Nothing's changed at Apple, but you could try running Darwin on a PC... yeah, maybe not for mission critical stuff ;-)Unless something has changed, Apple does not license their operating system on any hardware other than Apple so there's no legal way to put OS X on a Windows machine.
So I'm looking at this.
Looking at Qlab, and I can't decide if I should pop for the pro video license or not. Currently the features we use are audio out linked to midi control of the light desk. would like the ability to add projections to the mix without a separate operator. So that would require the Basic Video License AND the Basic Audio License? I find the chart a bit confusing but it may simply be that I've only had three cups of coffee today so far!
The language in the license says "Apple labeled computer." Some in the OSX86 (hackintosh) community considered their machines "Apple labeled" if they put the decals from the OS X retail box on the case of their machine. But seriously if you want to run OS X in a production environment, get Apple hardware. Hackintosh might be fun for a hobby computer, but not worth the headaches when something goes wrong at the worst time.Unless something has changed, Apple does not license their operating system on any hardware other than Apple so there's no legal way to put OS X on a Windows machine.
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