Booyamos
10-13-2004, 08:28 AM
Just read an interesting article:
http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,65323,00.html?tw=rss.TOP
"A Hawaiian company specializing in streaming video claims to have developed a $50 software emulator that allows a Windows PC to run Apple Computer's Mac OS X.
Maui X-Stream on Tuesday announced CherryOS, a virtual PC that mimics the hardware of a G4 Mac. The company said it is already working on a stand-alone version that cuts out Windows XP. A stand-alone version of CherryOS would allow OS X to run on a cheap commodity PC without the added expense of Microsoft's operating system -- provided the emulator works and Apple's lawyers ever allow it to see the light of day.
Available as a 7-MB download, the CherryOS software emulates a G4 processor and includes the chip's multimedia-boosting Velocity Engine, formerly known as AltiVec. It also features support for USB, FireWire and ethernet. It automatically detects hardware and network connections, the company said."
http://www.cherryos.com/index.html
sounds interesting if it works. I would try it out. If they can eliminate the MSFT OS it would definately make things interesting. 20% loss is not too too bad, considering you could throw that thing on a pretty beastly machine.
http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,65323,00.html?tw=rss.TOP
"A Hawaiian company specializing in streaming video claims to have developed a $50 software emulator that allows a Windows PC to run Apple Computer's Mac OS X.
Maui X-Stream on Tuesday announced CherryOS, a virtual PC that mimics the hardware of a G4 Mac. The company said it is already working on a stand-alone version that cuts out Windows XP. A stand-alone version of CherryOS would allow OS X to run on a cheap commodity PC without the added expense of Microsoft's operating system -- provided the emulator works and Apple's lawyers ever allow it to see the light of day.
Available as a 7-MB download, the CherryOS software emulates a G4 processor and includes the chip's multimedia-boosting Velocity Engine, formerly known as AltiVec. It also features support for USB, FireWire and ethernet. It automatically detects hardware and network connections, the company said."
http://www.cherryos.com/index.html
sounds interesting if it works. I would try it out. If they can eliminate the MSFT OS it would definately make things interesting. 20% loss is not too too bad, considering you could throw that thing on a pretty beastly machine.