. Even if the one for rebooting the system instead returns EFI_NOT_SUPPORTED the system will still reboot because Apple still has legacy code to do this without EFI runtime services.

      The point of my booter is to allow Apple to focus on their own systems and to not maintain legacy code yet still continue to provide open source code that will work unmodified on non-Apple machines. The idea is that anyone can take the code they do release as Darwin and boot it unmodified on most PCs. As a side-effect anyone can also take the Apple-compiled binaries from OS X and do the same. That is, after all, the point of it.

      Of course, what I provide does not enable you to run OS X. You still have to provide a decryption engine and decryption keys and I don't help with that. Nor does Netkas PC EFI since the decryption engine, as explained by Amit Singh, is in the "Dont Steal Mac OS X.kext"

      None of this has anything to do with EFI. Once the kernel is going, EFI is gone except for two tables and a handful of runtime services functions.

    43. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by WNight · · Score: 1

      After all, the whole discussion has been on how Mac needs a video card slot. No. You're totally wrong.

      The whole discussion is about how some people want the option of installing a better video card, or other card of their choice.

      Someone feels it needs more video power, another thinks is needs a tuner, another wants to install some data-capturing or anything else.

      And they aren't saying that the Mac needs to be like this. They're looking to buy something else, aren't they? They realize that the whole market isn't just like them. So why don't you?

      You've simply been yammering on because other people's needs don't meet your approval. As if anyone asked you. And you're wrong in pretty much all ways to boot - about the tuners, about the demand, and about what people want or are trying to do. Get a fucking clue. You haven't been relevant to the actual conversation once, nor have you added anything but naysaying and insults.
    44. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by monoqlith · · Score: 1

      Really? The entire thing boots up, works snappily with Leopard 10.5, and because one feature doesn't work you consider it a failure? Yeah, it's a shortcoming, but you can easily download the required updates from Apple using your browser. Considering that all of this has been done without Apple's legal sanction, I'd say it's as successful as it's ever going to be. On a side note, have we heard any response from the makers of this machine in defense of their address changes, or are they just going to let the machines speak for themselves?

    45. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 3, Informative

      What you don't realize is that you don't have to modify kexts on disk to modify their behavior at runtime.

      The way Apple has structured the IOKit you can do everything that needs to be done purely by adding kernel extensions. It is never actually necessary to remove or modify kernel extensions but the hackintosh scene hasn't figured this out yet.

      I plan to update my website in due time with the specifics of how exactly you accomplish this. Aside from the issue of the kernel simply not being able to boot unmodified on a P4 I have an otherwise completely update-proof test box with hardware that is not supported out of the box by OS X. It's no different from any other OS really. Add drivers for hardware support. Add drivers that support hardware better than the OS-supplied drivers and keep the OS-supplied drivers from loading when they would cause problems.

      For example, consider a typical Windows installation. Microsoft provides a driver for basic ATA support. Once you install a more appropriate driver, it matches the hardware and drives it in lieu of the MS-supplied driver. The biggest difference is that on Windows NT (and derivatives) the plug'n'play aspect is done once when installing the driver. The system records which driver needs to load for a given piece of hardware. In OS X the plug'n'play happens upon each boot. The kernel builds up the IOCatalogue with information about available drivers and then passively matches the hardware using that information. That usually reduces it down to 1 or 2 potentials, usually just one. Then active matching occurs where each driver has a chance to probe the hardware and actively test whether or not it is able to drive it.

      All of this is fully documented by Apple. Once you read the effing manual you realize that the current hackintosh methods are insanely stupid.

      As an aside, this is why Windows fails to boot on a different machine to that which it was installed on. The Windows bootloader will not load drivers except those declared in the configuration control set registry hive. An OS X installation, if actually done properly, is able to boot on anything. But so far no one has really done an OS X installation properly which is why we see all these stupid machine-specific installation options in hackintosh spins.

      As for the ACPI tables, I'm theorizing on that now. I think the clear answer is to write an open ACPI platform expert as such an animal is needed for Darwin to really be considered an open platform. Doing a fully open ACPI PE kext means that various ACPI hacks employed in Linux can be ported to Darwin. Not having a fully open ACPI PE means that it's somewhat questionable as to whether Darwin can be used freely, depending mostly on whether you consider the Apple-supplied kexts to be parts of OS X or parts of Darwin.

    46. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Not only that but if something doesn't work, who are you going to turn to. Psystar will probably blame Apple and Apple will say you have an unsupported system. How is that any different than the Windows World we all live in today?
    47. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by hassanchop · · Score: 1

      Of course, it helps if you're deaf too - the Pstar has to be one of the loudest fans I've heard in years.


      I'd wager far fewer people care about that than the lack of expansion slots on a mini.

      I would say that the % of people where slots are actually used is in the area of 20% max.


      Well, I'd say that the % of people who care about their fan noise is less than that, much less.

      That you think it's important has zero bearing on its actual importance.
    48. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      The sad truth is that if you want a Macintosh with upgradeable graphics hardware, it's going to cost your $2200+. I can upgrade the graphics card on virtually any $199 Wal-mart PC. There's a problem here. With the $199 Wal-mart PC you HAVE to upgrade the video card to do anything productive. On a $1500 iMac, you don't. That's the only "problem" I see here.
    49. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      You're right that I was very imprecise, I have an AMD system so I haven't been able to personally use the GUID/EFI stuff. My understanding was that you could easily install the 10.5.1 update on a functioning 10.5.0 system, but you can't install 10.5.2 without intervention (because it requires the kext). Presumably Apple will continue to require the kext on future updates, and Psystar doesn't want any of those installing automatically because they'll break the functioning 10.5.1.

      Of course, they may be doing something completely different, nobody has really posted any details of what Psystar is doing and it may still turn out to be a total scam :/

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    50. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Because when you purchase a dual quad core workstation upon whose performance your livelihood depends the internet is large and dangerous place to expose a computer to. Especially when you're working with rough cuts of feature films which the masses would love to get an advance copy of.

      Also if you have a client show up the last thing you want is a crashing computer.

      Most of these people also have a laptop off to the side for internet.

    51. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Apple has only just, finally, squeezed a decent graphics card into an iMac. I have to disagree, because everything is relative. The Radeon X1600 card in my iMac plays just fine for nearly every PC game I've tried (booted in XP, of course). Sure Crysis kicks it's butt, but all the other current generation of games play decently enough that I don't have to scale everything back. Sure there are "better" cards out there, but when it comes to actual hands-on use, those improved FPS cards are lost on the majority of users (even semi-serious gamers). It has been nice to stick with the same computer/graphic card combo for two years straight without the dreaded 6-month video card upgrade requirement.
    52. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1
      You poo-poo the very thing the separates most PC and Mac users. If you found that ridiculously loud fan to be anywhere near acceptable and don't see it as anything BUT a deal-breaker, then you definitely won't appreciate the nice touches of Apple products. I hate sounding like a smug A-hole Apple user, but how else is one to respond to your "not-as-cute-as-you-think-it-was" remark?

      The issue is not that a loud fan CAN'T be corrected, it is that Pystar DELIVERED a product with such a horrific flaw like that, knowing people would buy it anyway.

    53. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Many such people want it to have TV tuner capabilities...

      Indeed. See here. No "slot" required.


      The seems to be an often missed point. Much that used to need a PCI card is now available in external form, either using USB or Firewire.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    54. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by rthille · · Score: 1

      After all, if it doesn't work out, I would have just built myself a really nice Windows machine anyway, so I'm not really out anything.

      Sorry, but that made my head explode. If I went to the Apple Store and came home with a box, opened it up and all it ran was Windows, I think I'd feel like I was 'out something'.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    55. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by lordSaurontheGreat · · Score: 1
      "If you downloaded windows or Linux and could never update, would you consider it a successful install?"

      Windows not working? That's expected!

      Oh, wait, you're one of those candyland people... nvm.

      --
      Consider yourself spoken to.
    56. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

      This "PC EFI" vs. non-EFI dichotomy is stupid. The bootloader should work on any PC and it should perform its most useful function which is to find the ACPI and SMBIOS tables and hand them off to xnu via the "/efi" node in the device tree.

      I am well aware of 10.5.2's little issue with "Dont Steal Mac OS X.kext" The problem is that like many Apple updates, 10.5.2 requires a double reboot. The first reboot runs a few scripts in single-user mode. Single-user mode only loads kernel extensions needed to find the root (e.g. disks) and to supply the console (e.g. Video, USB controllers/hubs, and USB keyboard). Notably it does not load Dont Steal Mac OS X. So Apple loads it from the script manually using kextload.

      On a real Apple, that works fine. On a fake Mac, it does not. Of course all you have to do to fix it is make sure that the alternative kext (e.g. dsmos.kext) is loaded by the bootloader rather than post-boot by kextd which does not get run in single-user mode.

      How to accomplish this is left as an exercise to the reader but it's not particularly difficult. Of course if you are dealing with a virtualizer instead of a real x86 you can more easily virtualize the SMC as Alex Graf did for QEMU. In that case, AppleSMC works as does Apple's "Dont Steal Mac OS X.kext".

      If I were selling Mac clones I'd probably just build a PCI card with an SMC-equivalent on it. That way everything would just work.

    57. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Saying the the Mini should have a removable graphics card is like saying your laptop should have one too. It does -- this isn't as uncommon as it was only a year ago.
    58. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      It has been nice to stick with the same computer/graphic card combo for two years straight without the dreaded 6-month video card upgrade requirement. In a "regular" computer an x1600 would have lasted just as long if it was up to your standards. If you didn't then you're admitting that the only thing that kept you from upgrading it was your inability to do so. I personally don't need my computer manufacturer papa'ing me around telling what I do and don't want - it's easier to just make those choices myself.
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    59. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      The graphics on that $199 are fine for any non-3d application. That's about all you're going to squeeze out of most of the lower end Macs like the mini anyways. The different though is that with the PC, I can easily bump it into the graphics category that I need. With the mac, whether it's under par when bought (the Mac Mini) or very soon afterwards (all but the most expensive iMacs), I'm stuck with what comes with it. Even worse with the iMac I'm stuck with not only integrated graphics, but also an integrated monitor.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    60. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by thejynxed · · Score: 1

      Or...you could try actually performing a product search:

      http://www.nextag.com/mac-tv-tuner/search-html

      There is also this:

      http://ati.amd.com/products/tvwonder650/usbmac/index.html

      Quite a few products take up only a USB slot, or alternatively, you can find MacOSX drivers for several Hauppauge cards and the like if you want an internal card. I've even found Linux drivers and cards for crying out loud :)

      --
      @Mindless Drivel: 100% of Twitter posts ever Tweeted.
    61. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I hardly think you could fit just any video card in your laptop, and certainly not an 8800 GTS.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    62. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never had software update work consistently on any linux distro I've used either so I wouldn't get too loud with that statement.

    63. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It should be noted that the PnP Driver detection once bit finally changed with Vistas kernel, just a shame the rest of the OS brings it down.

    64. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't knock the cheap Walmart PC so bad. It probably has the same integrated Intel graphics that the $1500 MacBook has.

    65. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I actually have a lot of "upgrade" options, one being open my iMac and put a better card in it. The other options include having an authorized dealer do it (why, when my warrantee is already up anyway) or to buy a new one with a better card (which I can afford, but can hardly justify the extra FPSs that you can't see anyway). The only thing keeping me from upgrading is that I don't have to. Crysis is the only game that I've tried that bogs down, but that game does it on the best video card out there anyway.

    66. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Again, my $1100 MacBook doesn't need a video card upgrade to do most things (3d gaming out of the picture, obviously), but I would be hard pressed to find a PC at $200 with integrated video that wouldn't be so mind-boggingly choppy that I'd want to chuck it out of an airplane somewhere (especially if it has Vista installed).

    67. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....are applying it to home theater sorts of applications...

      We recently bought a 47" LCD Monitor/TV which among other things has a VGA connection. We connected a G4 based mini to that monitor. The mini will display the full 1920x1080 resolution of that screen and works great with DVDs. The TV boasts a special interpolation chip, which boosts the full screen DVD picture to fill the screen.

      At first I used screen sharing to a laptop Mac to start the movie, but now I have a USB based wireless keyboard and mouse. The G4 mini also plays my shared iTunes library over the network. I've also done slide shows with music, using iPhoto. I can sit in the living room and surf the Internet on a BIG, super sharp monitor.

      The Mac mini, hidden in the cabinet the monitor stands on makes that TV/monitor more useful than we ever imagined. The itself TV has 2 built in tuners for broadcasts, but we have satellite receiver which feeds video to the TV and audio to the stereo.

      --
      All theory is gray
    68. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....but like most Mac fanatics, you're trying to go with the argument that something so incredibly simple and mainstream is a niche market...

      It would interesting to see a survey of ordinary mom and pop users, not /. nerds, who ever even have cracked the case on their computer. You are not the target customer Apple is making their products for. Most people want a computer that "just works" at every day tasks, such as email, surfing the web, showing picture and movies, ripping and playing CD's and working with the iPod or iPhone. Even our old obsolete G4 mini still does all that without the slightest hiccups. It works fabulously well at full 1920x1080 resolution with our new 47 in LCD monitor/TV.

      --
      All theory is gray
    69. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Except that there are no tuner cards for Mac...

      If you TV doesn't have a tuner, there are some on the market. We just got a new 47" monitor/TV with two tuners, which we don't use because we have a satellite receiver. This TV also with fine with an old G4 Mac mini.

      --
      All theory is gray
    70. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      The video card really only comes into play with 3d applications. Barring Aero or Quartz Extreme (in which case if Vista DOES come on the $199 PC it will be Home Basic and hence no Aero anyways), you'd likely not be able to tell the different for normal usage between the latest Nvidia Hotrod and a Voodoo Banshee gawd knows how many years back. Your video card won't make your normal desktop use "choppy" unless it's lacking drivers and running in VESA mode.

      In short, as the GP stated, the integrated graphics between the two are quite likely pretty close in power - neither is going to play games and either will do standard desktop stuff fine.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    71. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Well, I'd say that the % of people who care about their fan noise is less than that, much less...

      Anybody who wishes to use their computer as a video player in the living room would care very much if it added noise of its own to the soundtrack of the show.

      --
      All theory is gray
    72. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Miseph · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and everyone knows that a last-gen video card that works just fine for anyone uninterested in the bleeding edge costs around $1300... oh, wait...

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    73. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...to really sue them big...

      Apple may just wait until enough clueless buyers throw away their money on a pile of S**T like that and prevent the computer from booting after the next update or installation of a new version of iTunes, Safari or other "free" program from Apple. It's cheaper than lawyers and MUCH faster. A proper CYA warning may be in order though.

      --
      All theory is gray
    74. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      As an aside, this is why Windows fails to boot on a different machine to that which it was installed on. The Windows bootloader will not load drivers except those declared in the configuration control set registry hive.

      The other problem is that the windows bootloader reads its boot information from the boot.ini file which specifies that the system should be booted from this controller, that device, this LUN, whatever. I've heard that if you are going from IDE to IDE you can use the generic driver for the controller and boot successfully, but I don't care any more. :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    75. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Unless you're a hardcore GAMER, you're not changing out your video card. In fact, I know of no one that has replaced their video card (unless it specifically died on them) after their initial purchase -- but I don't hang around hardcore gamers.

      But if you're a hardcore gamer, you're going to find other reasons not to use the Mac. Such as "why the hell would I buy a Mac to run Windows so I can play games" ?
      I've yet to see a hardcore gamer with a Mac. What a strange idea.

      Macs probably have their strong points (although after running one for a bit more than a year, and being used to Unix/Linux, I didn't see much difference with Windows, but that's just me) but gaming isn't one of them, even though you can at least get *some* decent games nowadays.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    76. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      You know, there was a time before we all updated our operating systems on a daily basis. [ ... ]
      There are some of us (music and video producers, artists, etc.) who even occasionally work on computers that are not connected to the Internets. The two went together at the time. And were directly related. After all why fix what wasn't (apparently) broken.

      Except nowadays, since we know our computers are in fact broken (as they were then) and full of holes, they have to be updated and fixed because they are connected to the rest of the world (which has become increasingly hostile).
      For standalone machines it isn't as much of an issue and they are in the same configuration as they used to be back in the 8 / 16 bit days.

      Fortunately ubiquitous connectivity makes updates easy to apply.

      (I have been known to sort my photos in the field *without Internet access* too. Felt kind of weird but I managed.)
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    77. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by mollymoo · · Score: 1

      I've had exactly zero problems with "software update" on Debian Stable. If you want to live on the bleeding edge then expect to bleed every now and then.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    78. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh God, not the upgrade argument again. Do most people really upgrade their computers one component at a time anymore? I think not.

    79. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Did you ever stop to think that maybe being "stuck with an integrated monitor" is actually a selling point for many? Besides, you can easily add any second monitor you wish, even on the cheapest iMac. As far as being under par very soon afterwards, my X1600 is still kicking just fine on my two-year old iMac. I'm not sure what very soon is on your scale, but two years of usability during this era of "gotta-have-a-new-video-card-every-6-months" seems pretty reasonable to me, especially on a $1500 computer.

    80. Re:Operation Unsuccessful by hassanchop · · Score: 1

      ....Well, I'd say that the % of people who care about their fan noise is less than that, much less...


      And I already said I don't. I genuinely don't care about your opinion on the matter, your bias is plain and obvious.

      That being said, if I did care, you'd still be wrong.

      Anybody who wishes to use their computer as a video player in the living room would care very much if it added noise of its own to the soundtrack of the show.


      You mean like every single projector ever made? Funny, none of our customers have complained about their 30k projector's fan noise. EVER.

      It's called "attenuation", you should look it up so you aren't wrong again.
  3. Meh by tab_b · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Looks like a noisy piece of crap PC, but if it goads Apple into releasing something with a similar form factor, then I'm all for it.

    1. Re:Meh by MBGMorden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hear you there. It's sad that a hacked box is an attractive purchase option for a Mac not really because of price (well, in a way), but rather because it's a reasonable config that Apple doesn't make: a consumer level expandable desktop. The Mac Pro is full of undeeded workstation grade parts that the home user doesn't need. The iMac is not expandable AND has an unneeded LCD duct-taped on. The Mac Mini is just plain non-expandable (which MIGHT be acceptable as the base specs aren't bad, expect for the insanely crippled graphics chip). The laptops are, well, laptops (I have a laptop that I like for traveling, but no way I'd ever use one for home use).

      Plop the mini's hardware into a mini-tower case, and tack on 1 PCI-E x16 slot, 1 PCI-E x1 slot, and 1 regular PCI slot, and then we'd have a machine worthy of my purchase. Until that point I'll keep on using my hacked up generic "mac" and my old PowerMac G4.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    2. Re:Meh by log0n · · Score: 1

      If that's what you want, why don't you just run Windows/Linux/BSD/whathaveyou? If the hardware specs are the driving factor behind your wants/needs, you should use the system that accommodates them. I use a MBP/OSX (both as a laptop and desktop) so I get why you would want your preferred OSX setup, but really, shouldn't the software accommodate what you want to do with the hardware? For the most part, the same software is available for both platforms. Computers are just tools to be used to accomplish your task.

