Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

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Sabre
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Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by Sabre »

Article
Even the most jaded Microsoft Windows fan will admit, grudgingly, to an occasional bout of "Mac curiosity". Since Steve Jobs' return in the late 1990s as part of Apple's acquisition of NeXT, Apple's trajectory has risen, and they currently sell several million Macs per quarter, representing (depending on whose analysis you read) about a 10% share of the domestic PC market and landing them in the top 5 computer companies in terms of U.S. sales. Their market capitalization current ranks them as the second largest company in the world, and they may overtake Exxon this year.

A "Hackintosh" is a computer that runs Apple's OS X operating system on non-Apple hardware. This has been possible since Apple's switch from IBM's PowerPC processors to Intel processors a few years ago. Until recently, building a PC-based Mac was something done only by hard-core hackers and technophiles, but in the last few months, building a Hackintosh PC has become much easier. Benchmark Reviews looks at what it's possible to do with PC hardware and the Mac Snow Leopard OS today, and the pros and cons of the building a Hackintosh computer system over purchasing a supported Apple Mac Pro.

Before we get started, I'd like to mention a few warnings and caveats:
This is not a detailed guide on building your own Hackintosh; it's a description of my personal experience building one, and how the result compared with my existing Mac Pro. If you want to build your own Hackintosh, there are many comprehensive resources on the Web. I've found Insanely Mac to be very useful.
I won't be arguing the relative merits of OS X vs. Windows, or other aspects of the Apple/Microsoft rivalry.
It's gotten easier, but building a Hackintosh is not for everyone. At the very least you must be someone comfortable with building your own computers. Prior experience with Macs, especially at the software level, helps a lot.
No matter how much time, effort, and money you put into a Hackintosh, it's not a Mac, and has drawbacks relative to the "real thing."
Pretty decent write up for those that have not tried this yet. It doesn't give a step by step intro, but it gives you pretty much everything you need :)
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Re: Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by complacent »

That was a pretty good write up. I've been very impressed with the resourcefulness of the opendarwin community. They've come through with quite a few kexts that are really useful.
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Re: Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by Sabre »

The Perfect Motherboards For Your Hackintosh
So you're going to "hackintosh." Well, you might as well start off properly.

After scouring around countless forums, the most popular boards people are using to setup their systems are boards made by Gigabyte. Digging deeper, the reason is clear: almost complete driver compatibility with Apple's OS X Snow Leopard (save for SATA 6gbps at the moment). The specific features and hardware components that Gigabyte uses for its motherboards in the last few years, are either the same, or natively supported by Apple.

Some other boards people are using belong to Asus, but there are far more compatibility issues here as far as hackintoshes go.

Motherboard support in OS X is the biggest hurdle in setting up your system. If you're going with Core i5 and Core i7, Gigabyte's recent X58A line of boards like the X58A-UD5, have complete compatibility with OS X.

Those interested, can look for driver support on kexts.com. The site also hosts full boot images that have already been customized to work with various boards (mainly Gigabyte boards).

Taking a quick look at the osx86project wiki, we can see a quick run down of which boards have the most compatible. For the latest version, check the OS X 10.6.4 list. Here is a list on OS X 10.6.3, and this one is for 10.6.2. If you want the best shot at a fully working and stable system. Start off with one of the popular Gigabyte boards listed.

On forums such as efixusers.com as well as insanelymac.com, there are plenty of guides on how to setup your own system with driver support as well.

What things do you need to look out for?

- Ethernet support
- SATA support
- The correct DSDT (or how to edit one)
Very cool for them to list this out!
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Re: Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by Mr Kleen »

I like Apple's hardware more than their software.
:on2me:
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Re: Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by Sabre »

Mr Kleen wrote:I like Apple's hardware more than their software.
:on2me:
You mean you like their cases... technically, their hardware is the same as a Windows/Linux PC! They definitely do some elegant designs, both inside and out though.
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Re: Turning PC into Apple Macintosh: Hackintosh

Post by Mr Kleen »

oversized track pads with the best implementation of multi-touch out right now?

damn, that last one IS software. :lol:
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