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OQO Hacker Claims World's Smallest OS X Machine

TechRadar writes "A hacker has turned his OQO ultraportable into the world's smallest Mac running Leopard. 'I will warn you this project is not for the plug and play crowd but definitely do-able,' the hacker, 'TRF' says. Interesting, given the OQO was designed by ex-Apple employees." It might run Mac OS X, but one thing this OQO is not is a Mac.

5 of 202 comments (clear)

  1. Apple already has that beat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    My iPod Touch is running a cut-down version of OS X, and it's even smaller.

  2. Time for Apple to cede some control? by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Clones like this and the Psystar machine must have Jobs and the other control freaks at Apple screaming bloody murder right now. For years, their bread-and-butter has been tying their OS to their (IMHO overpriced) hardware. Now it seems that a lot of people are getting sick of it (if the preorders at Psystar are any indication, a *LOT* of people). Not only that, but the more heavy-handed Apple gets, the more they risk that cool-chique image as they appear more and more like just another greedy corporation (i.e., more like MS).

    It might well be time for them to consider doing what they could have done years ago, realeasing a general version of Leopard that will run on non-Apple PC's. They might even consider doing an "Apple Certified" program for Dell and other companies wanting to offer OS X as an option for their customers. If their hardware is truly superior, then it won't cost them much hardware business and will cut deeply into Windows' market dominance. In the end, everyone would win--most noteably the consumer (and those who like building their own machines).

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  3. "It might run Mac OS X..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    "but one thing this OQO is not is a Mac."

    Forget the weird grammatical structure, what exactly is this supposed to mean? That it runs OS X poorly? That it is not Apple hardware? That it's not authorized? Thanks for the enlightening comment Timothy!

    "I just put my dick in your moms mouth, but one thing your mom is not is a condom."

  4. Re:The new black? by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is cramming MacOS onto a wholly unsuitable machine the new version of doing the same thing with Linux?

    I'm reminded of this - Mac OS X running on a Centris 650. 68MB RAM, 25MHz 68040.

    No, not even a PowerPC processor. Fully software emulation.

    Running? Well, booting. Sort of. Excruciatingly, glacially slowly!
    --
    Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
  5. Re:Superior Hardware? by nano2nd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm a long time Mac user who recently made the switch - to a Hackintosh. The OS really is central to the Apple proposition. But.. the hardware is also a big part of it - in terms of the reliability that only comes with total control of hardware and software.

    Hardware is also important in terms of the user's perception of quality. I'm using the Apple Cinema Display I previously used on my Powermac and it is still far superior to the Samsung panel I bought recently for my kid.

    But all that said, I like the fact that my Hackintosh cost me a lot less than the new top of the range iMac (granted, I already owned the Cinema Display), and it still outperforms the real deal.

    However, 10.5.3 may be the end of the road for Hackintosh as I'm sure all the recent noise around this and Psystar will have Apple bringing down the hammer and breaking OS X for non-Apple hardware very soon.