    3. Re:Meh by log0n · · Score: 1

      To clarify.. my use for Mac/OSX is Logic Pro (musician/composer - specific software needs), something not available for Windows AFAIK. As that is the program I use, my choice of OSX makes sense for my situation. But as you seemed to focus more on hardware, your needs sound more hardware specific and would be solved with the appropriate hardware.

    4. Re:Meh by vijayiyer · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be surprised, however, if the market you mention is really small...probably the vast majority of "mid range" customers won't ever expand or customize their machine. Think of the population as a whole - what percentage even knows what a PCI slot is?

    5. Re:Meh by grm_wnr · · Score: 1

      So you just want a cheap Mac with enough PCIe to stick a video card into to drive a monitor of your choosing? Seriously, what do you NEED PCIe these days for apart from graphics cards? Well, you might want to stick in a RAID card or something, but if you want to do that you are in the market for a Mac Pro. If you want non-integrated graphics, get an iMac and use its mini-DVI slot to drive a display for your choosing. Don't want to pay for the integrated display? Tough luck, Apple soes not want to support your niche. They have been historically only interested in filling niches they want, not what everybody is screaming at them to do, with pretty good success, especially lately. Also do keep in mind that the mid-90s desaster when they did exactly what you want burns on the mind of everyone at Apple; the company nearly died back then. YOu migh have forgotten, but they themseves sure haven't.

      That said, I wish Apple would include an ExpressCard slot on the iMac. That would make the machine reasonably expandable without breaking their stylish case designs.

    6. Re:Meh by aliquis · · Score: 1

      It _IS_ a noisy piece of crap PC.
      Anyone can do it themself with whatever (almost) PC they already have and a downloaded DVD from TPB or whatever. These people are just trying to make money of the work by both people over at Apple and the people who made it possible.

      And it sounds like fuck, I'd pay $200 to get rid of that noise alone.

    7. Re:Meh by argent · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      If Apple charged twice the price for it I'd buy one from Apple.

    8. Re:Meh by pauljlucas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ... it's a reasonable config that Apple doesn't make: a consumer level expandable desktop ...
      Do you equate "expandable" with "has slots for cards?" If Apple's marketing research group has done their homework, well, obviously, they don't think most consumers need (and thus not want) such a desktop. Most people just want to plug in a printer and maybe a digital camera for which USB is sufficient. Everything else (GigE, 802.11n, USB2, FireWire, DVD, webcam) is already built-in. Out of curiosity, what exactly would you put in those PCI slots if Apple made such a consumer machine? Gamers and geeks simply aren't their target consumer market.
      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    9. Re:Meh by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Plop the mini's hardware into a mini-tower case, and tack on 1 PCI-E x16 slot, 1 PCI-E x1 slot, and 1 regular PCI slot, and then we'd have a machine worthy of my purchase. Until that point I'll keep on using my hacked up generic "mac" and my old PowerMac G4.

      What they need is a Mac Pro Mini (or Mini Mac Pro). Basically, half a Mac Pro:

      * Single dual or quad-core CPU
      * 4 DIMM slots for 8G-16G RAM (2G standard)
      * PCIe x16 slot (with room for dual-width cards)
      * PCIe x4 slot
      * PCIe x1 slot
      * Two internal 3.5" bays, w/RAID1 or RAID0 on the chipset.
      * One internal 5.25" bay (Dual layer DVDRW standard)
      * Priced from about US$1100.

      Of course, Apple will never do this because it would absolutely slaughter higher-margin Mac Pro sales.

    10. Re:Meh by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      I do run both Windows and Linux on other machines. I like to use OS X as a daily OS for personal preferences. That plays a role, as does the hardware in other things (afterall, you use a MacBook Pro over a Macbook - I'm sure you had your reasons for doing so, just as I'd have my reasons for wanting a hypothetical MacTower over a MacMini).

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    11. Re:Meh by grm_wnr · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thinking about this a little, it appears you should buy a secondhand PowerMac G5. I am almost serious about this.

    12. Re:Meh by misleb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I use a MBP/OSX (both as a laptop and desktop) so I get why you would want your preferred OSX setup, but really, shouldn't the software accommodate what you want to do with the hardware? For the most part, the same software is available for both platforms. Computers are just tools to be used to accomplish your task.


      I hear this sentiment a lot.. but what does it really mean? Are there people who aren't using computers as tools to accomplish a task? Is hacking an OS to work on X piece of hardware NOT an appropriate task? What if you enjoy that sort of thing? I know I do at times. That's what Linux was largely about for a long time. It is only fairly recently has the focus in Linux shifted towards end-user usability. Screw the "computers as a tool" mindset! I say have fun. Pick your favorite platform and hack it to make it do what you want... and then hack it some more!

      This reminds me of a friend who used to be a bit of a BSD hacker and played around with all kinds of odd hardware like VAXen. Now he just uses Windows because it runs a lot of software that he uses and he doesn't do much fun stuff anymore. He seems depressed and uninspired and frequently complains about how retarded WIndows is.... but it runs his apps. He's given in to this idea that "computers are just tools." It is kind of sad, really.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    13. Re:Meh by marklar1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Think Again:

      It's not just video cards!

      Geez, who'd ever have thunk we'd get USB 2, or FireWire 2, or (e) SATA ?, or some new Networking protocol...or ???

      luckily, with basic PCI expansion cards that (almost) any tard can plug in the machines are ready for the future...

      and this is why several of my (and one's I look after for family/friends) machines AREN'T IN LANDFILLS!

      Encourage Expandability - Look to the FUTURE, even for mom & pop machines!

      so get off the "who would ever expand their computer" thing...

      Maybe your parents or grandparents or neighbors don't know what a PCI slot is, but when they need to figure out how to add a USB2 card or a network adapter or..??? they google it, or ask you or me, or go to the store and the clerk tells them...

    14. Re:Meh by aliquis · · Score: 1

      The thing is that much software in all the pro categories aren't available in the free oses, and much stuff requires more work.

      He probably just want the OS of his choice with the applications he likes on a computer which doesn't suck / is sufficient for his needs.

      With a PC and Linux/BSD/.. he doesn't get the apps.

      With a mac he get crippled hardware or unnecessary bullshit he doesn't need.

      And I 100% agree with him. I did buy this 15.4" 2H 2007 MBP thought because it was close enough (and I was stupid enough to pay for ADC student membership, if I hadn't I would have waited this time aswell because it only had 128MB which was so retarded, and 1440x900 are pretty retarded aswell.)

    15. Re:Meh by Shadowmist · · Score: 1

      The consumer desktop is the iMac. it's got all the capability that a consumer level user is going to need, DVD burning, built in camera, gigabit smart ethernet port, builtin AirPort and bluetooth, firewire and USB ports, and a machine which is definitely NOT desktop based. (as I understand it, the main system board is a deriviative of the XServe box.) With an iMac you don't need 3 PCI slots as the machine is complete for just about any consumer level use you could ask for it. Firewire, USB, and bluetooth can take care of 98 of the expansion needs you could possibly ask for.

    16. Re:Meh by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

      to bad the screen is not that good and the video card is weak.

    17. Re:Meh by gobbo · · Score: 1

      It _IS_ a noisy piece of crap PC. ...
      And it sounds like fuck, I'd pay $200 to get rid of that noise alone.

      That's just it. By the time I have a nice quiet speedy shuttle-sized box configured, I'm up around $1000. I'd buy that from Apple in a flash.


      Silence is Golden.

    18. Re:Meh by Maserati · · Score: 1

      That'd be nice. In the meantime, a Mac Pro can be had with only a single dual-core CPO as a BTO option. The machine is still overkill, but you can shave a few hundred dollars off the price. And it's a really nice case - tons of bays and slots, not sure about RAID on the drive controllers though.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    19. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The clerks tell them? No, the clerks try to sell them on a new computer, even if the old one is only 6 months old. It's easier for the clerks and they get the chance to sell them a worthless extended warranty.

    20. Re:Meh by donweel · · Score: 1

      I would like a bigger version of the Cube as a Medium Mac I love the way it opened up, kind of like a nuclear bomb or something. http://www.apple-history.com/?page=gallery&model=g4cube Perhaps in brushed aluminum this time with some cheese-grater type holes in it.

      --
      Many a long talk since then I have had with the man in the moon; he had my confidence on the voyage. Joshua Slocum
    21. Re:Meh by Game+Genie · · Score: 1

      Tough luck? Hardly. I bought $600 of parts on newegg, put everything together, and now I have an upgradable machine without a built in monitor that rivals a $2200 iMac, and I am running OS X. I have no complaints.

    22. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Out of curiosity, what exactly would you put in those PCI slots if Apple made such a consumer machine? Gamers and geeks simply aren't their target consumer market.

      maybe the target market for this opencomputer is the crowd that wants to dual boot Windows and OS X, with priorities different than Apple's.

    23. Re:Meh by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute... to buy a dual core, 4 dimm (assuming at least 2gb), with integrated RAID, and a dvd burner, YOU HAVE TO BUY USED! What a load. No wonder I don't own a mac - I obviously don't need or want to pay for what they must have out there now.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    24. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iMac is a laptop crammed into a display. You see that 3.06 GHz iMac? Do you know why it's a 3.06 GHz iMac? Because Intel just released the 3.06GHz Penryn. That's why you have two SO-DIMM slots, and also why they traditionally have terrible GPUs (For a mere 2.2k you can get one with a passable GPU now).

    25. Re:Meh by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      luckily, with basic PCI expansion cards that (almost) any tard can plug in the machines are ready for the future... and this is why several of my (and one's I look after for family/friends) machines AREN'T IN LANDFILLS! That's all Pie-in-the-Sky until you look at the reality of the situation; most family/friends' machines ARE in landfills (perhaps not everyone is fortunate enough to have your awesome stewardship?). It isn't for lack of upgradeability either. It's simply the fact that most WinXP installs become so infested (or start that way) that after 6-months, most average users are flustered into just buying a new computer. Macs may be way more expensive (old argument, not true), but at least they stick around for a lot longer (800 mhz G4 still productive, can't say so for my 1.5ghz AMD box)
    26. Re:Meh by Christophotron · · Score: 1

      And just what are you going to use the PCIe x16 slot for? I'm pretty sure that you can't put a standard NVIDIA 8800 card in it, cause it's a Mac. You need to have a special graphics card with Apple BIOS flashed to it to make it work on a REAL Mac (the kind with EFI instead of legacy BIOS). I don't think that's going to change, so you would still have to h4x0r the card to make it work, or buy your card from Apple at a premium price.

      (Does anyone know if this is still accurate?)

      It's these kinds of things that make me stay very far away from Apple hardware. People who are looking for expandable or upgradeable hardware would do best to avoid Apple entirely.

    27. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you need stationary machine for in this day and age?

      Macbook Pro 17", if you can afford is, is like being in heaven, on the move, ha ha ;). I can use the touchpad, it scrolls, the screen is just the right size and I can lug it in my backpack (which is bigger than most backpacks I admit).

      ItÂs the only machine I really need, although I do have a server for some P2P-action, shared disks, backup etc. too. The plus is that the server resides in another room which I never use myself, and the P2P-programs doesnÂt suck up the RAM on my "laptop" (I almost never put it on my lap), and is on 24/7.

      Macbook Pro 17", you should try it. If you can afford it, itÂs pure gold!

      After using this, I canÂt stand any PC laptop. They are so hopelessly designed compared to the Macbook Pro..

    28. Re:Meh by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      What do you need stationary machine for in this day and age? Laptops have slower (and smaller) hard drives, slower and non-upgradeable components (most significantly the graphics cards, though some new models have upgradeable graphics), and to get any semblance of a comfortable user experience I have to connect an external mouse, keyboard, monitor, and speakers as none of them on a laptop are as comfortable (or as large in the case of the monitor - I use a 22" monitor on my desktop) as that on a desktop.

      I do have a laptop. It's Vista based, but the specs aren't bad (AMD Sempron Mobile 3400, 2GB RAM, 80GB hard drive, Geforce Go 7200, 15.4" screen). It's a wonderful machine for when I'm away from home. I've even connected it to a full set of desktop components a few times when I was at home and wanted to do some work specifically on that machine. Still, it's nowhere near the level of computer I want/need for my everyday uses.
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    29. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NTSC/PAL/ATSC/DVB capture cards. Yes, some of these come in USB2 and Firewire. Excepting ATSC and DVB, they suck compared to getting the raw data. IDE and true FDD would be nice. Fibre network cards, SCSI Raid cards, REAL serial/parallel ports (USB converters don't work for special applications), ah hell, just buy a PC already!

    30. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not a bad idea - I'd just looked into it because we've been asked to look into developing an iPhone/iPod touch application.

      Trouble is it requires an *intel* powered mac, it's not sufficient just to be able to run the latest OSX.

      If we land the project we're going to have to buy a new Mac as our G4 won't run the developer kit.

    31. Re:Meh by theurge14 · · Score: 1

      This is why I got rid of my PC. I got burned for a $400 nVidia 6800GT when Doom 3 came out. That experience made me willing to take the iMac plunge and I haven't regretted it since. I've added RAM and I've added an external firewire drive and going on almost 2 years now I'm still happy with it.

    32. Re:Meh by rtechie · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, what exactly would you put in those PCI slots if Apple made such a consumer machine? Sure:

      Assuming PCI Express, a better video card for Photoshop or any other video task. Or gaming.
      Aftermarket sound cards
      Hardware video encoding cards
      DTV tuner cards

    33. Re:Meh by toddestan · · Score: 1

      It's not always about today, what about tomorrow? My PC started it's life with just the AGP slot populated. Over time, it's gotten firewire card, upgraded network card, and an upgraded sound card (should have started off with that in the beginning, but oh well). I've breathed life into older PCs by adding a USB2 card so they can use newer USB devices without them being godawfully slow. I bet the people with older iMacs wished they could do that when Apple screwed them by dropping Firewire on the iPod.

    34. Re:Meh by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      But Macs come with all that stuff already, so, again, why do you need slots?

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    35. Re:Meh by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Yeah, something like a shuttlespeced machine within a cubedesigned case containing motherboard, fans, cooling system, psu, operating system where you added the cpu, memory, harddrive, optical drive and then a supporter bios graphics card just as you can do on any hack and it would be perfect.

      And people don't mind paying some extra for a shuttlekind of system over the cheapest stuff available, and they would understand that they need to pay for the OS aswell.

      Sure some people will still complain and say that they need two graphics cards, soundcard, four harddrives and two optical drives but fuck them ;D

      (Just make sure it has 3-4 800mbps firewire or something, and/or external sata maybe.)

    36. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gamers and geeks simply aren't their target consumer market.

      We know. That's why we don't buy Macs.
    37. Re:Meh by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      This is an eternal debate, but wanting OSX and wanting upgradeable hardware do not exclude each other.
      Computers are tools, but they need to be the right tool for the job and you are the one that should decide the specifications needed, not a marketeer at Apple.

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    38. Re:Meh by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Did you even read what I said? I'm talking about what's coming out tomorrow, and isn't available today. With my PC, it's trivial to add the new functionality (USB3, whatever), but impossible on a Mac.

    39. Re:Meh by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      But Macs come with all that stuff already, so, again, why do you need slots?

      For those type of future upgrades. The point was not actual features, but future standards that upgradeable hardware can move up to. What happens when USB3 come out, or Bluetooth 2, or some other standard not on the table now? In Mac-land, that means buying a new Mac unless you bought the biggest and most expensive one. In PC-land that means a new PCI (or PCI express) card - slots that even the cheapest PC have.

      To me, the biggest reason to get a desktop PC is to allow for such upgrades. I'd rather have a laptop attached to a monitor than some sort of iMac. All the non-upgradeablility of a laptop with the lack of portableness of a desktop. Wonderful combination.

  4. So.. shall the bets begine by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

    On when Apples lawyers come crashing down on Psystar. I'm going to hazard a guess that since they are supplying a legal copy (according to their website) of the OS install disks, that there is not much Apple can do about it.

    On the other hand, the EFI bootloader they are using from netkas, thats another story...

    I actually have OSX running on my Dell Vostro 1500, and while everything in the base model works perfectly with OSX, my customized model, the intel wireless card does not work.. *sigh*

    --
    I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    1. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 1

      If they are indeed pre-installing Leopard on these systems then Apple will pounce. Of course, that's what they (actually the one guy who seems to be running the show there) promised to do from the outset and they're now apparently delivering computers - I would have expected Apple to take the company down just based on that promise. It's only a matter of time before Apple goes after Pystar , unfortunately, since Apple wants to try to enforce its EULAs. I personally think it's healthy for Apple to have some competition; I think this guy is doing a good thing by addressing a market segment that Apple is completely ignoring right now (consumer towers).

      --
      Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    2. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Kenja · · Score: 1

      Yup, they (Paystar) are not breaking Apples license. However, anyone that trys to get support from Apple for these boxes is going to be in for a bit of a shock.

      I fully expect there to be something in future OSX patches that will be incompatible with these computers.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    3. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 1

      Apple's EULA says that OS X can only be installed on Apple branded hardware, so if Pystar is pre-installing Leopard on these computers Apple will certainly respond.

      --
      Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    4. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Kenja · · Score: 1

      My impression is that they dont pre-install the OS but provide Apple media.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    5. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Blimey85 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      What if they order all of their hard drives from Apple and then use cheap commodity hardware for the rest? Technically the os gets installed on the hard drive right? So if you install it on an Apple hard drive would that work? Then again, Apple doesn't actually make the hard drives so the hard drive, even if ordered from Apple, would not technically be an Apple branded item. Hmm...

      --
      How is it that one careless match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box to start a campfire?
    6. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Kenja · · Score: 1

      With what Apple charges for hard drives, they would be operating at a major loss.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    7. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

      From what I recall being offered, they would install the OS for an additional fee.

      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
    8. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here's the relevant EULA excerpt: "You agree not to install, use or run the Apple Software on any non-Apple-labeled computer, or to enable others to do so."

      --
      Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    9. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      since when have EULA's been legal? (or illegal for that matter) anyhow there not end users.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    10. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Sure the car analogy gets tossed around all the time, and in some cases a manufacturer might be able to get around fixing a problem due to a potential aftermarket product being installed, but they cannot sue you for installing a Kenwood radio in a Ford when Ford specifies only authorized Ford equipment can be used (yes I know, this has been hashed out in the courts, and it was probably a bad example, and no they cannot void a warranty for using an aftermarket part), but the point is the same, you can write whatever you want in a document, but it needs to be tested in a court of law, and these days, who knows who would win (and bankrupting your opponent does not constitute a win, thats more a forfeit by the losing side, but would still probably set a precedent of sorts).

      I would hope that the legal system would rule in favour of you being able to use whatever equipment you want, but who knows :/

      --
      I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    11. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by misleb · · Score: 1

      Yup, they (Paystar) are not breaking Apples license. However, anyone that trys to get support from Apple for these boxes is going to be in for a bit of a shock.


      Last I checked, Psystar makes it pretty clear that the configuraiton is not officially supported by Apple. They seem to be catering specifically to the "hacker" types who don't mind dealing with little details like not being able to run the automatic updates. If they were claiming/implying to be some kind of "official" Mac clone, that would be another story, but they're not.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    12. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by christurkel · · Score: 1

      They're Seagates, last I checked. I don't think Apple has anything branded on the inside.

