Jump to content
14 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

It's official, Snow Leopard will require an Intel CPU:

http://www.macrumors.com/2008/06/11/mac-os...owerpc-support/

 

9-12 GB of disk space. Whatever happened to "reducing the footprint"?

 

It is too bad that they have to drop PowerPC support. Some PowerMacs etc are really quite powerful, and are even more powerful than many average PCs out there. To abandon all these classic PPC Macs is a pity...

Some PowerMacs etc are really quite powerful, and are even more powerful than many average PCs out there.

Debatable (and it has been done many times -_-). PPC is more "different" than "better" - it has different strengths and weaknesses than x86 has.

 

To abandon all these classic PPC Macs is a pity...

It's a necessary evil. Supporting multiple major hardware platforms quickly turns into a nightmare (as Microsoft has found out the hard way :ninja:).

 

I think Snow Leopard will more of a "transition" OS than a major release. I think Leopard will be the last major Mac OS for legacy Macs, and Snow Leopard is going to be the bridge between PPC/Carbon and exclusive x64/Cocoa.

9-12 GB of disk space. Whatever happened to "reducing the footprint"?

 

It is too bad that they have to drop PowerPC support. Some PowerMacs etc are really quite powerful, and are even more powerful than many average PCs out there. To abandon all these classic PPC Macs is a pity...

with a clean install no printer drivers NOTHING but iLife

it takes up about 21GB on my macbook pro.

9-12gb would be heaven

It's a necessary evil. Supporting multiple major hardware platforms quickly turns into a nightmare (as Microsoft has found out the hard way :D).

 

But there's a difference. Apple supports Intel Xeon, Intel CoreDuo (1 and 2), G5's, and G4's

 

Microsoft supports Xeon, CoreDuo, Pentium, Celeron, AMD Turion, Athlon, Opteron, Phenom, and any other processor company out there (there are several).

 

I'd hardly call what Apple supports a nightmare and I think it's a bad move to not support the G5's in Snow Leopard.

Microsoft supports Xeon, CoreDuo, Pentium, Celeron, AMD Turion, Athlon, Opteron, Phenom, and any other processor company out there (there are several).
Those all use the exact same microprocessor architecture: x86.

The PPC, ARM and x86 which Apple use are all quite different.

Yes, their logic is quite sound. Snow Leopard is supposed to make huge leaps in multicore and GPGPU processing, neither of which 99% of the old PowerPC's had (yes, there are still a few dual/quad G5's out there).

I still don't buy it. I mean, I don't really care (I'm on Intel), but just because the development builds are Intel-only doesn't mean the final product will be. The G5 was discontinued less than two years ago - I can't see Apple dropping OS support for it just yet.

I still don't buy it. I mean, I don't really care (I'm on Intel), but just because the development builds are Intel-only doesn't mean the final product will be. The G5 was discontinued less than two years ago - I can't see Apple dropping OS support for it just yet.

I can easily see them dropping it. Nehalm will be out by the time Snow Leopard is released; Nehalm has 4 physical / 8 logical cores. Snow Leopard is all about multicore and 64-bit, both of which will be plentiful with Nehalm, and neither of which they can continue supporting with PowerPC. We have to progress at some point. Apple's doing what Vista should have done with 32-bit.

×
×
  • Create New...