Posts Tagged: ‘Snow Leopard’

Greetings program! Between fiendishly checking to see what’s going on with the Tron viral marketing campaign and anticipating the Life miniseries on Discovery, Chris and I have recorded two more podcasts for your listening pleasure. Last week we rounded out our operating system overview and took a good hard look at fibbing.

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Welcome to the week They Don’t Want You To Know About. Chris and I risked almost certain doom (or at least an iPod failure) by bringing you this week’s episodes of TechStuff. We addressed two of the most-requested topics we receive from listener mail: hackintoshes and technology conspiracy theories.

I can hear some of you out there asking for the definition of hackintosh. A hackintosh is a non-Apple computer that runs the Macintosh operating system. Apple is very particular about the computers that can run Mac OS X. That’s because Apple works in a closed system — it produces the hardware and software for Mac computers.

Apple designed the Mac OS to work with a particular set of hardware and BIOS settings. To get the Mac OS to run smoothly on a PC, you’ll need a compatible set of components. You’ll also need to tweak your computer’s BIOS settings if you want the OS to operate as if it were on a Mac.

The main reason people try to get the Mac OS to run on other computers comes down to price. Mac computers are fairly expensive. If you want Mac functionality but don’t want to pay Apple’s asking price, your only other option is to try and force the OS onto a PC. Chris and I talk about how this is done in general and some of the challenges hackers face, particularly now that Apple has tweaked Snow Leopard so that it won’t work on PCs with Atom processors.

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Earlier this week, we released the TechStuff podcast Jonathan and I recorded about the hackintosh. As you already know, Apple’s Macintosh is a closed system — they produce the hardware and the software both. It makes for an elegant solution, because in general the machines and operating system are tailored to each other and work well together.

One downside of this is that Apple charges a premium for its computers. So if you like OS X and want to run it on your desktop, you have to buy a Macintosh computer. If you don’t mind, it works out; Apple hasn’t released a lot of underpowered machines lately. But if you’re on a budget, you just might be buying a PC. Also, if you prefer netbooks, you’re also out of luck, since Apple’s stance on the issue is that the company can’t make a netbook of the quality that Apple can get behind.

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Animals and operating system names must go hand-in-hand. Or maybe paw-on-mouse. Apple is on this whole big cat code name kick for the various builds of OS X. It’s caused them a bit of a headache — Apple fans appear to enjoy parsing every single word from the corporation. The latest version of OS X is Snow Leopard. The one just before it was Leopard. That prompted some people to say that the newest version is more of a service pack than an evolutionary step.

But the Linux distribution called Ubuntu doesn’t have that problem. Each build of Ubuntu bears the name of a different species of animal (coupled with an alliterative adjective). The first build was Warty Warthog. After that came Hoary Hedgehog and Breezy Badger. Next was Dapper Drake and from that point on the builds arrived in sequential alphabetical order.

The current distribution is Jaunty Jackalope. PC Pro reports that the successor to Jackalope, Karmic Koala, is in the final alpha build stage. Next will come a beta test and — assuming everything works the way it should — a release of the final build will come some time in October.

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Apple’s officially releasing the latest version of its operating system, 10.6, on Friday. Nicknamed Snow Leopard (it’s not a code name if everyone knows it, right?), the newest OS promises more changes under the hood than flashy new OS apps. In fact, the company’s decided to charge only $29 for the update.

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