      --

      CDE open sourced! https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/
    13. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Sancho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As others have pointed out, the obvious way around this clause in the EULA is to label the computer: Apple.

    14. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Divebus · · Score: 1

      "You agree not to install, use or run the Apple Software on any non-Apple-labeled computer, or to enable others to do so." Look in the OS X software box. You get two Apple stickers. Use 'em.
      --

      Most of the stuff on /. won't survive first contact with facts.
    15. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Blimey85 · · Score: 1

      Ah, new idea... forget buying hard drives from Apple. All we need to do is order a crap load of Apple labels and stick them on each machine. Then we are within the terms of the Eula. Also, if order the labels direct from Apple we aren't violating any copyright or anything I don't think. I wonder what would work as a label... could we just use the Apple stickers that they give out all the time?

      --
      How is it that one careless match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box to start a campfire?
    16. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      The hard drives on the Apple Store are blank third party drives. The only way to get Apple to ship you a hard drive with OS X on it is to buy a Mac that contains one.

    17. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Although I don't think Apple sells them retail, they are Apple branded (usually the Apple logo next to the Western Digital or IBM/Fujitsu logo.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    18. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by CommanderData · · Score: 1

      If you want wireless, try a Linksys WPC54GS card (NOT the WPC54G). I got one for $39 brand new, and it uses the Broadcom chipset. The non-speedboost version (54G, no S) uses the Atheros chipset which seems much more fussy about working with Hacintoshes. Assuming your PC Card slot is working this will auto-detect as an Airport Card, no drivers needed. Worked fine on my Fujitsu P1620.

      More brave souls can try to get a new Mini PCI or Mini PCI-E card off eBay (the Dell 1390 and 1490 cards usually work well). I tried this and failed since my Mini PCI-E slot is misconfigured in the BIOS, but you'd be putting the Dell card into an actual Dell laptop. Seems like it would be a slam dunk.

      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
    19. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by rbanffy · · Score: 1

      Anyway, there are jurisdictions where this restriction is illegal and thus unenforceable.

    20. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Willy+Wong · · Score: 1

      And if either of you had bothered to check the website, you'd see that they preinstall it for free!

    21. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Darundal · · Score: 1

      Well, the whole address/contact issues could be because these guys don't want to deal with Apple's lawyers. Ever.

    22. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by stizzmindspring.com · · Score: 1

      Which is why my Quad Core Mac Pro Clone has a apple logo on the front and side. Finally found a use for the stickers that came free with my ipod.

    23. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      (blinks)

      So all you have to do is whip out a label maker, type out "Apple" and stick it on the case?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    24. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      So if I take an Apple label off a Mac and stick it on a PC, I can legally install OSX on the Apple labeled PC even if it wasn't made by Apple?

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    25. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by necrognome · · Score: 1

      "Hacker types" know how to build their own machines.

      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    26. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Izabael_DaJinn · · Score: 1
      That's why Apple may not sue them at all.

      Why?

      Because most people who shop for Macs are not interested in additional steps and the possibility of never being able to update. People are drawn to Macs precisely to avoid complications of that sort.

      Therefore this is going to be a small, niche market, a *new* market which will not limit Mac sales whatsoever but will contribute to sales of their OS.

      Also suing this company will bring way too much attention to a company most people won't bother with. If Apple lost, the company would be that much stronger afterward.

      Better to battle these guys with a little subtlety.

      We'll see I guess....:)

      --
      Careful What You Wish For....
    27. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Sounds like I can regut a suitable older Apple case with modern components and be legal. :)

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    28. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by misleb · · Score: 1

      Experienced hacker types don't bother with such mundane details. :-)

      Seriously, I've been building PCs on and off for more than 15 years (oh God, has it been THAT long?). I have nothing to prove by putting yet another motherboard in a case, plugging in a video card, and connecting the hard drive. If I can get someone else to do the based research and put together a suitable system for me, all the better.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    29. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by aliquis · · Score: 1

      How? The encryption key are known and I think most other things they can come up with can be fixed. I think Apple are screwed then it comes to make it only boot on their machines aslong as they use compatible instruction sets and so on.

    30. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I doubt harddrives bought from Apple are Applebranded... More like Hitachi or Fujitsubranded.

      Maybe if you install it on your iPod and boot from that over ;D

    31. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Intelligent indian guy:
      http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1495632&tstart=1

      Yeah, good idea, ask on Apples forum!

    32. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have some Apple-stickers that you can label it with.

    33. Re:So.. shall the bets begine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I understand that just slapping an apple label on your hackintosh makes it perfectly legal to run macos on it. Maybe psystar should ship labels with their hw... that also makes me wonder if scratching the apple motif off an imac makes you infringing?

  5. Litigation by damicatz · · Score: 0

    I'll give it about a week before Apple starts litigating.

  6. I didn't know... by HetMes · · Score: 1

    ... cloning abilities were in the specs...

    1. Re:I didn't know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ship cloning abilities, nonetheless.

  7. Can't Wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for the girlfriend review.

    1. Re:Can't Wait by cptnapalm · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's easy:

      Girlfriend looked at new computer. "That's not a Mac," she commented.

      Later that night, while asleep on the couch, he dreamed of marketing slogans.

  8. Apple legal by Glock27 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm waiting for Apple's lawyers to arrive with the attitude of a school of hungry piranha any time now...

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    1. Re:Apple legal by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

      It shouldn't be long. I believe that the Apple legal team was actually waiting to see if one of these units actually shipped (up until that point, it's fraud I believe, not any sort of infringement). I'm certain that Apple had someone within the company purchase one as well so they can evaluate it up close.

      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
    2. Re:Apple legal by berashith · · Score: 1

      I hope the clones have a EULA banning Apple employees or agents from using this for use in establishing fraud or infringement cases.

      Not that it would matter, but because it would be cute

    3. Re:Apple legal by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      I hope the clones have a EULA banning Apple employees or agents from using this for use in establishing fraud or infringement cases. That would be no problem. Apple can sue them, and then ask Psystar to provide the evidence themselves. That is what discovery is for.

      But anyone mentioning the EULA is way off the mark anyway. The EULA (End User License Agreement) states what an end user can do or can't do with the Leopard software. For Psystar, something else is more important: The EULA doesn't apply, because they are end users, so only copyright law counts. Copyright law allows Apple to (1) control who can and who can't make copies of the software and (2) who can distribute their software. (2) is the important bit here: Psystar has no right to distribute Apple software.

      It also seems that Psystar induces its customers to break the EULA (and whether Apple can enforce the EULA or not doesn't matter; Psystar isn't allowed to do this), and that is a major part of its business. That is interfering with Apple's business and illegal.
    4. Re:Apple legal by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      (2) is the important bit here: Psystar has no right to distribute Apple software.

      No, copyright law only applies to the act of making copies and then distributing them. Merely passing along the thing you got without making an additional copy of it falls only under the doctrine of first sale.

      Preinstalling the OS is the only thing that can get Psystar in trouble here (because they're making an additional copy, onto the hard drive).

      It also seems that Psystar induces its customers to break the EULA (and whether Apple can enforce the EULA or not doesn't matter; Psystar isn't allowed to do this)

      On the contrary, they're inducing customers to break the EULA only if the EULA is valid in the first place. I'll bet that Psystar will argue (in the inevitable lawsuit) that it's not.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Apple legal by eldepeche · · Score: 1

      But wouldn't first sale apply here? It's legal to buy a copy of OS X; it might be legal to install OS X on non-Apple hardware; it's legal to sell your computer, including the software installed on it.

    6. Re:Apple legal by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      No, copyright law only applies to the act of making copies and then distributing them. Merely passing along the thing you got without making an additional copy of it falls only under the doctrine of first sale. Tell that to the Free Software Foundation. Based on what you're saying, the whole "conveyancing" thing in GPL3 is a myth (an opinion I've always held to).

      Ultimately, which is it? GPL3 is wrong and trying to control something it has no right to, or Apple is right and they can in fact exert control over intermediaries between themselves and their end user?
      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  9. Software Update does not work. by wiredog · · Score: 1
    Because, if it did, Apple could brick the box. (Sort of, you could probably install Linux on it.)

    No software update means no fixes for any security vulnerabilities that turn up. Lovely.

    1. Re:Software Update does not work. by MBGMorden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because, if it did, Apple could brick the box. (Sort of, you could probably install Linux on it.) The operating not booting because of a bad patch is not "bricking". You could indeed still install Linux, or even just reinstall your hacked copy of OS X and just not do the software update the next time.

      Annoying over-used buzzwords aside, my guess is that the update situation on these will be just like other hackintosh setups, where you can update, but you have to obtain a hacked update installer, or go through a very manual process to do it.

      My original hackintosh setup for example was running 10.4.8 and couldn't use software updates, but I was able to move it over to 10.4.10 eventually (though I'm now running on 10.5.1).
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    2. Re:Software Update does not work. by nawcom · · Score: 1

      Because, if it did, Apple could brick the box. (Sort of, you could probably install Linux on it.)

      No software update means no fixes for any security vulnerabilities that turn up. Lovely.

      You understand that these aren't what you would call mac clones, but PCs with os x compatible hardware (with a patched kernel to skip hardware checks of course), right? I've had OS X on my AMD system for years, and it runs world of warcraft better than windows ever did. And I don't even want to start about the use of the term "bricking".

      The only problem with the update risk is that your basic consumer won't know the difference between what patch updates the kernel or not.

      Since most things people do on OS X are non-administrative, it will take a while for it to reach its equivalent of administrative-always windows. As of now, most vulnerabilities are equivalent to Linux vulnerabilities; most are buffer and stack related. No going to a website and getting your computer taken over.

    3. Re:Software Update does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You also have other choices of operating systems upon order such as Ubuntu, Windows XP or Vista.

      If nothing else it looks like it would be a nice little Ubuntu box (Ubuntu installed is free).

    4. Re:Software Update does not work. by DietFluffy · · Score: 1

      Annoying over-used buzzwords aside, my guess is that the update situation on these will be just like other hackintosh setups, where you can update, but you have to obtain a hacked update installer, or go through a very manual process to do it.

      My original hackintosh setup for example was running 10.4.8 and couldn't use software updates, but I was able to move it over to 10.4.10 eventually (though I'm now running on 10.5.1).


      current gen hackintosh setups (such as those using kalyway leopard) can accept most official mac os x updates, (like 10.5.1) but require hacked versions of updates that change the kernel. (like 10.5.2)

    5. Re:Software Update does not work. by MBCook · · Score: 1

      It could be a brick. There is nothing to prevent Apple from releasing a patch that would simply erase the BIOS/EFI from the thing. It's not like they couldn't get their hands on one box to see exactly how to do it.

      Without a BIOS, your computer is bricked.

      Normal software updates might render the OS unusable, and you're right you could just install Ubuntu. But Apple could truly brick the thing if they decided too.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    6. Re:Software Update does not work. by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      It could be a brick. There is nothing to prevent Apple from releasing a patch that would simply erase the BIOS/EFI from the thing. It's not like they couldn't get their hands on one box to see exactly how to do it. Apple would be fine as long as this happens unintentionally. But if Apple bought a Psystar bpx and made sure it gets bricked, that would be trouble.
    7. Re:Software Update does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without a BIOS, your computer is bricked.

      Probably not. It's very common for the BIOS chip on a motherboard to be removeable, so there's nothing stopping you from getting a new chip from the manufacturer, from another motherboard of the same model, or from a friend who can copy chips. Replace it and you're good to go. I've done it before to recover from bad flashes, actually.

      The only way Apple could really "brick" your computer is if they found some way to actually do physical damage to your computer. If only there was some hidden register on an Intel CPU that would cause the motherboard to catch on fire...

    8. Re:Software Update does not work. by fortyonejb · · Score: 0

      Wait a second.... I thought Macs were invulnerable to security issues...

    9. Re:Software Update does not work. by MBCook · · Score: 1

      I've had to do that too (bonus points for doing it without turning off the computer, because it wouldn't be able to boot back up... yes, it was stupid to do).

      Most people won't know that, or how to do it. Frankly I wouldn't be surprised if it was a cheap motherboard with the flash chip soldered on and no backup, thus basically unfixable.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    10. Re:Software Update does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its really driving me nuts the number of people who misuse the term brick. If you brick something, that means it doesn't work anymore ... end of story. Not, oh it sorta works ... or it works in a different OS, or works after a reinstall.

    11. Re:Software Update does not work. by rtechie · · Score: 1

      The operating not booting because of a bad patch is not "bricking". The term "bricking" is properly reserved for firmware updates. It's easily possible for a bad firmware update to destroy the bootloader for the hardware, meaning the only way to repair it is to re-flash the chip using specialized hardware (and if it's soldered on, even that may be difficult). That's "bricking" a device. This is very common with motherboards, to the point that many have backup BIOS chips.

    12. Re:Software Update does not work. by aliquis · · Score: 1

      "and it runs world of warcraft better than windows ever did.", yeah right.

      100% bs, feel free to install Windows and get the FPS with the same settings in both oses and supply two screenshots which shows how the game looks aswell.

  10. With Apple's Blessing... by rainhill · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't be surprised if Psystar had Apple's blessing behind the curtain on this..

    It would be perfect for Apple if this caches up, yet safe way out if not.

    1. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      It would be perfect for Apple ...
      Why?
      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    2. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

      Well, this is just a theory and I could very well be wrong but I think that it's just a matter of time before OSX becomes an option on any PC and a legal one at that.

        I see it going from

      OSX only on new Macs to...

      OSX on all Macs to...

      OSX on Intel Macs to...

      OSX hacked onto other Intel PC's to...

      OSX hacked really well onto other Intel PC's to...

      OSX working well enough (albeit illegally) for the installed base to grow to...

      OSX being made available as a legal product for any computer.

      I know, Apple is a hardware company. It's the way things are and that's where they're money comes from and I am sure that this must be taken into account. I just think that anything that can be done with software will be done with software eventually and sooner than most people think. Encrypt it and they'll crack it. Lock it down tight and somebody will come along, unlock it, and have it on Bittorrent before the sun comes up the next morning. I think Apple knows this and I think they know that eventually they'll have to be both a hardware company AND a software company. I think that was inevitable from the day that they moved to the Intel processor.

      Intel Macs appeared as a surprise to most people and I would not be at all surprised to learn that in the same way this happened there might be a group at Apple right now focused on the groundwork needed to prepare for a day when they find themselves selling an OS to most people and a complete computer to others. I imagine at some point Apple might license the OS (PcOSX?) to run on only certain high end models from HP or Dell exclusively. Later this would be expanded and eventually it would run on most everything sold. Nobody said they have to flip a switch and support everything all at once to be successful at this software company stuff.

      I think they know it's only a matter of time before it happens. Apple hardware will always be sold but they've made a point of spreading out their offerrings enough to be able to withstand a transition period in their hardware sales like I described above. Mac sales are way up and the interest in OSX is rising. They'll be in a perfect position to ride this over into PC sales eventually and then they'll have an admittedly much smaller but still "Microsoft-like" source of income from OS licenses. When they start competing with Microsoft on the same hardware they're going to do very well against Vista and anything based on it.

      And none of that is probably going to happen but it could and it's not crazy to imagine it happening. It's one way for them to go and it takes into account a realistic scenario that will happen whether Apple chooses to try and leverage it or not.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    3. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by kellyb9 · · Score: 1

      I'd be suprised if they DID. How does Apple benefit from someone underselling their hardware and competing with them. If they truely had Apple's blessing, I'm pretty sure you'd be able to update your operating system.

    4. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Because they get to charge retail for every copy of OS X sold. If Psystar are selling to people who would not otherwise have bought a Mac, then that's $149 of pure profit for Apple on every sale. If they are cannibalising Mac sales then Apple have a quick way of shutting them down.

      The problem with clones the first time around was that clone makers were undercutting Apple in the same market segments they were competing in. If this machine takes off, Apple could make Psystar sign a secret non-compete agreement, keep selling machines running OS X, only with supported software updates, and boast to businesses that there was a second source available.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    5. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by rainhill · · Score: 1

      because selling software is more profitable IF it goes mainstream, like the Windows.

    6. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Why would it be perfect for Apple that someone starts to make money on hacks?

      Thought Jas did aswell considering people paid for his mac pro.

    7. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by kellyb9 · · Score: 1

      If that was the case, Apple would've licensed out its software to Dell and HP.

    8. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by rainhill · · Score: 1

      Dell and HP wouldn't have the slightest of interest selling Mac, could they risk having a slap on their face from Redmond?

    9. Re:With Apple's Blessing... by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      Dell and HP wouldn't have the slightest of interest selling Mac, could they risk having a slap on their face from Redmond?

      Dell has wanted OSX since it went to Intel...

  11. Loud! by MightyYar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yikes! Who brought the vacuum cleaner to the party! Wow, that video is loud!

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  12. Step One Complete! by creature124 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They shipped. Thats only step one though. Next, they have to function just as well as a real Mac, which according to the article isn't quite right.

    Plus, they have another hurdle - Apple C&D letters should be rolling in by now, if they haven't already.

    It should be an interesting court battle. Yet another challenge for intellectual property in relation to software. Lets hope this one goes the way be all want.

    1. Re:Step One Complete! by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I hope for their sake they don't ship with OSX bundled/installed. But then that would make it no better than just doing an OSx86 yourself.

      ps - the camera work in that video was just terrible! why follow the video cable for a quarter of the clip? wtf. yes we know the video cable attaches to a monitor. I trust them not to just hid a MacPro under the desk (pretty obvious with the PC bios boot up)

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    2. Re:Step One Complete! by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yeah, no kidding! The important thing they should have filmed (but didn't) was something proving it was a Psystar and not some other random hackintosh.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    3. Re:Step One Complete! by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Be? I doubt they care.

      "We" probably want different things. Depending on if we belive Apple should be paid for their work or that we should have more hardware options, or which people want the most.

  13. Mac Mini by MBCook · · Score: 3, Funny

    Am I the only one who thinks it would be hilarious if every model they shipped out contained a faulty motherboard, with signals rerouted to hide the fact everything is running from a Mac Mini stashed in the "powersupply"?

    That would be great.

    I've got to say, for a scam they are really committed.

    At first, I thought this was all interesting and going to have an interesting legal battle attached to it. Then it was clear this was a scam and there would be no fun to watch. Now I'm starting to wonder if I'll get to see the legal fight after all. Maybe it's not a scam?

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    1. Re:Mac Mini by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one who thinks it would be hilarious if every model they shipped out contained a faulty motherboard, with signals rerouted to hide the fact everything is running from a Mac Mini stashed in the "powersupply"? That would be great.

      For $400 bucks, that would be great! ; )

      --
      This guy's the limit!
    2. Re:Mac Mini by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      Well, lessee... Take 10,000 paid orders, ship 100 units, skip town. Sure, those 100 units might cost $1500 to build, but that's still a heck of a profit margin.

