Microsoft has managed to squeeze out the competition and dominate PC operating systems, with only open source systems (powered by rabid hobbyists) and MacOS holding out (it being only partially open source).
There are stacks of emulators that empower you to run MacOS on your PC, but they generally incur a performance hit. One of the best currently available is http://pearpc.sourceforge.net/index.html and it covers everything needed to boot OSX.
PC hardware has consistently beaten Macintosh on cost and flexibility, but few would dare claim that Microsoft Windows has performed equally well against MacOS.
Consider what OSX offers. It is a BSD operating system with clever GUI and all the software anyone needs - not like Linux, then
There is not much to separate OSX features from MS Windows, except that perhaps only OSX can be forced upon a 0.5MHz computer: http://www.appletalk.com.au/articles/68kpanther/

Macintosh have been planning a change, and nearly all products are now optimised for x86 hardware. Apparently (this is hearsay), from about midway through 2006, the Apple will lose it's RISC processor in favour of cheap Intel parts.
With the assumed CPU change, heavy-duty emulation will no longer be required, and any performance hit from emulation will be small. Are PC hard drives everywhere about to witness an invasion by OSX?
There are stacks of emulators that empower you to run MacOS on your PC, but they generally incur a performance hit. One of the best currently available is http://pearpc.sourceforge.net/index.html and it covers everything needed to boot OSX.
PC hardware has consistently beaten Macintosh on cost and flexibility, but few would dare claim that Microsoft Windows has performed equally well against MacOS.
Consider what OSX offers. It is a BSD operating system with clever GUI and all the software anyone needs - not like Linux, then



Macintosh have been planning a change, and nearly all products are now optimised for x86 hardware. Apparently (this is hearsay), from about midway through 2006, the Apple will lose it's RISC processor in favour of cheap Intel parts.
With the assumed CPU change, heavy-duty emulation will no longer be required, and any performance hit from emulation will be small. Are PC hard drives everywhere about to witness an invasion by OSX?