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Can i get a laptop pc to run Mac os x snow leopard?  Quote from: jackal88k on December 20, 2010, 12:44:38 PM

Can i get a laptop pc to run Mac os x snow leopard? 

Probably, but since it violates the Apple EULA which requires the OS install to be on Apple branded hardware, it WOULD against the rules of this forum to tell you how to do it. In any case, you would be better off thinking up something to type into a search engine such as Google.



I remember I saw like this question on yahoo answer . And the answer was no
Quote from: moro on December 20, 2010, 01:25:43 PM
I remember I saw like this question on yahoo answer . And the answer was no

it is possible, and plenty of people have done it.

Quote from: moro on December 20, 2010, 01:25:43 PM
I remember I saw like this question on yahoo answer . And the answer was no

PLEASE - if you don't know the answer to a technical question it is better if you do not respond.it DEPENDS on your hardware too

http://www.osx86project.org/Hi jackal88k,

please post the direct link to the page you want us to look at instead of posting the link to the main site. It appears as spam in its current state.

~DMJ Yeah, I SEE what you mean about the spam thing there DragonMaster Jay - it's cute but a direct link would have been much better. This is a tech forum not a funny farm. Let's keep all the marbles rolling in the same direction jack.I think he meant to link this page.
http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index.php/HCL_10.6.5

Not sure how posting the root-level url of a web site is particularly spammy.
Quote from: BC_Programmer on December 24, 2010, 01:24:38 AM
Not sure how posting the root-level url of a web site is particularly spammy.
By doing so, the URL appears to have no relevance to what is being said, which makes it look like it has been inserted randomly...something seen in a lot of spam.  Doesn't mean it is spam, but it can make it difficult to tell the difference.I see.

www.google.ca Quote from: CBMatt on December 24, 2010, 02:50:01 AM
By doing so, the URL appears to have no relevance to what is being said, which makes it look like it has been inserted randomly...something seen in a lot of spam.  Doesn't mean it is spam, but it can make it difficult to tell the difference.

But we do know how to read a url. A site called osx86.org is of "no relevance" to a discussion about putting OSX on, er, x86 hardware? I don't agree. To make this a bit clearer, although I should have thought that everybody knew these things: 1. It's an .org domain, so not a business 2. OSX is a Mac OS 3. x86 is what we sometimes call PC CPU hardware. It looks very much like a "Mac OS on PC" site. Directly relevant. Although if we have to write our posts so they are immediately comprehensible by 11 year olds who never read anything that isn't about World Of Warcraft, then posting here will be a lot more onerous than it is already becoming.


While I agree the comment about "spam" may have been a little "nit picking", I don't think it's necessary to keep the thread going this far astray from the original topic. THANKS. Quote from: Allan on December 24, 2010, 11:26:26 AM
the comment about "spam" may have been a little "nit picking"

More than a little.
Yes, we better return to the topic at hand, about directly breaking Apple's EULA.


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