    3. Re:Mac Mini by oahazmatt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Am I the only one who thinks it would be hilarious if every model they shipped out contained a faulty motherboard... Well, the hardware would have the same functionality as the 800 Mhz G3 iBook.
      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
    4. Re:Mac Mini by ickoonite · · Score: 1

      Well, the hardware would have the same functionality as the 800 Mhz G3 iBook.

      Man I fucking hated that machine. Three fucking times it burned me. THREE FUCKING TIMES! Twice in the space of a month as well.

      Now a very happy MacBook Pro user, I should add (having come via a PowerBook G4 12" - greatest laptop ever), but the iBook G3 800 was a low point.

      :|

    5. Re:Mac Mini by seaton+carew · · Score: 1

      Hey, I'm posting this from an 800MHz G3 iBook, you insensitive clod!

      [look, it was _cheap_, and it's only on its second mainboard...]

      --

      As technology accumulates, the hatred between people tends to decrease. - Steven Pinker
  14. Movie doesn't show anything by mariushm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That movie can be extremely easy to create, it's probably a fake.

    He films the normal PC in the back with the cable and so on, everything is fine...
    When the turns to the front of the screen someone takes out the VGA cable, puts it in a display switcher or something, while the monitor is still turned off, and connects a Mac laptop to that display switch.

    Then the dude turns on the PC, starts recording the screen, waits until the windows starts showing and the other guy switches the signal to the laptop. This was his hand with the camera remains in the same position and it's easy to cut out the transition.. especially since the eyes of the people are focused on the flash where the mac screen is shown.

    So the movie for me it says nothing, it can be so easily faked i could do it myself if i had a fake.

    The motherboard is also a Gigabyte based on the "setup-q-flash" message shown on the screen... i don't know if gigabyte would agree to make a Mac clone...

    Just my two cents

    1. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      The motherboard is also a Gigabyte based on the "setup-q-flash" message shown on the screen... i don't know if gigabyte would agree to make a Mac clone... Gigabyte wouldn't be agreeing to make a Mac clone anymore than ECS agreed to make my own homebrew mac. The reality is that with a little tweaking MacOS will run on just about about anything with a modern Intel chipset. With a little more serious tweaking it will run on AMD-based machines. Plenty of people have been doing this for years now. All this company did was pick out some generic hardware off the shelf that works with Mac OS X, and then install the hacked copy (note that while you do RECEIVE a vanilla Mac OS X CD with these purchases, if it's preinstalled it's not vanilla OS X. The preinstalled copy is a hacked version using PC_EFI by netkas).
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    2. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by nawcom · · Score: 2, Informative

      That movie can be extremely easy to create, it's probably a fake. He films the normal PC in the back with the cable and so on, everything is fine... When the turns to the front of the screen someone takes out the VGA cable, puts it in a display switcher or something, while the monitor is still turned off, and connects a Mac laptop to that display switch. Then the dude turns on the PC, starts recording the screen, waits until the windows starts showing and the other guy switches the signal to the laptop. This was his hand with the camera remains in the same position and it's easy to cut out the transition.. especially since the eyes of the people are focused on the flash where the mac screen is shown. So the movie for me it says nothing, it can be so easily faked i could do it myself if i had a fake. The motherboard is also a Gigabyte based on the "setup-q-flash" message shown on the screen... i don't know if gigabyte would agree to make a Mac clone... Just my two cents ... and let me guess, you don't believe in the moon landing either?

      Installing OS X on PCs is old news. Certain Gigabyte motherboards come with hardware that OS X has driver pre-installed for, and everything else is community supported.

      Here's a "fake" forum if you are lookiung for more info: http://www.insanelymac.com/

    3. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      That movie can be extremely easy to create, it's probably a fake.

      Nowhere near as easy as just installing 10.5 on a suitable PC.

      Seriously, why would anyone think the video is a fake ? It's not difficult to install 10.5 on EFI-capable PC hardware (which is both common and cheap).

    4. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      I know that forum is all part of your elaborate ruse!

      -Peter

    5. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by seandiggity · · Score: 1

      Seems like a KVM switch could do the job, and there are many other ways to fake this. That said, there are hackintosh boxes out there that run OSX with non-Apple hardware so it's certainly possible this is legit. I just find it hard to believe that Psystar isn't a hoax/fraud after all the shenanigans with their changes of address etc.

      --
      Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
    6. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by seyyah · · Score: 1

      So the movie for me it says nothing, it can be so easily faked i could do it myself if i had a fake.
      If you had a fake, why exactly would you fake it?
    7. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would anybody go through the trouble of faking the video when running OS X on commodity hardware is so easy? It COULD have been faked, but that would be ridiculous.

      Also, what does Gigabyte have to do with this? You don't have to get permission from component makers before shipping systems, you know.

    8. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by lucifig · · Score: 1

      Okay Mulder...keep looking for that moon-landing set.

    9. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by caseih · · Score: 1

      And two cents is all it is. Many people are running OS X 10.5.x on their regular PCs, on a certain set of hardware, which does, by the way, include certain gigabyte motherboards. Two of my acquaintances are using the Kalyway install disk and EFI boot loader hack. Recently we also installed OS X 10.5.1 on a Dell Optiplex GX755, which worked pretty well, including the updates (so I've been told).

      I'm not sure why you're so convinced this is a fake. What does Gigabyte have to do with anything? They simply make motherboards and sell them to end users and OEMS. They don't have to agree to anything. It just turns out that Gigabyte motherboards seem to run OS X really well.

      In short this is nothing but another whitebox pc manufacturer who happens to be illegally pre-installing OSX86 on it.

      I'm quite astounded by folks who, when faced with a picture or video of something they don't understand or have never before seen immediately cry "fake!"

    10. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      I'm quite astounded by folks who, when faced with a picture or video of something they don't understand or have never before seen immediately cry "fake!" Then I hope you're sitting down next time you read the comments on YouTube.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    11. Re:Movie doesn't show anything by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Of course it's not a fake, anyone can do this on their own PC (or well, almost any PC)

      Gigabyte doesn't have to agree to shit, you can buy the same gigabyte motherboard and install it on your own without or with psystar existing. They haven't done shit except selling the pre-cracked DVD and whatever PC.

  15. Sorry, typos by mariushm · · Score: 1

    This was his hand with - > this way his hand with

    i could do it myself if i had a mac.

    sorry for the typos

  16. You Don't Actually Need Software Update by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I prefer not to use it except to check for what I need to download. I download all my updates manually from Apple's download page, then keep all the updates backed up both on hard drive and burned to CD.

    That way if I need to reinstall, which does happen now and then, I don't need to download again.

    There's no serial number check on manual downloads, but I expect that soon we'll be seeing the Apple version of Windows Genuine Advantage.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      There's no serial number check on manual downloads, but I expect that soon we'll be seeing the Apple version of Windows Genuine Advantage. I don't think that will happen. I think Apple will shut down clone makers, and leave the hackers to their own devices. Apple already has a "WGA" style protection built-in to their hardware. I'd be surprised if going the Windows route protected them any more than the hardware solution that they have in place. Either system is not sufficient to protect against a determined individual.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by stoofa · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why don't you just select 'download and keep package' from the software update menu and then just routinely burn your packages folder to CD?

    3. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by nine-times · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't think the problem is just that Apple's "Software Update" doesn't work. More likely the problem is that you can't update your OS without causing it to stop functioning. Psystar hacked the OS to run on generic hardware. If you install an update that overwrites part of that hack, your machine doesn't work anymore.

    4. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by ipjohnson · · Score: 1

      Thats what happened to hacked OSX install on my quad AMD box.

    5. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by edalytical · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If there is ever an Apple version of Windows Genuine Advantage I'll quit using OS X, it will be erased from my drive and I'll never develop software for the Mac again.

      My computer, once I purchase it, should always function as long as there is not a hardware issue. I shouldn't have to prove I'm not stealing from the company, I shouldn't need an internet connection to unlock software, I _should_ be able to replace hardware components of the computer and I _should_ be able to transfer the software to another computer.

      End of story. I use a Mac because I think Apple understands that these are rights and they improve usability.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    6. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      First we'll see a CD-Key to install Mac OSX, and then a Macintosh Genuine Advantage check. Mac OSX already has DRM for media files, adding in DRM to prevent pirated copies would be the next logical step.

      Of course the Mac Pirates will just find a way around that as the Windows Pirates did with XP and Vista. So maybe Apple wouldn't bother and just allow OEM installs for Non-Apple branded hardware?

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    7. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are people still using dial-up???

    8. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I doubt that since it will be easy to just crack that check each and every time aswell. So it's 100% pointless and will only lead to problems for the consumers, which Apple for sure don't want to happen.

      It's not like WGA have stopped Windows piracy ...

    9. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "I think Apple will shut down clone makers, and leave the hackers to their own devices"

      Apple can't shut down clone makers because there's nothing illegal about using off-the-shelf hardware that's broadly compatible with theirs, and EFI is an Intel technology, not an Apple one. The most they could do is go to court to prevent them from pre-installing OS X or supplying software or instructions bypassing any Mac-identifying security measures (DMCA could and would be used) but they can't stop them from selling the official Apple boxed version with a machine any more than they can stop other retailers from putting it on the same receipt as other non-Apple stuff.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    10. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The most they could do is go to court to prevent them from pre-installing OS X or supplying software or instructions bypassing any Mac-identifying security measures (DMCA could and would be used) And I'd argue that is enough to get to the protection level that Vista has. How many mainstream folks are going to get a hacked machine?
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    11. Re:You Don't Actually Need Software Update by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "And I'd argue that is enough to get to the protection level that Vista has."

      Agreed. I was refuting the parent's suggestion that Apple could stop people from selling machines built from off-the-shelf hardware that are capable of running OS X (hacked or otherwise), not saying that preventing them from selling it pre-installed or supplying materials / instructions telling people how to hack it wouldn't be an extremely effective way of limiting the market for such hardware.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
  17. Mac vs PC vs MacClone commercials by AioKits · · Score: 1

    Oh please oh please let someone release one of these into the wild...

    --
    "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    1. Re:Mac vs PC vs MacClone commercials by MistrBlank · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Hi, I'm a Mac" "and I am a PC" "YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAR and I be a MacCLone!" (the Mac guy wearing a pirate outfit).

    2. Re:Mac vs PC vs MacClone commercials by domatic · · Score: 1

      You'd have sickly stodgy Windows Guy, young hip Mac Guy, and squared off chunky orthopedically impaired version of Mac Guy.

      "Me um Hackintosh Man am just as good as Mac Guy!"

    3. Re:Mac vs PC vs MacClone commercials by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      "Hi, I'm a Mac."
      "And I'm a PC."
      "And I'm Guybrush Threepwood, a mighty pirate!"

  18. No software updates mean.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..that it's a plain "BIOS PC". The only item on the list that today is used by OS X for verification during both installation and software update is whether or not the machine is an EFI machine (contra an older BIOS machine; a normal PC). The TPM junk is currently not in use.

    So it's verified: they actually do modify the OS X installation, because that is the only way to have a vanilla OS X disc to install on a non-EFI machine.

    1. Re:No software updates mean.. by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about the TPM part? AFAIK part of the OS are indeed encryptet, but the key is known so not much of an issue.

  19. Bias...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, hardly they have shipped this, so called 'doubter' start wondering if it even works.

    Even if you want to doubt them, at least give them fair trial, read what they have done, and then at least put up a show that you have tried not to be another apple douchebag.

    But this is just another example of how Apple, the so-called-media and their fan-base go defensive and start an outright attack on anything remotely coming close to Apple or their product. Perhaps, this siege mentality is showing something deeper.

    /. assumes they are hoax in every article, wired publishes their address (along with Google map image!) as if they are criminals. Let's not even go to Gizmodo or Engadget - they already have their heads inside the Apple ass and they enjoy it.

  20. WHY doesn't Software Update work? by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

    I haven't seen an explanation yet. If, as claimed, you can load an "actual Leopard retail package with genuine installation disc..." then why wouldn't it load the next version of the actual Leopard retail package? If it runs the next version, then what's the difference between loading it from a disc and making the same updates via Software Update?

    If, in fact, it replaces parts of Leopard with custom-tailored substitutes for this specific hardware, then I don't think it's accurate to say it's really running retail Leopard.

    Is there any technical reason for believing that whatever it is that prevents Software Update from working can't affect other software as well? Have the SQAed the product with iDVD, with Aperture, with Epson's printer drivers, etc.? If not, who has?

    This sounds like one of those boring "99%-compatible" PC clones of the early 1980s... a friend of mine bought one for use ina a research laboratory, found that it wouldn't work with some Tecmar I/O card, called the company, and their response was to thank him for the information and say that they would be sure to add it to their list of products that was known to be incompatible.

    1. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's a "normal" PC, using BIOS. Mac's use the modern EFI system instead. This is what OS X tries to verify during installation and via the Software Updates tool. If it's found to be a plain ol' BIOS PC, updates (and installation, without hacking) is denied.

    2. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why doesn't Software Update work? Well, for starters, the guy doesn't have an ethernet cable plugged in in the video. Do these machines have wireless? I'd hate to find out that the reason it doesn't "work" is because the guy didn't plug in the ethernet cable.

    3. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

      Why didn't Psystar "use the modern EFI system," then?

      Why does this interfere with Software Update, but not with installing from an installation DVD? How does it boot from the installation DVD?

      To say that this is capable of running "unmodified OS X Leopard kernels" is either logic-choppping with the word "kernel," or it's like saying a NASCAR vehicle is an "unmodified" retail car...

    4. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

      This is complete bullshit. The software update tool does check the model name and internally (e.g. without sending data to Apple) displays additional model-specific updates.

      For instance, if you have an iMac with a particular firmware version then Software Update will display the firmware update for it. If you don't have that particular model of iMac then it will hide it from you. But the program still knows it exists because it grabs the full list of updates from Apple.

    5. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BIOS PC's are readily available in abundance, for little money. If you'd like to google for resellers and manufacturers of EFI PC's, I can refer you to the largest manufacturer and reseller on the planet to save you time: Apple.

      Also, this _does_ interfere with installation: OS X -refuses- to be installed on a BIOS PC. The process of "hacking" OS X onto a BIOS PC is by using an EFI emulation layer, such as netkas or iatkos, as done for all "hackintosh" systems, including this one.

      OS X does not care for the platform when booting. It does care for it during installation, and under Software Updates. Psystar has simply not installed a modified version of OS X, but in order to have it install at all they have done so under a modified environment, likely the normal iatkos EFI bootloader thingy.

    6. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, it's not bullshit. Both rhe OS X installer and the Software Update tool check for an EFI layer - it uses it to extract the current version of the EFI firmware, and the serial number of the machine. If the EFI layer can't be found, neither firmware rev. or serial number can be acquired, and, as a surprising result, the machine can not be verified as a genuine Mac, and installation/updates are refused.

      Booting OS X involves no verification of the EFI layer, though, which is why Psystar's hack boots; it's installed during an EFI emulation layer (likely IATKOS), but the installation itself is not modded to run the EFI emulation prior to loading the OS, and that's why the machine can not be verified by the Software Update tool.

    7. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by Jimithing+DMB · · Score: 1

      Again, absolute bullshit. What Software Update and some other Apple programs do is look for a few keys in the "/efi" node of the IODeviceTree registry plane.

      Early hackintosh modifications to xnu added some code to the IORegistry lookup function to munge queries for "/efi" into "/rom" which is totally wrong but was a quick stupid hack so that "IODeviceTree:/efi" existed from the point of view of some things that needed it. This of course fails miserably for other things and was just an outright stupid hack. Is it any wonder that programs that expect certain keys to exist there break?

      That is why I modified the bootloader. But it's not EFI emulation. All it is is providing some structures, some function pointers, and some I/O Registry nodes that the kernel, some kernel extensions, and some userland programs want to see.

      The bottom line is that OS X does not need EFI. What it needs is a bootloader that works like Apple's loader and passes in the correct information to the OS. As long as you give the OS all the info it needs, everything works.

      And yes, if you fail to provide it then shit breaks. What a surprise. Providing some data does not make it EFI emulation, no matter how much Netkas wants to market it as such.

    8. Re:WHY doesn't Software Update work? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Because it's not a genuine installation disc, because it's just like any other hack. And software update probably works, but once you start install it it may break some of the hacks which you have which makes the machine not work later on (most likely because Apple have updated some part of the OS which happened to be cracked, not that Apple replace it on purpose just to fuck with hacks.)

      Your second part are probably the correct one, it do require additional patches, and it's not running retail Leopard, it's running a Leopard hack. But it can run the vanilla kernel thanks to netkas work.

      Printer drivers and most applications are probably ok. I guess things like X-code, Quicktime, Pro tools updates, and such may break the system.

  21. Why no cese and desist from Apple? by Danathar · · Score: 1

    I have to wonder why they have not tried to get a preliminary injunction to halt shipment pending legal matters. They probably could get that fairly easily.

    1. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have to wonder why they have not tried to get a preliminary injunction to halt shipment pending legal matters. They probably could get that fairly easily.

      They're probably weighing it against the possibility of having their "you can only install the copy of OS X you bought onto our list of blessed hardware" clause in the OS X EULA ruled invalid.

    2. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

      Bad PR? If Apple went after "Psystar," then pretty soon everyone would realize that "Psystar" is just some random guy, and that Apple was basically suing an individual. That's quite a difference than if Psystar was a larger outfit, faceless or not. Apple will most likely settle it out of the courts by offering a bunch of money.

      That's how they handled the ThinkSecret guy. Apple would have no problem suing a (real) corporation, but they're afraid to look like the RIAA if they use the courts to go after individuals for EULA issues.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    3. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Probably because they can't find them. Psystar kept changing addresses all last week.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    4. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by phantomcircuit · · Score: 1

      I have to wonder why they have not tried to get a preliminary injunction to halt shipment pending legal matters. They probably could get that fairly easily.

      They're probably weighing it against the possibility of having their "you can only install the copy of OS X you bought onto our list of blessed hardware" clause in the OS X EULA ruled invalid.

      What is the point of having that clause in their EULA if they are afraid to ever use it?
    5. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, just like the same clause in Safari that says it can only be installed on a Mac, even though they developed a windows version?

    6. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by Viewsonic · · Score: 1
      Microsoft thought the same thing and got nailed for it. Apple could take this to court and find the courts find it anti-competitive and make them open up their OSX to be installed on any configuration.

      Pretty tough spot for Apple.

    7. Re:Why no cese and desist from Apple? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      Because people are afraid to find out if it's enforceable or not (it's probably not, but do YOU want to argue with Apples lawyers?)

  22. hmm by nomadic · · Score: 1

    So are all the people who've posted on slashdot how it had to be a hoax, and anyone who paid money for a pre-order was an idiot, are they going to admit they were wrong?

    1. Re:hmm by Duradin · · Score: 1

      I'd reserve reversing the hoax judgment until they fulfill the majority if not the entirety of the pre-orders.

      It may hurt their profit a bit to kick out a few machines, but some profit is better than no profit.

      Has anyone checked to see if they have an actual physical location (or at least a front) yet?

    2. Re:hmm by StingRay02 · · Score: 1

      They may have been wrong about it being a hoax. Whether the people who bought one are idiots is yet to be determined.

