Looking at all those old unused non-pro MS Surface units, that may be untruehackintosh won't be a thing anymore.
Looking at all those old unused non-pro MS Surface units, that may be untruehackintosh won't be a thing anymore.
The non-pro MS surface units you mention, they're all ARM based? Besides, with Apple doing their own thing, the graphic card, sound card, etc, won't be the same as any existing hardware. They're go back to how they used to make everything specialized and proprietary. Hackingtosh only works on hardware that is compatible with the Macintosh hardware. I doubt there will be any compatible out there, even with the old ones.Looking at all those old unused non-pro MS Surface units, that may be untrue(ARM isn't really a targetable platform worth supporting though, Apple will do their custom chips with custom idiocy and tie their software to that, it also opens up more ways to make their hardware unfixable.)
Not a mac player but curious and interested in these sorts of things - may I have a brief rundown of the technical limitations that have caused this decision?
Sort of related Ed:
The Q4 update, does it mean the required specs for the game will be higher?
No it does not![]()
No it does not![]()
Phew.... I don't have to upgrade the Hamster in my PC then, He's knackered enough as it is.
I have been a Mac user since I bought my awesome cheese grater Mac Pro in 2006 (I miss that machine). Right now, I have an iMac in my home office and for certain tasks it is a great machine. For software development and productivity it is still way ahead of Windows for me. However, I am super annoyed at Apple because I have to maintain a separate PC tower just for games. Happily I play Elite on the PC. While I disagree what the Mac is dead I agree that overall desktop computing is in decline.
As for this decision I totally blame Apple. They refuse to update OpenGL on macOS and won't support Vulkan. It also doesn't help that the GPU's in the iMacs are super low-end for the money. The only machine Apple makes with a decent GPU is crazy expensive and totally non-upgradable. I can see why most gamers have a distaste for the Mac.
Perhaps this means development time won't be so slow with one less platform to optimize for.
Aside the fact that the desktop market is were Apple started and grew, they will still need desktop Macs in the future, as their mobile devices are fine for content consumption, but not for production: You can watch a multi-million dollar blockbuster movie on it, but you cannot edit it. You can listen to the latest music albums on it, but you cannot produce them. You can play the latest battle royale match-3 clicker gacha simulator, but you cannot develop it.
And Apple knows that, as this recent statement from Tim Cook shows.
Raises some interesting questions about Q4.
Are Mac owners entitled to PC version licences? If so, i see bootcamp as an option, or free PC licences to Mac owners if they aren't automatically entitled to them.