    3. Re:hmm by umStefa · · Score: 2, Funny

      Admit we where wrong? This is Slashdot, where baseless inflammatory accusations are NEVER wrong!!!!

      --
      Technology is most abused by the very people it was created to help
    4. Re:hmm by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      I for one welcome our baseless inflammatory accusing...

      Wait, we elected that guy 8 years ago!

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
  23. the fans are so loud! by denominateur · · Score: 1

    why they didn't invest in a quiet power supply and cpu cooler is beyond me! core 2 chips run so cool that it's laughably easy to build a silent pc these days...

    1. Re:the fans are so loud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be easy, but probably not cheap. The two are usually mutually exclusive.

    2. Re:the fans are so loud! by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      What was that saying again... "Quick, cheap, good. Choose two."

    3. Re:the fans are so loud! by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      Well, it shipped a week or two late, at prices commiserate to higher quality PCs, and it's loud as hell. I don't see "quick, cheap, or good" in there...

    4. Re:the fans are so loud! by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Because they want to earn as much money as possible? As in build it as cheap as possible.

      Just build your own hack and it will be both cheaper and up to whatever specs you want. Or get a real mac =P

  24. Apple-labeled peripherals by tepples · · Score: 1

    Apple's EULA says that OS X can only be installed on Apple branded hardware So plug an iPod Shuffle or a Mighty Mouse into one of the USB ports. Congratulations; your PC now contains Apple-labeled hardware.
  25. Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a hoax by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

    Until I've seen one with my own eyes, and I've played with it, and I'm sober, nothing is proven.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  26. No Updates by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

    I'm more worried about it not being able to update than how well it functions. The more people who pick this up, the more stories you'll hear about mac viruses and vulnerabilities. Apple will have to make a choice... if they choose not to sue Pystar into oblivion, they would need to decide if they should allow such systems to be updateable. Apple probably will not, the more systems they end up supporting, the less secure their os becomes overall.

    If they choose to allow these hackintoshes to update, the more systems they end up supporting and the more money they would have to spend. Don't expect any support from Pystar or other such dealers. They run a risky business as it is. The best thing you can do when your Mac operating system becomes too unstable or too old is either buy an entirely new MacOS CD, install Windows, or install Linux.

  27. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of course, guilty until proven not to be. Good show!

  28. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? by Animats · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On what grounds? Psystar is installing a retail boxed product of MacOS X on Psystar hardware. There's no copyright violation, so none of the extreme remedies in the Copyright Act apply. Any legal restriction Apple seeks to impose that their software can only be run on their hardware runs afoul of "tying" restrictions in antitrust law. Apple would have to win an antitrust case before they could get a cease and desist order.

    What we'll probably see is heavily restrictive DRM in future Macs to prevent this. Or an end to retail sales of MacOS.

  29. Thanx for the cheap, easy threadjack by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 5, Insightful

    LOL. My Hackintosh supports software updates from Apple. Can't they at least install PC EFI? They're a fuckin integrator, they could BUY EFI boards. Morons.

    --
    Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
    1. Re:Thanx for the cheap, easy threadjack by initialE · · Score: 1

      software updates are a risk. it's the easiest way for Apple to render the boxes unusable.

      --
      Starbucks, Harbuckle of Breath.
    2. Re:Thanx for the cheap, easy threadjack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what are the full specs for your machine?

      Motherboard? processor? etc.

    3. Re:Thanx for the cheap, easy threadjack by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 1

      Currently typing this on my HP Pavilion dv9540 running OSX 10.5.2.

      The ideal Hackintosh in tower would be:
      CPU : Intel C2D or Quad (or Xeon if you're that rich)
      Mobo : Anything with an ALC888 audio chip, unlesss you plan on using a separate audio card (or USB audio). Oh, and the Intel ICHx chipset are supported out of the box, as are all Realtek Ethernet chips. If you want WiFi, use an Atheros card : they're recognized as AirPort devices.
      Graphics : nVidia.
      Everything else : whatever you want.

      http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index.php/HCL_10.5.2 for a list of compatible devices.

      --
      Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
  30. isn't history repeating by cremat · · Score: 1

    To some extent, this looks like when the first clone PCs appeared in the market. IBM claimed their hardware was better... at the end cloned pcs won the battle.

    1. Re:isn't history repeating by rainhill · · Score: 1

      this is _probably_ good for Apple.

      Apple needs to turn a blind eye to this if it has any serious intentions of reaching to much more users.

    2. Re:isn't history repeating by Jellybob · · Score: 1

      Apple don't have intentions of reaching out to much more users though.

      They have intentions of reaching out to more customers - you know, people who are actually going to pay them for more then just a Mac OS DVD.

    3. Re:isn't history repeating by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Paying them for a Mac OS DVD still makes them a customer. Actually I'm told that a company over in Redmond, WA has made quite a bit of money selling operating system CD's.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:isn't history repeating by Megane · · Score: 1

      To some extent, this looks like when the first clone PCs appeared in the market.

      Except for the minor difference that IBM didn't own the OS, and Microsoft made sure that they weren't an exclusive licensee. So Microsoft could happily sell to all the cloners in the world, and IBM couldn't do squat about it.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    5. Re:isn't history repeating by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      But competitors of that Redmond-based company haven't done so well. Where are BeOS, OS/2 and the others?

      Selling OS at retail can't be anywhere near as profitable for Apple as selling hardware and OS at retail.

      The quick maths on this (numbers are guesses, and illustrative more than accurate):
      Each quarter Apple sells 2M Macs at (say) an average $500 profit. That's $1B profit.
      If each OS X box makes $100 profit, Apple need to sell $1B/$100 = 10M copies of OS X.

      Can we identify ten million new OS customers every quarter? I really doubt it. Even if my numbers are way off, we're probably still looking at at least five million sales every quarter to replace hardware.

      If people move en masse from Apple hardware to el cheapo hardware running OS X then Apple will very shortly be out of business. Maybe that's not such a bad thing, if you consider a world with less competition and less diversity better than the current world.

      Of course, if these clones become the norm we'll probably see Apple hardware continue to be sold almost as much as currently, given the premium people are willing to pay for a quality laptop or high-end desktop. The iMacs will be hurt, and maybe the Mac Pros, but we probably won't see the sort of Apple-doomsday I outlined above.

  31. I see a box with a Mac mini inside! by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    If he wanted to verify authenticity he should have gone further than just following the cable. He should have run this with the case open.

    Here are the instructions to make your own.
    Acquire Mac Mini, PC case, screwdriver. You might need some extension cables too.
    Open case. Put Mac Mini inside.
    Close case.
    Profit!! Err, I mean loss!

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:I see a box with a Mac mini inside! by CSMatt · · Score: 1

      If there was a Mac mini inside the case, then we would save seen the back of it in the video.

      However I agree that this video does not guarentee authenticity. For all we know, he could have installed the "Hackintosh" version.

    2. Re:I see a box with a Mac mini inside! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac's don't have that particular BIOS POST at boot shown on the video.

    3. Re:I see a box with a Mac mini inside! by jimdkc · · Score: 1

      I guess then the real trick would be selling $500 Mac Minis (plus all the other components) for $399. That would actually be more impressive... And Software Updates would work!

    4. Re:I see a box with a Mac mini inside! by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...That would actually be more impressive...

      What would be more impressive, is if Apple would make a capable little brother of the Macpro and price it in the mid iMac range. I don't think Apple will EVER enter the rock bottom computer market. There little profit in that.

      --
      All theory is gray
  32. What dept. is this article from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What department is this article from? (The line below the title)

    attack-of-the-clones dept.?

  33. Ok, riddle me this by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    How do you clone a ship? You can do it with a Mac?

    --
    What?
  34. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by Duradin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Innocent until proven guilty is (was? seems to be out of fashion these days) a necessary legal concept.

    However, for consumers, it is a very dangerous approach when dealing with questionable businesses. Caveat emptor and all that.

  35. Well I'll be damned - I never noticed that by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 1
    I owe you a debt of gratitude.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:Well I'll be damned - I never noticed that by stoofa · · Score: 1

      Nice to have been able to help.

      How did I discover it?

      After a very nasty system crash I had to rebuild my Mac and so had to go through all the software updates AGAIN and once I had done the last one I was ranting to myself (yes, correct usage of 'myself') and said "Why don't they just have an option to install it and download it at the same time? They could put it up here."

      Upon saying the word 'here' I clicked the menu to show where I thought it should go... and there it was already.

      I then rebuilt it all again and did it properly.

  36. Idiots by RavenChild · · Score: 1, Informative

    The people commenting on the linked paged are idiots. This is not a typical "Hackintosh." They claim to have EFI emulated so that there is no need to hack your copy of OSX. You are able to install right from the Leopard CD. This isn't using OSx86.

    1. Re:Idiots by Swampash · · Score: 1



      Was it the complaints about not having 2-button mice, or the ranting about not being able to dual-boot with Windows that gave it away?

  37. What would I use expandibility for? by argent · · Score: 1

    Out of curiosity, what exactly would you put in those PCI slots if Apple made such a consumer machine?

    What I would want to put in it would depend on what it starts with. Since I don't expect them to build my ideal machine, I just want to be able to make something that's got what I need without having to pay 3 times as much as I can afford for a bunch of stuff I don't need.

    If it had intel integrated video, I'd definitely need a video card.

    I need at least one 3.5" drive bay.

    I'd want two 3.5" drive bays, so I can run RAID-1 internal.

    I want to be able to upgrade the internal CDROM.

    It would be nice to be able to add eSATA... it's got less latency than Firewire. That's not a requirement but it's something I'd be likely to add if it was an option.

    Adequate cooling is a must. That's a big drawback on the mini.

    What I *don't* need: I don't need the Mac Pro's 8 cores. Two cores is plenty. Two cores socketed so I could upgrade to four later on would be more than ample.

    What I don't even want: integrated display. I have a perfectly good display already... and a KVM.

    Alternatives that would make my happy: a "Mini pro" with two 3.5" drive bays and a decent GPU, or an "iSwitch", an iMac with an internal KVM so I can toggle between it and my wintendo, or maybe a networked window system that virtualized OpenGL ove the network so I could get decent video performance over the network from the Mac. Screen scrapers like VNC and RDP need not apply.

    1. Re:What would I use expandibility for? by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      As I suspected. Most consumers simply don't need or want what you want. If they want an external drive, FireWire is good enough. The factory CD/DVD is good enough. Most consumers don't even know what eSATA is. Yes, it sucks to be a geek in a consumer world.

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    2. Re:What would I use expandibility for? by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

      a DVD / CDWR is not good enough when you have to pay $200 more in the mini for a DVDRW drive and you still only get 1gb for ram at $799.

  38. How long until Apple Sues? by Kagato · · Score: 1

    Apple legal isn't going to let this stand. Even IF everything is legit, they won't have the money to defend themselves against Apple.

  39. Just one question.... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

    ...if everyone goes out & buys one of these, what will the "official" fanbois all move to in order to remain in an exclusive little elitist club?

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    1. Re:Just one question.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like donate money to sue this guy behind Psystar, even if Apple doesnt?

  40. The 80s called... by nabasu · · Score: 1

    ...it wants it "IBM compatible"-PC back... Seriously, if something like this was released during the personal computer wars, we might've cared.

  41. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by Malevolyn · · Score: 3, Funny

    You sure about the sober thing? I find Apple's visual effects much more entertaining when I'm not sober.

    --
    Your ad here.
  42. Uh oh by moosesocks · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think I just heard the sound of an iChair being thrown against a wall....

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    1. Re:Uh oh by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      and iDontgiveashit.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:Uh oh by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      iDevelopers, iDevelopers, iDevelopers!

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    3. Re:Uh oh by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      iApathy

      iDontcare

      iNobodycares

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    4. Re:Uh oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I just heard the sound of an iChair being thrown against a wall.... I couldn't hear it over that vacuum cleaner noise coming from the pc.
    5. Re:Uh oh by firstojune · · Score: 1

      What? Didn't they invent the iWall yet? Bah, Apple's not what it used to be anymore.

  43. I run software update on my hackintosh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only patch you can't get that way would be 10.5.2, 10.5.3, etc. But everything else patches fine.

  44. It is a fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It IS a hoax. They claimed that their "open" computers ran retail Mac OS X straight away, from the box. It's a lie: they come with a patched OS X pre-installed. You won't be able to update it and you won't be able to install a retail OS X.

    Basically, they are reselling other people's work and patching OS X.

    1. Re:It is a fraud by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Basically, they are reselling other people's work

      Ahem! OS X (=sold by Apple) is built on a BSD core (=other people's work).

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:It is a fraud by Jellybob · · Score: 1
      Yes, and the license for the BSD core allows exactly that.

      Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification...


      The Mac OS license does not allow that (as they are entitled to do by the BSD license). And lets face it, Mac OS isn't exactly a few patches on top of BSD.
    3. Re:It is a fraud by MBGMorden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      BUT, Apple is still being paid for their OS, which is the only item that many people are interested in. Their EULA says that you can only install it on their hardware, but it's a clause that is QUITE likely to be shot down in court.

      As to "profiting off someone else's work", EVERYBODY does that to some extent. ISP's are "profiting" off of Google, Ebay, etc because people buy internet access because of those items. Gas stations are profiting off of car manufaturers because they supply fuel for something that someone else made. Paper companies profit from fax/copier manufacturers because they generate a need for their product.

      The bottom line is that Apple sells an operating system. They have a legally questionable clause in there stating that when you buy it you can't install it except on computers that they deem appropriate (namely, ones they made themselves). If that clause is successfully shot down, things will likely return to a semblance of fairness: people who purchase software from a company can install it wherever and on whatever they want to.

      I mean seriously: if Microsoft came out with EULA stipulations tomorrow that stated that regardless of how well it worked, you couldn't install MS Office (even a legally purchased copy) on a WINE-equipped Linux machine, Slashdot would shit a jagged brick coated in hot sauce. Apple does the same though and it's reasonable behavior.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:It is a fraud by sbeckstead · · Score: 0

      Have you actually read the ms office EULA. That clause is in there! Seriously it is. You just have to translate the legalese back into plain old english and translate to French and then German then back to english. It'll be there plain as day.

    5. Re:It is a fraud by Viewsonic · · Score: 1

      Microsoft already had clauses on what machines Windows could be installed on, if the vendors could sell other OSes or not, etc. Remember they got caught and punished for it? The same will happen with Apple. They may be told they cannot stop what hardware their OS is sold on.

    6. Re:It is a fraud by pizzach · · Score: 1

      I mean seriously: if Microsoft came out with EULA stipulations tomorrow that stated that regardless of how well it worked, you couldn't install MS Office (even a legally purchased copy) on a WINE-equipped Linux machine, Slashdot would shit a jagged brick coated in hot sauce. Apple does the same though and it's reasonable behavior.

      I think this mostly comes down to fear that these clones might bankrupt the company based on Apple's past exeriences. Even if they don't, Mac OS X at $130 is probably subisdized by hardware hardware sales. Without that money Mac OS X could possibly suffer from lack of funding, losing the very gleam that made you want it in the first place...or be forced to jump to Windows Super Ultimate Edition price.

      You can be right, and you can be DEAD right. And you can't always have your cake and eat it too.

      Of course, Apple has diversified since it's last jaunt with clones...

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    7. Re:It is a fraud by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Mac OS X at $130 is probably subisdized by hardware hardware sales. Without that money Mac OS X could possibly suffer from lack of funding, losing the very gleam that made you want it in the first place...or be forced to jump to Windows Super Ultimate Edition price. What's wrong with that?

      If they can't make a profit selling the OS for $130, then they should raise the price to one where they can make a profit. And if their OS is so expensive to make that the unsubsidized price is too high for customers to afford, well, I guess that takes care of the clone problem, right?
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    8. Re:It is a fraud by pizzach · · Score: 1

      You would be switching the problem around from being unsupported to being too expensive and likely be effectively in the same rutt. See the circle? Too expensive?

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    9. Re:It is a fraud by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Well, the full price for Windows Vista Ultimate is $319. Let's suppose OS X ends up being even more expensive, somehow, and is priced at $500.

      If you buy a compatible PC for $500 and the OS costs another $500, you're still only paying $1000 for an expandable Mac desktop, which is a bargain compared to the Mac Pro.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    10. Re:It is a fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean seriously: if Microsoft came out with EULA stipulations tomorrow that stated that regardless of how well it worked, you couldn't install MS Office (even a legally purchased copy) on a WINE-equipped Linux machine, Slashdot would shit a jagged brick coated in hot sauce. Apple does the same though and it's reasonable behavior. But they DO have such a clause in their EULA. You must not install Windows on a virtual machine (iirc only Vista Ultimate permits that).
    11. Re:It is a fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BUT, Apple is still being paid for their OS, which is the only item that many people are interested in.

      Apple is only being paid for an OS upgrade, not a full retail version.
    12. Re:It is a fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, but perhaps someone here is and can explain how Apple's EULA hardware restriction differs from, say, MS's Office Home and Student restrictions.

    13. Re:It is a fraud by tourvil · · Score: 1

      Have you actually read the ms office EULA. That clause is in there! Seriously it is. You just have to translate the legalese back into plain old english and translate to French and then German then back to english. It'll be there plain as day.

      Microsoft EULAs are much better in the original Klingon.
    14. Re:It is a fraud by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft already had clauses on what machines Windows could be installed on, if the vendors could sell other OSes or not, etc. Remember they got caught and punished for it?"

      They got caught and punished for abusing a monopoly. Those tactics would have been perfectly legal if Microsoft weren't deemed to have a monopoly on desktop operating systems.

      "The same will happen with Apple"

      The same will happen to Apple if they ever reach a position where Macs are deemed to have a monopoly of the desktop computer market.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    15. Re:It is a fraud by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      I'm not denying that the BSD license allows them to do it - but the core point of Apple selling the work of other people still stands.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    16. Re:It is a fraud by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "I think this mostly comes down to fear that these clones might bankrupt the company based on Apple's past exeriences."

      The only thing that nearly bankrupted Apple was Apple itself. The current Apple management team knows this, hence the fact that they're running a very different company from the one that existed before Jobs returned to the helm.

      " Even if they don't, Mac OS X at $130 is probably subisdized by hardware hardware sales."

      I doubt that the boxed set is in any way subsidised from hardware sales, although the ones bundled with Macs (and indeed a growing range of other hardware that uses it) obviously are, much as OEM versions of Windows are also subsidised from hardware sales (and cost a small fraction of what they sell boxed sets for). The fact of the matter is that OS X costs significantly less than Windows to develop (there are many reasons for this), and it doesn't have to act as a cash cow that finances other projects which bleed red ink for years, so Apple can afford to sell it for less while still making a tidy profit on each box.

      "Of course, Apple has diversified since it's last jaunt with clones"

      And as we've seen with the iPhone, iPod Touch, and AppleTV, OS X is a central part of their current diversification strategy. In fact, it would probably be fair to say that rather than hardware being used to subsidise OS X, it's now a case of OS X giving them the capability to develop new hardware far more cheaply and easily than would be possible if they didn't have a multi-platform, scalable, and highly modular operating system to use on it.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    17. Re:It is a fraud by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      If you buy a compatible PC for $500 and the OS costs another $500, you're still only paying $1000 for an expandable Mac desktop, which is a bargain compared to the Mac Pro.

      Which is why Apple will never do it, and some fly-by-night is trying to fill the niche.

  45. What's the "something?" by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Not only that but if something doesn't work, who are you going to turn to.

    Hardware? Psystar. Software? Probably Psystar or the OSx86 community. People who buy these machines know what they're getting into. And the point is not to save money; the point is to have a machine running OSx86 that breaks Steve's matrix.

    --

    +++ATH0
  46. Yep by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    I would mod you up if I could. The real reason to run a Hackintosh is that Apple's product matrix is left with an intentional hole in it to force people to buy up to an insanely-specced, insanely-priced Mac Pro, or something that doesn't really fit their needs (iMac) to satisfy Jobs' ego about how wonderful AIO is.

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Yep by Duradin · · Score: 1

      I've always figured that they specifically don't want a low end version of the Mac Pro because the people that are too cheap to buy a Pro would be the ones that would buy an "Amateur" and slap el-cheapo discount cards in it and create a very unfavorable view of Apple from their experience (that they created themselves but will blame Apple for).

      If you have the money for a Pro you're probably not going to slap a $50 card from walmart into it.

    2. Re:Yep by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      I've always figured that they specifically don't want a low end version of the Mac Pro because the people that are too cheap to buy a Pro would be the ones that would buy an "Amateur" and slap el-cheapo discount cards in it and create a very unfavorable view of Apple from their experience (that they created themselves but will blame Apple for).
      That's ridiculous. Some of us simply loathe the idea of paying a premium for a name or fancy color scheme. I have students who would love to be able to use Logic instead of Cakewalk Sonar, but just can't afford a Mac Pro so they can use their venerable MOTU hardware (w/PCI interface).

      If I could buy a middle price-range Mac with slots, I'd be more inclined to put a decent video card in it that I would be to put a crappy one. And if you happen to be a digital audio workstation user, a $50 video card may just be sufficient (if you buy it from one of the low-price joints).

      If I go out and buy a mid-price Dell or other PC, and put in a really bad video card, I would not blame Dell for the poor experience.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    3. Re:Yep by jimicus · · Score: 1

      If I go out and buy a mid-price Dell or other PC, and put in a really bad video card, I would not blame Dell for the poor experience. Well done. You've completely missed the point,

      A $50 expansion card from Wal-Mart (NOTE: Not necessarily a graphics card, could be anything) probably won't be supported in OS X. Though it's fair to assume it would be based on a common-as-muck cheap Chinese chipset which was reasonably supported under Windows.

      You might think "ah well, it was a cheap card, what did I expect?" The novice who's never even considered that it might sometimes be a bad idea to buy the cheapest expansion card (or even be aware that a large choice exists) probably won't.

      By excluding the market that would do this, Apple are essentially ensuring that the stack of cheap & nasty expansion boards which aren't worth the silicon, copper & plastic they're made with don't damage their "it Just Works" image.
    4. Re:Yep by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Nah, they just don't see the need for the "tower-upgrade-mentality" anymore. That's so 1990s. I bet Steve is actually offended at the sight of Mac Pros and wishes he could turn it into a lamp-looking device.

    5. Re:Yep by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Fancy color scheme? When is the last time color scheme's had anything do do with Apple COMPUTERS? (leave iPods out for the moment). Last I checked Macs only come in black, white, or silver.

    6. Re:Yep by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      I'm not bashing you personally, but the money thing is getting kind of silly at this point. I'm not going to do a point by point breakdown of prices, but Macs really are not that much more expensive.

      Of course you could do what I did- I saved money for 3 years to get a MacBook Pro. Probably could have got a dell laptop in 2 years.

      Whatever- I like my Mac, some people don't, some people like to rig cardboard and bale wire boxes.

      Why the heck do we keep having these discussions? Get what works for ya'!

      (Don't forget to watch for the monkeys, they are sneaky and have a tendency to fling poo)

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  47. What's the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really don't see the point of making such a hard effort to use a software the vendor explicitly won't support and probably will try to break.

    The only reason it would make any sense to clone the apple non-standard would be to provide powerpc-based machines, but even then, not clonnnig apple is still a good idea.

    1. Re:What's the point? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      but even then, not clonnnig apple is still a good idea. Why not? There are a lot of us who would be thrilled to be able to run Mac OS (and for me, Logic) on our own hardware.

      Maybe this will encourage Apple to rethink its strategy. It has happened before, you know.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    2. Re:What's the point? by lawn.ninja · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I still find it amusing that so many people think that if you put OSX on a OC you'll get the same experience as you do on Mac hardware... You folks know that if Mac ran on anything it would be just a buggy and fucked up as windows right? The only reason it runs smoothly now is because Apple controls the hardware. The day you can run it on any machine in the world will be the day that Mac zealots finally shut the fuck up about how superior their shit ass OS is. The world will one day learn that Linux is the true way through. Until then clever marketing will sell hunks of shit, and create a cult around them. iFag.

    3. Re:What's the point? by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I agree. It's the same reason your game console doesn't crash very often. Limiting what hardware you are running on greatly reduces the complexity of your code, and makes everything much easier to support.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    4. Re:What's the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not? There are a lot of us who would be thrilled to be able to run Mac OS (and for me, Logic) on our own hardware.
      There's an easy way to do that already. It's called buying a Mac.

      Maybe this will encourage Apple to rethink its strategy. It has happened before, you know.
      Yeah, Apple rethought their strategy last time they saw people selling Mac clones: they stopped licensing MacOS to them, because people selling Mac clones was killing Apple.

      There are better ways to encourage people to rethink their strategy than violating their EULA. And if Apple don't want to rethink their strategy, what the hell gives you the right to stop them selling their OS however the hell they like?
    5. Re:What's the point? by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      Thing is, I bet most of us here on /. would run it w/o support from Apple... I mean, how many of us actually get any kind of support from Microsoft?

      Additionally, there could be a "system check" disc like you could make for Windows NT that would probe all hardware and tell you if it was supported or not.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    6. Re:What's the point? by Bob-taro · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I still find it amusing that so many people think that if you put OSX on a OC you'll get the same experience as you do on Mac hardware... You folks know that if Mac ran on anything it would be just a buggy and fucked up as windows right? The only reason it runs smoothly now is because Apple controls the hardware.

      That is just a hypothesis (granted it's a very plausible and reasonable one). OSX already does run on a variety of hardware -- just not as big a variety as Windows. While you probably can't run OSX on just any PC, you could probably spec a system out for it specifically (as Psystar has apparently done). The most interesting thing about this company might be that it is a chance to see the hypothesis tested. Linux users are already quite willing to accept hardware limitations to avoid OS instability.

      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    7. Re:What's the point? by stormguard2099 · · Score: 1

      is it possible to mod this insightful and troll at the same time?

      --
      http://greenobyl.com/ please.... think of the children!!
    8. Re:What's the point? by mollymoo · · Score: 1

      You folks know that if Mac ran on anything it would be just a buggy and fucked up as windows right?

      You mean like Linux, which runs on loads of hardware and is just as buggy and fucked up as Windows? Oh, wait...

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    9. Re:What's the point? by lawn.ninja · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... my linux boxes all run fine. Matter of fact the only real problem I've ever had was getting my old matrox dual head video card to work properly and that was in 2000. Other than that you'll have to expand upon these bugs you speak of. As far as the windows stuff goes... Yeah it's totally buggy, I agree. I work on that crap ass OS everyday of my life as an admin. I think the best part of this all was that it was my experiences as a windows admin that convinced me to run Linux. P.S. There is no such thing as a forward slash.

    10. Re:What's the point? by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      The irony being that OSX doesn't run all that well on Apple hardware either.

    11. Re:What's the point? by mollymoo · · Score: 1

      I didn't think sarcasm tags would be required for that one; that the "Oh, wait..." would suffice. I guess I was wrong.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    12. Re:What's the point? by lawn.ninja · · Score: 1

      Sorry mate, I'm used to being attacked whenever the M$ word comes up.

  48. Look at the bright side by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    at least users of these machines won't reboot after every damn download of iTunes and such.

    I wish I were kidding.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  49. Hah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just PC-case-modded my box to look like a Mac, and I installed Ubuntu...

    It fooled my hipster girlfriend!

  50. shipping addresses by anothergene · · Score: 1

    I wonder how many of them are due to ship to #1 Infinite Loop?

    --
    Who's leg do I have to hump to get a dry martini around here?
  51. So now I suppose by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    1) "In Soviet Russia, ship clones Mac"?

    2) "Mac clones ship"?! That's not news

    C'mon! One of these has gotta hit...let's hear some laughs out there...You think I like doing this??

    BTW I just upgraded to 9.22... a REAL Mac OS... not one of those phonies with unix underwear... on a real Mac... with no fan... so it's dead quiet... except for the CRT... they all got that horrible squeal they make... ok, and the occasional popping noises... should I be concerned about that?

    --
    What?
    1. Re:So now I suppose by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      I just upgraded to 9.22... a REAL Mac OS... not one of those phonies with unix underwear...
      )Oh come on. "Classic" Mac OS had the nicest interface back then -- still better than OSX in some aspects, actually -- but any app crash would bring the whole thing down.
    2. Re:So now I suppose by Megane · · Score: 1

      BTW I just upgraded to 9.22... a REAL Mac OS

      Good luck using the Installer to add or remove features, then. The last version with a proper installer was 9.2.0. I've heard of rumors of a 9.2.2 Golden Master existing, but even being on Apple's developer program, I've never seen one. Maybe someone hacked one up from the 9.2.0 installer.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    3. Re:So now I suppose by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      Mac OS 9 was nothing like a *real* OS. Now System 7, that was a real OS. It had everything - small, fast, stable and modern. 7.1 was probably the finest pre-OS X version of the Mac OS ever.

      Ha! 9.22! I laugh at your 9.22! I dance on the grave of 9.22!

    4. Re:So now I suppose by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

      And 7.6 was the worst. Not just the worst MacOS, but a good candidate for worst OS ever. It was so unstable that I found myself actually preferring Windows 95. Ugh! The horror!

  52. Maybe it's time for a 2nd war... by krischik · · Score: 1

    When I needed needed to replace my Wifes computer I looked at the options and well - I did not like the idea of Vista at all, and I waited to the Linux break theue for don't know how many years. In the end I bougth an iMac for her. And damm it - best decision I ever made (computer wise) - ad she just loves the box.

    Point of the little story is: May be it's time for a 2nd run on the "personal computer wars" - maybe it's time to replace Windows.

    And while I probably replace my Linux system with a MacPro when time is due I welcome the options that those less coin on there hand might get a change on a better OS as well.

    Martin

    PS: As for Linux as alternative: I use SuSE since V.5.1 - but I now come to the conclusion that it still takes to much quality time to configure and maintain. As does Windows - configuring my Wifes new iMac was an eye opener.

  53. Re:What would I use expandability for? by argent · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most consumers simply don't need or want what you want.

    First, I distinguished between "need" and "want". The desires you chose to ridicule were not in the "needs". You didn't ask what our "needs" were, you asked what we would do with expandability. If you asked "what do you need expandability for" you'd get a different answer.

    So once you eliminate that straw man, what I need is an adequate GPU, an adequate hard drive, and no integrated display... and a consumer price. Maybe 40% over what Psystar is asking for their box? That would give Apple their usual markup.

    The argument that "most consumers don't need" those features is a bit circular, since they're not available from Apple and haven't been available from Apple at a consumer price since Steve Jobs took over. On the other hand, they *are* available from Wintel box shippers, and most consumers are still buying Wintel boxes.

    Don't assume you know all the reasons why they do that. I know I'm regularly surprised by people's answers to why they still use Windows after they express desire for my desktop.

    And do consider that you'll never find out if you just ask Mac users, because that's a sample that's pre-selected to only include people for whom the current line of Macs is at least minimally acceptable.

  54. that fan noise... by legrimpeur · · Score: 1

    these overpriced, unupgradable Apple computers... they don't even provide such an agreeable, reassuring, loneliness killing fan noise, heck!!

  55. Then again they may not sue by Infonaut · · Score: 1

    Apple legal isn't going to let this stand. Even IF everything is legit, they won't have the money to defend themselves against Apple.

    If this one-man wonder of a company totally screws up, which is likely, it will just reinforce the notion in consumer's minds that the best purveyor of Macs is *drumroll* Apple.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Then again they may not sue by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

      Apple legal isn't going to let this stand. Even IF everything is legit, they won't have the money to defend themselves against Apple.

      If this one-man wonder of a company totally screws up, which is likely, it will just reinforce the notion in consumer's minds that the best purveyor of Macs is *drumroll* Apple.

      It doesn't even have to be a one-man wonder of a company. Look at Daystar. They had permission to create official Mac clones, and those didn't take.
      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
  56. quicktime only? by Stewie241 · · Score: 1

    From the Psyster website: Sorry about being Quicktime-only but this was put together in OS X Leopard, using Final Cut Pro, on an Open Computer.

    are you really not able to create non-quicktime video on an Apple?

    1. Re:quicktime only? by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

      From the Psyster website: Sorry about being Quicktime-only but this was put together in OS X Leopard, using Final Cut Pro, on an Open Computer. are you really not able to create non-quicktime video on an Apple? You assume their using an Apple and not one of their own products.
      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
    2. Re:quicktime only? by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      No, that's just not true (thankfully!). Final Cut Pro outputs to lots of different formats. It's just that this guy chose to output into a QuickTime container. He's probably lazy.

  57. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Why not? He's not the government!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  58. And yet... by Gm4n · · Score: 1

    ... is there any proof this isn't just some guy's hackintosh? This could be a "we're legitimate, really!" stunt from Psystar. I'm hoping they're real, but this hasn't exactly convinced me yet. And as a side note, do these things come with a standard vacuuming attachment? =)

    --
    1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
  59. IANAL by Skeet112 · · Score: 1

    But, if I remember correctly, their software is LICENSED and not sold -as is-.

    This doesn't sound like a hack at all. It sounds like an interpretation to their software licensing agreement, in Psystar's favor. They have probably heavily studied that there is no binding agreement in that license that says they cannot do this. Otherwise, it's blatantly obvious that it's Court-worthy. I have not seen the terms of their license, personally.

  60. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Until I put my fingers into his wounds...

    I don't require hands-on with every bit of hardware and software in the world. That why we have reviews.

    I like this idea. As soon as I'm convinced this actually works, I'm checking one out. I'm hoping this hastens the day I can run Mac OS on my own hardware.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  61. Over priced and ugly by ToasterTester · · Score: 1

    The thing doesn't come with the OS so add another $150 that mean for $50 more you could buy a real Mac Mini and have a supported machine that is also smaller, better looking, and duals boot any Intel OS you want. I don't think Psystar was thinking too clearly when they decided to kick Apple in the shins. But being just one more inexpensive PC on the market it is getting them some attention.

  62. I converted my gaming machine into one by Arcturax · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just had to add a hard disk for Mac OS X and some more ram (upped to 4GB or corsair 800 mhz) and off I went. I used a Gigabyte P35-DS3L and a Core 2 Duo e6750 processor, evga Nvidia 8800 GT graphics for the gaming rig and the Kalyway installer to put it on the new 500 GB western digital hard disk.

    It is fast fast fast fast fast.

    Only few things I have to put up with.

    1. You have to turn on AHCI in the BIOS or you will kernel panic randomly. This makes the machine sit for about 20-30 seconds probing SATA ports and whatnot until it finally launches into the OS bootloader. This is a bios/board problem, not an OS X problem. Annoying at worst.

    2. Machine will sleep (using kernel patch) but upon wake, I have to manually assign an IP then go back to DHCP to get the machine to go back online.

    3. If I boot into windows and want to go back to Mac OS, I have to turn off the computer, unplug it and wait 15 seconds before plugging in and starting back up. If I don't, after the white screen with the apple, the graphics card will shut down and I can't see. Must be some flag in the card or board that windows sets that the drivers I'm using isn't resetting.

    4. Switching resolution can cause a blue screen where you can't see anything. Rebooting will take care of it.

    5. Some 3D apps won't work. Second Life is one example.

    --

    --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    1. Re:I converted my gaming machine into one by Christophotron · · Score: 1

      I built my GF a computer with nearly the same specifications (GA-P35-DS3L, EVGA 8800GT SC, 2 gigs of ram, C2D E6550 OC'ed to 3.5 Ghz)

      Since she's a music professional who uses Macs everyday at college, she might really like dual-booting OSX at home. With OSx86, is it really a workable machine that she could use everyday or is it just a hacky experimental thing? Points 3, 4, and 5 are kind of worrysome but it looks promising.

    2. Re:I converted my gaming machine into one by hyperz69 · · Score: 1

      Using an EFI string Will remove the blue screen issue as well as the driver issue when switching OSes... you may also have a bad NVCAP number or being using an older version of NVInject. The network issue you have is a known issue for that board, and using a static number will resolve it *most routers support this*. Other boards do not have this issue. Your 3D apps issue is a problem with your SMBIOS, get netkas's new SMBIOS and it will resolve it. The issue comes when asking for a serial number for the machine, an invalid number is returned.

    3. Re:I converted my gaming machine into one by alices+ice · · Score: 1

      the second life problem is likely the applesimbios , you need the original apple one, or the updated netkas one that'll also give your hackintosh a fake mac serial number

    4. Re:I converted my gaming machine into one by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      With OSx86, is it really a workable machine that she could use everyday or is it just a hacky experimental thing?

      I use my Hackintosh with nearly the same hardware for everyday. It replaced a Hackitosh I used everyday since 2006. The main difference mine has with hers (and the parents) is the lack of the 8xxx series Nvidia card and a better CPU. Since those are brand new they have a little more trouble to work than a 7xxx series card (like my 7900 GS). In fact, almost every problem the parent poster has (except the network thing) has to do with the newness of the graphics card.

      If you don't want to replace it temporarily, then your best bet for ease is wait for a 10.4.3 disk to show up on the Pirate Bay in a few months. By then all the problems with 8xxx series cards should be fixed. Here is a guide for that motherboard to help you.

      Honestly my policy with Hackintosh is that I love it for myself (four core Mac for less than half what a Mac Pro costs) but I would not subject my friends and family to it (well, except my mom, but she lives in the same town as me for support). The main reason for keeping it to myself is that you can't upgrade without following a guide. At first I thought that was not that bad (I just told my mom "don't ever except any upgrades") but I learned the hard way that computer users are conditioned to just click "Yes" to everything without reading what it says, and so upgrades happen and OSX86 installs get screwed. If you think your GF can have good mouse control and you or her can get through that guide then give it a shot in a few months. OSX86 overall is VERY stable in my experience when set up right, and can be very rewarding.

  63. Capitalisation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read the headline as
    "First Psistar McClones sheep."
    and thought new cheap cloning method.
    Then I reread it as
    "First, Psistar Mac clones ship."
    and thought wacky SF plot.
    The actual story is kind of lame compared to that.

  64. Re:What would I use expandability for? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    The argument that "most consumers don't need" those features is a bit circular, since they're not available from Apple and haven't been available from Apple at a consumer price since Steve Jobs took over. On the other hand, they *are* available from Wintel box shippers, and most consumers are still buying Wintel boxes.

    Don't assume you know all the reasons why they do that. I know I'm regularly surprised by people's answers to why they still use Windows after they express desire for my desktop.

    And do consider that you'll never find out if you just ask Mac users, because that's a sample that's pre-selected to only include people for whom the current line of Macs is at least minimally acceptable. Very, very well worded post. It's so tiring to argue with fanatics sometimes who claim (rather obviously) that the current Macs meet the needs of Mac users (duh), and then resort to the idiotic argument that Apple doesn't want your business if you're not satified with what they currently make.

    I'm sure if a month before the MacBook Air was announced you argued for a light noteboook in the same way, they'd argue "You should just buy a Sony Vaio. Apple doesn't want to cater to your niche. They don't want you as a customer.". The truth is that Apple, like any company, wants to make as much money as possible, and that usually includes acquiring as many customers as they can.
    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  65. PA Semi Chips to the Rescue by BoRegardless · · Score: 1

    Would not be surprised.

  66. First thing's first by dr00g911 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    These aren't clones. They're Hackintoshes done for you and then shipped out. The OS isn't legit, iLife isn't legit, and you're dumping entirely too much money on the hardware that they're shipping out as there's no software cost at all.

    I've got to wonder why Software Update isn't working on them, even though they've admitted to using the EFI loader hack. In my experience, only OS updates (ie 10.5.1->10.5.2) are potentially dangerous anymore, and I managed to update from 10.5.1 to 10.5.2 without issue on an oldish Shuttle AMD barebones box here after patching EFI/Vanilla kernel.

    It's almost trivial to get a vanilla kernel up & running on an Intel hackintosh now, only slightly more difficult on an AMD box -- there are even several quite good pre-packaged installers now with 10.5.2 that do everything for you if you don't like to get your hands dirty.

    All that said, it's going to be funny when all of the people duped into buying these can't update to 10.5.4 or whatever and end up with a bricked box. At least if you do it yourself, you develop the skillset to boot into single user mode, disable kexts, remove caches etc.

    Maintaining a functioning, stable, up-to-date Hackintosh (with Quartz Extreme running properly etc) is a lot like keeping a '60s Volkswagen running. Not particularly difficult, but you build up the skills over time and it takes quite a bit of patience. I think there are going to be a lot of pissed off people once they realize what they've bought into.

    1. Re:First thing's first by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what I was thinking. Hackintosh was the first thought. If this company exists and people are dumb enough to buy one, haha at them.

      Also, Psystar (again if they exist) better have some good damn lawyers because there is no way Apple is going to not sue them. They already threatened osx86 Project with litigation; now that a company is trying to make money Apple will certainly sue and take them out.

      Apple is no longer interested in clones. Clones means less money (in the long run) to Apple I guess. I would disagree.

      And yes, maintaining a Hackintosh is a pain at times if you really want to be fully up-to-date. There are billions of hacks and everything to get it going. I was using my laptop as a hackintosh for like a week and it was interesting but no Quartz and all meant it was going to be a limited experience anyway. Today it would work and I even ran Leopard (hacked version of course) natively just to try it, but my problem with OS X is simple: not enough free (freeware and FOSS) programs. And also, as with Linux DE's, there is a lot of missing functionality that Windows just has. Handling RAR's in Mac is about the same in Linux, you use unrar or rar in a terminal. I don't mind this, but it gets annoying. A lot of file formats are simply not as easily usable on anything but Windows (namely, MDF/MDS, GI, all kinds of disc formats; some compression formats; etc etc). Consider that I have to use UltraISO in Wine to convert formats to ISO (a usable format in Linux). cdemu died, it's totally unmaintained and requires changes to the code to compile (the kernel functions it uses are deprecated) and even then it is not a replacement for mounting an ISO with mount. Believe it or not, and I love Linux (using Firefox on Gentoo to type this), Linux is missing so much. I could easily say the same for OS X.

    2. Re:First thing's first by SkipRosebaugh · · Score: 1

      Handling RARs in Mac is done with The Unarchiver

      And are you really surprised that MDFs, created by proprietary Windows software, don't have a convenient tool on Mac? Try using an open format instead.

    3. Re:First thing's first by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      I'm not surprised at all. It just sucks that people think proprietary formats are fine. :/

  67. Well, as Chandler Bing would say... by wernst · · Score: 1

    Having watched the video, could that computer BE any louder?

  68. History is repeating itself by grilled-cheese · · Score: 1

    This sounds an awful lot like the early days of home computing with PC-compatible hardware. Maybe this is the year for Tandy to make a comeback.

  69. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    There's no copyright violation, so none of the extreme remedies in the Copyright Act apply.

    If (and only if) Psystar preinstalls the OS for the customer (as previous articles have claimed they plan to do), then it would be copyright infringement.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  70. licensed clones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it's time for apple to take another look at licensed mac clones. It's true that the last time they did such a thing, the clone makers undercut apple and apple nearly went out of business.

    However, one problem apple often has is that being the only mac maker, they are always in the precarious position between having gaps in their hardware lineup, which causes people to look to windows machines to meet their needs, or having too many options and ending up with excess stock of the options that don't sell that well.

    Servers and game machines (which require good graphics, but not necessarily a workstation class processor) are areas that are traditionally under served by apple's line up. It would make sense to allow a smaller company to make clones for such machines, and then dictate pricing and high licensing fees to said company to insure that they couldn't undercut apple. Dell wouldn't work for this, since they are too big to let apple dictate pricing and configuration. A subsidiary, or smaller startup with less leverage would make more sense.

    The benefit of having another company do this is that it externalizes risks associated with having an expansive product line, while avoids digging into apple's core market's, such as desktop users, students, and graphics professionals.

    1. Re:licensed clones by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      I agree, imagine if Apple licensed OSX in OEM form to the following companies:

      IBM/Lenovolo You'd have IBM Thinkpads that could be called Macpads.

      Dell, you'd have iDells being sold over the Internet.

      Compaq already has the iPaq so it would be called the MacPaq.

      Apple can finally settle with eMachines and the eOne ripping off the original iMac, and call their machines the iPC or iMachines iOne.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    2. Re:licensed clones by dbcad7 · · Score: 1

      I am surprised they haven't gone after the emacs "operating system" by now.

      --
      waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
    3. Re:licensed clones by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      The FSF should sue Apple over the name of this eMac becuase it resembles emacs too much.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  71. No different than a pirated Windows box by billcopc · · Score: 1

    What Psystar is doing is not much different than the sketchy PC vendors that preinstall an upgrade copy of Windows. The main difference is Psystar most likely is not paying for the OS at all, since it is doubtful that Apple would allow it.

    Part of the high price of a Mac is the OS. The $129 pricing of the standalone MacOS is really more of an upgrade price, since you need to own a Mac in the first place, and you can't get the hardware without the OS so normally you'd have already tithed.

    The only thing Psystar is doing is using components that are known to work decently with the hacked OS, and then preloading the OS. It is legal in the USA ? Hell no. Does it make business sense ? Probably not.

    Who is more likely to buy a Psystar hackintosh ? The power user who has the time and patience to dabble with hacks and unsupported software ? No. He/she is more likely to build their own hackintosh from scratch.

    What about the non-techy users who just want a cheap Mac ? No, they wouldn't want a Psystar, because they need vendor support and they'd be better off with a true low-end Mac.

    So what are we to do, as tech fiends ? I think we should ignore Psystar. They have already gotten far more attention that they deserve, for what amounts to little more than a trendy piracy scheme. The moment the hardware starts shipping, someone from Apple is going to get their hands on one and lawsuits will fly.

    Who's to say the next Mac app you install isn't going to brick your Psystar ? All it needs to do is detect the unofficial hardware, blank out the BIOS EEPROM and call it a day. Hell, they could even replace the BIOS with a tiny script and image saying "The computer you are running is a fake Mac and is not licensed to run Mac OS. FOAD! - The Management"

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
    1. Re:No different than a pirated Windows box by Budenny · · Score: 1

      Three wrong statements:

      1) Its illegal in the US. It is not. It may be actionable in civil law. They are different.

      2) They are installing unlawful copies of OSX. There is no evidence of this. They seem to be installing copies purchased at retail, not directly from Apple on OEM terms.

      3) OSX is only available as an upgrade. No it is not. They are sold at retail, and do not require a preexisting installation.

      MacFud!

  72. Didn't someone already try this? by Doug52392 · · Score: 1

    I remember hearing about an open-source Mac OS operating system in the late 1990s or early 2000s, but the company making the operating system got sued out of existence....

  73. Reminds me of an old Apple problem... by Dekortage · · Score: 1

    The G5 series had a lot of loud fan problems, where a problem caused the variable-speed fans to all run at full blast. It was nearly as loud as the Psystar effect.

    --
    $nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
  74. re: Just label the computer "Apple"... by Neurotic+Nomad · · Score: 1

    Then, instead of just breaking the EULA, they will be breaking Trademark Law.

  75. Can't be too careful by fm6 · · Score: 1

    You also need to verify that you're not a character in "Total Recall", "The Matrix" or some other nothing-is-real movie.

  76. Naysayers by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In other words, it's not a hoax, but it is an ineptly implemented, poorly supported, piece of crap. That will show all the naysayers!</sarcasm>

    This whole episode is a reminder of Hanson's Law: Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by stupidity!

  77. This in no way proves the company exists by Stonent1 · · Score: 1

    Someone could have located the case used in the pictures on the website built a system inside it and then loaded a hacked copy of OSX on it. The company supposedly making these systems made all sorts of claims about the system. So why didn't they show that OpenGL worked, audio worked, ethernet worked etc?

  78. Why the slow BIOS bootup? by edmicman · · Score: 1

    Why does it take so long for the BIOS to come up after powering on? I counted ~14 seconds....I've NEVER seen a PC take that long to get from hitting the power button to just *showing* the BIOS. Wow....something funny going on??

    1. Re:Why the slow BIOS bootup? by sdnoob · · Score: 1

      i noticed that too..

      of the dozen or so pc's laying around here (ranging from celeron 500 to athlon x2 and a p4 3.2), the longest one takes to show something on an already-powered-on (like in the video) flat panel monitor is less than 5 seconds.

      granted, i haven't had a mac since the mac plus was all the rage, but even it didn't take that long just to put something on the screen -- and that had a crt to warm-up.

  79. Re:What would I use expandability for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for such a good explanation.

    I have a Mac Mini, because I needed a Mac for software testing, and the Mini was the least unsuitable for my needs... I don't have room for an iMac next to the massive and vastly superior monitor I already have on my desk, and a Mac Pro is totally overkill for my needs. The Mini is just as you say: underpowered, and has a nasty tendency to overheat badly (it's already killed one hard disk -- thankfully replaced under warranty).

    If there was anything like you describe, I would buy it like a shot. And I suspect there are many others like us. The fact that there isn't drives us to our different choices -- some buy Minis, some build Hackintoshes, some give up on Apple altogether. In no case does Apple benefit: either we do not buy from them at all, or we buy from them a computer that costs significantly less than we want to pay!

    If this is good business sense, it's hard for me to understand how. But I guess that's why I'm not as rich as Steve Jobs...

  80. What is Psystar really selling? by rudy_wayne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    All $399 gets you (or $999 for the "Pro" version) is a box full of generic PC components that are known to be more or less compatible with OSX. No monitor, no keyboard or mouse and *NO OPERATING SYSTEM*. An installed copy of OSX will cost you an extra $150. Since a genuine Apple Mac is really just a PC running OSX, it would make no sense for someone to buy a "Mac Clone" without OSX so I'm figuring that almost all the units Psystar sells will probably have OSX on them.

    Does Psystar's installation of OSX violate Apple's EULA? Is Apple's EULA even legal? I have no idea, but Psystar is not the company who is going to spend millions slugging it out in court trying to get Apple's EULA declared invalid. This is a Fly-By-Night operation and Psystar's behaviour so far -- from the constantly changing addresses to the questionable background of its owners to the fact that they have built their entire business model on selling freely available OSX hacks -- tells me exactly what is going to happen next:

    When Apple Apple sues -- and make no mistake, they will sue -- Psystar will fold and disappear. That's been the Psystar game plan all along. Take as many orders and collect as much money as possible before they get shut down. And if you happen to be one of the people waiting for delivery when Apple's lawyers attack, well, it sucks to be you.

  81. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  82. SCREW THE MAC CLONE!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want the remote controlled AC10!!!!!!

    http://gizmodo.com/384601/a10-rc-model-vs-the-real-thing-at-top-gun-2008

  83. Because by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    The choice should not be between "sensible hardware" and "good consumer operating system." That is a shitty, false binary choice that is imposed by Apple upon legions of people who want to run their platform.

    --

    +++ATH0
  84. Target markets by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Gamers and geeks simply aren't their target consumer market.

    And yet, with just a minimal amount of effort, they could easily serve the needs of these markets. All you have to do is hide a PCIe slot in there somewhere. You don't even have to advertise its existence; those who need it will know where to look.

    --

    +++ATH0
  85. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  86. Reasonable HD storage. by acomj · · Score: 1

    For those that want lots of fast storage (Ie photographers), the 2.5 inch HDD in the mini is too slow and small. The processor in the mini can handle it.

    A mini tower with 2x 3.5HDD for 1000$ would sell really well. (As a shareholder, I'm a little agravated that apple doesn't do this..)

        A tower that apple used to offer started at a reasonable 1600$. I think entry level towers are currently in the 3000$ range.

    1. Re:Reasonable HD storage. by mollymoo · · Score: 1

      What makes you think photographers are the only people who want lots of fast storage?

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
  87. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  88. Mac Pro sales by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    don't HAVE to be higher-margin than the machine you describe. The Mac Pro is, in fact, the best deal per-unit-hardware that Apple offers. Apple could make more margin on cheaper machines that do everything the Mac Pro does with very, very few exceptions.

    The problem is that no one actually NEEDS a Mac Pro. Nothing takes advantage of 8 cores. Nothing takes advantage of Xeons. Nothing requires higher-latency FB-DIMM RAM.

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Mac Pro sales by norkakn · · Score: 1

      A Maya Workstation.
      A Final Cut Workstation.

  89. Apple Clone by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1
  90. This makes no sense. by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Why does the scenario you depict not happen with PC makers? No one blames Dell when they change something in their PC and it breaks. The people who are savvy enough to upgrade their own graphics are savvy enough to know that Shit Happens When You Open The Case Sometimes.

    --

    +++ATH0
  91. Potential malware on Gizmodo site by GWD2 · · Score: 1

    When I clicked on the article "Psystar has begun shipping its Macintosh clones" site my copy of little snitch went crazy. Two automount processes showed up and an eject icon showed up next to my network icon. I took the mac directly into the local apple certified repair place.

    They pulled a copy of the web page from cache. We watched the process repeat, they verfied that someone had taken control of my Mac from this site. I'm doing a clean instal of the OS and hoping for the best....

    1. Re:Potential malware on Gizmodo site by osssmkatz · · Score: 1

      can you provide us with more information? OS version? browser used? browser version? process name?

      Thanks.

      --Sam

    2. Re:Potential malware on Gizmodo site by GWD2 · · Score: 1

      The Apple repair place backed off on the malware claim after quite a bit of internal debate. The site does create havoc on my Mac. Apparently the page takes more than 1 GB to load. This seems a bit much for a simple web page. The site also connects with several of other sites creating a bunch of network traffic. Why I get automount processes that I did not have before the visit is a mystery as is why the site is able to make an eject button appear next to the network icon when no other site does this. Iâ(TM)m running Mac OS 10.4.11 on a 1.5 GHz Powerbook G4. It has 1 GB of Ram. The browser is Safari 3.1.1 . I had installed the latest Apple security patches the day before I visited the site.

    3. Re:Potential malware on Gizmodo site by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The Apple repair place backed off on the malware claim after quite a bit of internal debate.

      Yeah, gotta keep that "nothing can infect a Mac" image.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  92. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? EULA by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1
    IIRC, the EULA on the software requires it be installed on an APPLE computer.

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  93. Another problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems just a little problem prone
    1 Its against the EULA
    2 There's no support on it
    3 It has no updates
    4 It's not a mac!

  94. Yes they can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and no they cannot void a warranty for using an aftermarket part


    Hmm, you need to check your facts boy, you're wrong.

    What the law says is they cannot void your warranty JUST for using aftermarket parts. HOWEVER, if said parts can be in any way responsible for the failure, you're fucked.

    http://www.ipdusa.com/Will-adding-aftermarket-performance-products-void-my-cars-factory-warranty/fi-28/

    SO if your electrical system screws up after you install your fancy stereo, and the manufacturer claims it was your stereo that did it, it's on YOU to prove otherwise.

    Good luck with that.

    And stop disseminating legal advice, or at least try not to talk out of your gaping asshole when you do.
  95. Wow! by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

    It clones a whole ship? How does it handle the sails?

    (ba-dum-bum).

    Thanks, I'll be here all week. Try the veal.

    --
    "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
  96. Re:What would I use expandability for? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    Very, very well worded post. It's so tiring to argue with fanatics sometimes who claim (rather obviously) that the current Macs meet the needs of Mac users (duh), and then resort to the idiotic argument that Apple doesn't want your business if you're not satified with what they currently make. That's not the argument at all. That's what your side of the argument is hearing, however. What is at the center of this cultural debate is engineering tradeoffs. If a company COULD make a geek-a-liciously delicious mid-range tower with the great looks of an Apple product, it would have been done already. Apple has to make trade-offs, and for THEIR target market, they've made the decision to go after that. Their is less competition in the high-end market, and Apple has solid footing in that ground. (The same reason BMW doesn't make economy cars, even though they could). You can call that "not wanting your business" if you must, but it's not like Apple is dissing the lower segment on purpose; they have to make trade-offs, and in this case, for now, the mid-range tower is out.

    What I would be interested to see is your side of the argument proving that Apple suffers from the lack of a mid-range tower. They seem to be doing just fine without, and there is nothing circular about that logic. Surely people who want a mid-range tower might consider a mid-range Apple tower, but that, my friend, is circular logic to a capital T.

  97. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? EULA by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    IIRC, the EULA on the software requires it be installed on an APPLE computer.

    You don't RC. It requires an "Apple-labeled" computer.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  98. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    If (and only if) Psystar preinstalls the OS for the customer (as previous articles have claimed they plan to do), then it would be copyright infringement.

    How? If they've paid for each and every copy they distribute, then there's no infringement.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  99. No Anti-trust problems, possible DCMA issue by hellfire · · Score: 1

    On what grounds? Psystar is installing a retail boxed product of MacOS X on Psystar hardware.

    Correct.

    There's no copyright violation so none of the extreme remedies in the Copyright Act apply.

    Any legal restriction Apple seeks to impose that their software can only be run on their hardware runs afoul of "tying" restrictions in antitrust law. Apple would have to win an antitrust case before they could get a cease and desist order.

    WRONG WRONG WRONG. Apple is not considered a monopoly, (remember them climbing to a whopping 5.6% marketshare in computers this past month?) and for anti-trust to apply, you have to be a monopoly. A case might be made for the MP3 player market, but not for the computer or OS market. They are clearly in the minority there. Tying is legal for a non-monopoly, because they do it to try to provide value and if they don't, the competitive market will provide better alternatives. It's illegal for a monopoly because instead of trying to tie value, they use their market dominance in a non competitive market to muscle in on new turf. That's illegal. If Apple wanted to go after these guys, the government cannot stop them on those grounds.

    While it sucks, they might have a DCMA fight here, or have something one of those "look and feel" lawsuits. The Apple Lawyers are very crafty and aggressive. I'm surprised they haven't pounced yet, maybe they are just making sure their ducks are in a row, but I believe they will attack soon.

    What we'll probably see is heavily restrictive DRM in future Macs to prevent this.

    Correct.

    Or an end to retail sales of MacOS.

    Hardly, at least not in the foresable future. This is a small outfit hacking Dells and putting the Mac OS on it. The guy has to have an automated factory data cloning hard drives with data before he puts a dent in Apple sales, and even then he has to prove that they can provide all the normal functions. Note the software update doesn't work. So, what else doesn't work? If I had a spare dell I'd hack it myself to learn but no way am I buying one for my mother. I'd be on the hook to fix it or explain everything that didn't work to her and listen to her whine about it.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

    1. Re:No Anti-trust problems, possible DCMA issue by Animats · · Score: 1

      WRONG WRONG WRONG. Apple is not considered a monopoly

      That's not the standard. Whether "the seller has market power in the tying product" is the issue. The "tying product" is the MacOS; the "tied product" is Apple hardware.

      Note that Apple has to win in court before they can stop Psystar. That could take years, and the odds are against Apple. Historically, manufacturers trying to enforce tying agreements have lost in court. IBM lost on mainframes. Ink-jet printer manufacturers lost on ink-jet cartridges. It's all uphill to get a court to enforce a tying arrangement.

  100. Apple's Lawyers by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    Everybody keeps talking about how Apple's lawyers are going to go after Psystar any second now. Let me remind all of you that Apple's legal team is not undefeated. They lost the lawsuit against Microsoft about the "Look and feel" of their operating system.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  101. Re:What would I use expandability for? by argent · · Score: 1

    If a company COULD make a geek-a-liciously delicious mid-range tower with the great looks of an Apple product, it would have been done already.

    I'm sorry, I really don't understand what the HELL you mean by this.

    (a) I'm not asking for a "mid-range tower". My original comment was that a mid-range tower is one of several possible solutions that would satisfy my requirements.

    (b) How exactly do you imagine that Apple would be somehow incapable of making a plain old desktop Mac. They've done it before. They've even done one under Jobs.. they just screwed up by making the cube a middle-of-the-road desktop in capability but charged high end workstation prices for it.

    (c) There are fewer engineering tradeoffs required for this product than anything else they make. It doesn't jave the size limitations of the mini or a laptop. It doesn't have the layout and size limitations of an iMac or a laptop. It doesn't have the noise problems of the Mac Pro or the head problems of the mini and the high-end laptops and the Pro.

    (d) BMW does make an economy car. It's called (with no intention of irony... they bought an economy car company that made it already) the "mini". Unlike the BMW mini, which is actually a car (seats, trunk, options) the Mac mini is more like a BMW motorbike... it costs as much as a desktop, but drives like a settop.

    (e) Who said anything about "low end"? Low end is around $300 these days. I'm sure Apple would charge a minimum of $800 for a "Mini pro" or over $1000 for a "Mini Tower". It's not the low end customers who are looking for this, it's everyone up to the edge of the professional workstation market. The entry level for Macs that fit the job we're talking about start at two grand.

    But most of all, the idea that they couldn't make one is just bizarre. Seriously. What the hell does "if a company COULD make" it mean?

  102. So if I bought one of these by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    ...would that make me a Mac fanboi?

    clone of a Mac fanboi? Mac fanboi clone? fanboi clone Ma--

    *head explodes

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  103. price not $399 by goombah99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The article notes that it comes with Leopard installed but that YOU CANNOT REINSTALL it yourself from a leopard CD (Which comes with it). (and you presumably cannot install Lion or whatever the next OS is) So if You want to run mac OS then you have to pay them to install Mac OS of $150. it also lacks firewire, blue tooth, and wifi. They will add Firewire for $50.
    Shipping is another $50 (macs ship free).

    so the total price is $609 without wifi or blue tooth. compared to $599 for the mac. The cpu is a bit faster, the disk is bigger and faster.

    You can buy the mac at macmall where they will upgrade your memory and and give you a "free" printer for the same price (provided you can stomach the "rebate" spanking machine).

    so basically a mac is cheaper, smaller and quieter. Not to mention the mac comes with software updates and you can re-install the software.

    ----

    the psystar's big brother, actually is cost competitive with the powermac however.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:price not $399 by Corwn+of+Amber · · Score: 1

      so basically a mac is cheaper, smaller and quieter. Not to mention the mac comes with software updates and you can re-install the software.


      Yeah, they could at least give you some pirate edition that you CAN reinstall. Like the ToH, Leo4all, Kalyway, Tubgirl...

      Maybe PsyStar sells computers even more overpriced than Apple, but anyone can build a Hackintosh for MUCH CHEAPER than a Mac pro.

      And, here in Europe, Apple sells Macs for the same price in Euros as in the US in dollars. SO, they're about 60% more expensive over here. (Who thought that an $200 Apple/ATT Overprice Tax for each iPhone was crazy?)

      And, what are you talking about anyway? Which Macs for $599? The unusably slow pieces of CRAP integrated in their monitors? Who even ever considers buying one of those?

      About the Mac Pro, well, anything is less expensive. I just checked what a monster rig would cost with eight cores and 8G of RAM and 6 HDs (3 raptors for speed and 3x1T for space) and a pair of 22" monitors and a studio sound card and wireless speakers and an nVidia GF9800 : 4000 Euros. That one is at the very least as fast as a MacPro, and with the watercooling it's as silent or more.

      It's possible to build it for 2000 euros with 8G of DDR3 and one quad-core that holds 12M of cache. Might be even faster too.
      --
      Making laws based on opinions that stem up from false informations leads to witch hunts.
  104. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    They've paid for each copy on the DVD. But if they preinstalled it, then there'd be an additional copy on the computer's hard drive. That's the copy that would be infringing to distribute.

    Note that I don't like the idea, or think that its the way things should be. But it is apparently how copyright law currently works. (This is why people say that EULAs are valid, too: you don't need a license to use the copy of the software on the disc it came on, but you need a license to get permission to copy it to your computer (i.e. install it).

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  105. Gizmodo & Engadget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gizmodo & Engadget are irresponsible sensationalist, nobody should visit them. Not ever. The only reason to visit them is for a laugh which isn't worth it because every hit gets them more ad revenue which keeps the shitty stories pouring out.

  106. This headline has me baffled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How exactly do you clone a ship? Wouldn't you just be building a replica?

  107. Obligatory... by 75bhp · · Score: 1

    ...And first Psystar ship clones Mac.

  108. Re:Unless the gizmod article or the posting is a h by ThatsNotFunny · · Score: 1

    You said the same thing about vaginas.

    --
    "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine No Posessions?'" -- Elvis Costello
  109. Re: Just label the computer "Apple"... by Kalriath · · Score: 1

    Not if they're sticking Official Apple Stickers on it. Such as those obtained with iPods.

    --
    For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  110. market power - in what market? by Krioni · · Score: 1

    So, are you saying that Apple has "market power" in the market for Mac OS X? If the standard was whether a manufacturer has market power in their exact product (not its category), then there would NEVER be a question. So, obviously not. Instead, the question is whether Apple has market power with Mac OS X in the operating systems market. Anyone care to argue that they do? Didn't think so. I haven't even taken antitrust law (yet), and I could reason through that one. Furthermore, the link you gave (US DOJ) uses the example of Windows as having market power in the operating systems market, and thus contradicts your premise.

    --
    Lose essential liberties to get temporary safety = get only hassles and security theater.
    1. Re:market power - in what market? by Animats · · Score: 1

      If the standard was whether a manufacturer has market power in their exact product (not its category), then there would NEVER be a question. So, obviously not.

      The Supreme Court disagrees with you. See Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Tech Svcs. There, the issue was whether Kodak had tying power in replacement parts for Kodak copiers. That's tying with respect to an exact product, not a category.

  111. Re:Why no cease and desist from Apple? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does Psystar supply the install disk as well, to prove they don't merely install everyone's System from the same disk?

    I would think that if they are purchasing the System disks and selling the system they'd have to. ?

  112. Oh noes! I must have an illegal powerbook now! by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    On another side, I've repaired my powerbook pro with another brand harddrive, non-apple-branded;
    it's even smaller! did I void my lifestyle now? depressive ....

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  113. That's bricking by wiredog · · Score: 1

    If you have to replace hardware, it's bricked.

  114. Hackintosh... by digitalsolo · · Score: 1

    So... how is this any different from the Hackintosh I have running on an HP laptop at home? I have all hardware functionality, and my updates even work...

    Apparently I now have the option of purchasing a less functional equivalent of what I built at home in a few hours time. Excellent, I can check that off the old wish list...

    --
    Just another ignorant American.
  115. Re:What would I use expandability for? by stewbacca · · Score: 1
    Wow, I forgot how analytical the slashdot crowd can be. Let me try to word it in a less subjective manner:

    A company can't appease all needs and wants of every consumer in a single product line. If they COULD, they would.

    And yes, I understand the argument that there is a "gap" in the product lines, with the omission of a mid-range tower, but...

    What tends to happen here on slashdot is that people who feel "left out" of the current offerings swarm to the threads to say how Apple has left out the majority opinion of "we want a tower". Obviously, Apple thinks that an all-in-one model is a more cost-effective way to bolster the bottom-line. This doesn't mean Apple thinks they know better than you or me, it just means Apple is trying to make as much money as possible. If you don't like that, don't buy Apple products, or go start your own company.

    In short, egocentrism on the slashdot community's behalf doesn't dictate what products Apple should build, because MOST people who buy computers aren't slashdotters. What I hear in this discussion is that Apple is losing SOOOO much business because they don't offer a tower, when that vision isn't quite the reality of the situation (unless you want to contend that Apple marketshare would be increasing in even MORE record-breaking bounds than it already is? I'd be interested in that theory.) People are making it sound like Apple are shooting themselves in the foot and losing huge market opportunities, but the numbers just don't support that notion.

  116. Re:What would I use expandability for? by argent · · Score: 1

    A company can't appease all needs and wants of every consumer in a single product line.

    That's all the more true of they don't provide a product that can be significantly customized anywhere except at the extreme high end of one of their product lines.

    What tends to happen here on slashdot is that people who feel "left out" of the current offerings swarm to the threads to say how Apple has left out the majority opinion of "we want a tower".

    Please refrain from putting words into my mouth. I have not said that this is a "majority opinion" nor even that a mid-range tower is the product that I'd like to see added. In fact I've pointed out twice now that this is not what I'm saying.

    If you want to pick a fight with someone who is actually arguing the point that you want to argue against, go ahead.

    My point is that the gap in the product line is real, and Apple would penetrate a sizable as-yet-untapped market if they filled it. Whether that gap should be filled by the device you're talking about, or whether that is a "majority" market or just a large one... I'm not going there.

    People are making it sound like Apple are shooting themselves in the foot and losing huge market opportunities, but the numbers just don't support that notion.

    I haven't seen any numbers that even address this point. There's not even a suggestion of anything even vaguely like a controlled study as to the relative popularity of comparable all-in-one vs headless Macs running OS X. There can't be, because Apple hasn't had comparable products since before even OS 9 was shipped. Remember, the iMac first shipped with OS 8!

    There are numbers indicating that apart from laptops all-in-one designs are currently unpopular in the market as a whole. About the only line of all-in-one desktops that's got any traction at all are Macs. People buying Windows-based boxes don't generally buy all-in-ones. People buying Macs have to buy all-in-ones.

    Would Apple's market share be higher if they sold a conventional desktop? I believe so, obviously, though the fact is that I can only point to indirect numbers showing that. On the other hand, you can't point to any numbers indicating I'm wrong, because there simply are no relevant numbers for Macs running OS X.

    The figures suggest that for Windows users the demand for all-in-one desktops is minuscule. For OS X users, as I noted, there's no comparable all-in-one desktop to compare against, so really all they show is that OS X on Intel is very popular. That's interesting, and for some viewers (particularly the Apple fanatics: a lot of the pro-Apple camp argued that this would be a stupid idea right up to the time Jobs announced it, and many anti-Apple fanatics kept that argument up long after the market showed otherwise) even surprising, but it's almost completely independent of the hardware line up.

    So while it's possible that there is some fundamental difference between OS X users and Windows users (and I would be interested to read your arguments for this point), I find it hard to believe that Apple wouldn't sell more Macs and make more profit if they sold a "Mini Pro" (the beefed up Mini) or a "Mac Semi-pro" (the mid-range tower you're discussing).

    One final note: the arguments against filling this gap right now are the same ones that were arrayed against the Mini itself right up to the time Jobs announced it. Apple sold a boatload of Minis, to a lot of people who never considered a Mac before, and it's been a real success. You've got your finger on the pulse of conventional wisdom, but conventional wisdom isn't always right. Think about that.

  117. Re:What would I use expandability for? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    A company can't appease all needs and wants of every consumer in a single product line. That's all the more true of they don't provide a product that can be significantly customized anywhere except at the extreme high end of one of their product lines. And I acknowledged the fact there is a gap; I just don't find Apple's lack of a tower CURRENTLY to be as nefarious as other people in this forum (not YOU specifically, rather two years of collective slashdotism).

    What tends to happen here on slashdot is that people who feel "left out" of the current offerings swarm to the threads to say how Apple has left out the majority opinion of "we want a tower". Please refrain from putting words into my mouth. I have not said that this is a "majority opinion" nor even that a mid-range tower is the product that I'd like to see added. In fact I've pointed out twice now that this is not what I'm saying. I'm not sure what's going on here, but my comments aren't directed at YOU specifically, rather, as commentary to this entire thread. I apologize for the ambiguity. Actually, I don't think I disagree with YOU that much (if even at all).

    My point is that the gap in the product line is real, and Apple would penetrate a sizable as-yet-untapped market if they filled it. And my point is that a LOT of people on slashdot are making the same claim, because we are collectively biased towards the more geek-appealing products, like a tower. I think Apple has done their market research and will either bring back a mid-range if feasible. This business about "making users buy the $2500 one" is pure nonesense. Instead of buying a Mac Pro, anyone in the market for a tower will just go buy a PC.

    There are numbers indicating that apart from laptops all-in-one designs are currently unpopular in the market as a whole. I would argue they aren't popular because the XP world isn't condusive to an all-in-one, integrated hardware/software solution like Apple can offer. I've tried a lot of the PC all-in-ones, and they are just awful. They try to pack a million features which goes against the entire simplicity paradigm in the first place.

    About the only line of all-in-one desktops that's got any traction at all are Macs. People buying Windows-based boxes don't generally buy all-in-ones. People buying Macs have to buy all-in-ones. And because PC people don't buy all in ones, they bring the same negative biases to the discussion forums, giving the iMac (notice, I haven't been talking about the mini at all here) a bad name, comparing to equally awful PC all-in-ones, when they really aren't comparible.

    Would Apple's market share be higher if they sold a conventional desktop? I believe so, obviously, though the fact is that I can only point to indirect numbers showing that. On the other hand, you can't point to any numbers indicating I'm wrong, because there simply are no relevant numbers for Macs running OS X. Exactly my point. OTHERS (not you) have been clamoring that Apple is missing a huge opportunity, when all I see are 2.2 million Macs sold last quarter (record quarter). Although that MIGHT be higher if there were a tower, there's no way to know really. Besides, we don't even know if Apple's business model could support another product line at this time. Maybe introducing another computer would wreck their production cycle or something. I don't work there, so I don't know. I'm pretty sure, however, that they don't purposely withhold a mid-range tower and cross their fingers in hopes people buy a Mac Pro. If anything, they MIGHT do it to lead people towards a MacBook Pro.
  118. Re:What would I use expandability for? by argent · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure what's going on here, but my comments aren't directed at YOU specifically, rather, as commentary to this entire thread.

    I got that impression, yes. Wouldn't it have made more sense to post at the top level?

    I would argue they aren't popular because the XP world isn't condusive to an all-in-one, integrated hardware/software solution like Apple can offer.

    I'm not sure why you think the OS makes a big difference. It's not like Macs haven't historically had a variety of form factors, and I've had a variety of Macs with a variety of form factors, all the way back to the original 128k Mac. The thing that made the original Mac attractive for me is that it was totable. Back before laptops it was a pretty good equivalent... but since laptops came out that aspect of all-in-one hardware has really become irrelevant.

    I held onto my old Beige G3 for years, upgrading it eventually to a G4/533, because it was the last conventional Desktop Apple made. And judging by the fact that people were still buying enough G4 upgrades for the G3s to keep OWC and Sonnet making new ones right up to the time the Mini came out kind of implies I wasn't the only one who thought so. In fact I bought a Radeon 9200 from OWC a couple of months before the Mini was announced, because people were making pretty convincing arguments... just like the one you're making now, that Apple wasn't going to come up with a headless Mac. No, the iMac and the all-in-one had reinvigorated Apple.

    I'm pretty sure, however, that they don't purposely withhold a mid-range tower and cross their fingers in hopes people buy a Mac Pro.

    Not just a Mac Pro. Apple has pretty good margins across the product line, so if people buy an iMac instead of a "Mini Pro" they're making more money, because they're netting 40% or $1200 instead of 40% of $800. That's likely the reason they crippled the intel Mini with an intel GPU, and why they do the same thing with a Macbook. It's not a "nefarious scheme", it's all part of product differentiation.

    And it's still forcing a lot of people who want a Mac to buy a computer they wouldn't otherwise consider, and it's kept a number of people I know... NOT all geeks, either... from making the switch.

  119. Re:What would I use expandability for? by stewbacca · · Score: 1
    Well, I can wrap this whole conversation up with this:

    It's not a "nefarious scheme", it's all part of product differentiation. I'm glad YOU understand that. If only the other thousands of slashdot contributors did...
  120. Okay? by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    I could get almost as much done with either of those apps on a quad-core Q6600 box with 8GB of normal DDR2 or DDR3.

    How many people need a machine to do Maya and Final Cut professionally?

    How many people need a fast machine that they would like to be a Mac and want some level of future-proofing graphics-wise?

    How many gamers and tech enthusiasts is Apple slamming the door on by telling them there's no computer for them?

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Okay? by norkakn · · Score: 1

      Apple has historically not given a fuck about pleasing everyone. There are people who are very happy to pay the cost, and there are enough of them to support the company. If they don't make a product that you want to buy, it doesn't mean that their products suck, it means that you shouldn't buy one.

  121. Re:What would I use expandability for? by argent · · Score: 1

    I think there's two things you need to keep in mind:

    1. Companies make mistakes in product differentiation all the time. When someone is ranting about this, ask yourself "does this mean they think Apple is being nefarious, or do they think Apple is making a mistake?"...

    2. The distinction between "product differentiation" and "nefarious scheme" is kind of moot when you can't do anything about it.