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#201 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 773
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No, I don't think it's a non sequitur at all. You clearly understand that it is an upgrade product, yet engage in a quibble about whether it says it here or there and what does it really mean.
Yes, you can install it on a clean hard drive, because it's sold with the understanding that you have already purchased a Mac so have a right to install the upgrade and because Apple chooses not to make it's user's lives more complicated than necessary. You know you're in the wrong, ethically and legally, so please don't pretend to innocence. |
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#202 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 62
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#203 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 127
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Stealing is stealing, there's no argument around that. But frankly, using OS X on a netbook is more about bending the rules than committing a serious crime. |
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#204 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 664
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Under the DMCA exemptions, it is legal to unlock your mobile phone to make it carrier independent. However, it is illegal to jailbreak an iPhone - the process required to unlock it. To me, it would follow that Fair Use would allow one to use OS X in any non-infringing way, like ripping a DVD or unlocking an iPhone. However, to do so, one would have to break Apple's EULA. The purpose of Fair Use is to protect end-users from overreaching copyright zealots, not to catch people in the technicality of "illegally" breaking a DVD encryption, or "illegally" jailbreaking an iPhone, or "illegally" breaking Apple's EULA. My Mod: G4 Cube + Atom 330 CPU + Wiimote = Ultimate HTPC!
(Might I recommend the Libertarian Party as a good compromise between the equally terrible "DnR"?) |
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#205 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 103
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#206 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 197
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The atom is an abomination. Apple is doing everyone a favour be disabling great software to run on crapware cpus...
Sign the petition to have apple commit themselves to offering more choice with a matte / anti glare screen across all macs and macbooks.
http://macmatte.wordpress.com/ Voice your concerns to apple. http://www.apple.com/feedback/ |
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#207 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 103
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Quote:
It clearly says you can only install Mac OS X on Apple branded hardware. All Apple branded hardware (not counting peripherals!) come with Mac OS X pre-installed. By any definition therefore, it's an upgrade - you're only allowed to install it on systems for which you already have a Mac OS X license. (It doesn't matter if you wiped the disk first and are doing a clean install, the key thing is that you already have a license to use Mac OS X because it came with the hardware.) |
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#208 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 1
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hackintosh
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The dell mini 9 is samall and is great to have on my kitchen table for reading email and the news while I have coffee and share toast with my doggies. It doe not take much space and is also ideal for looking something up while doing the crosswords. And I happen to prefer running Mac OS on it. I only wished Apple would have one. It would be a great addition and more useful to me than a tablet.. |
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#209 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 103
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Agreed, if you buy a copyrighted product you can do whatever you want with it. You can turn the Mac OS X installation DVDs into Christmas tree decorations. You can use them as frisbees. You can put them into your home entertainment system and watch it say "Not a valid disc" on screen. You just can't COPY it, ie. install it onto your computer's hard disk, unless you have a license that says you can.
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#210 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 127
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Hey, you get what you pay for. I'm not expecting stellar performance with a computer that can typically cost less than $300. Frankly, I'm actually surprised that this processor can do what it does, given all the horror stories behind it. |
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#211 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Georgia
Posts: 721
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#212 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: The Ansible
Posts: 12,207
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#213 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 31
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I know the Internet tar & feather brigade is out in full force over this but has anyone considered Apple is planning to use a feature the Atom does not support? To the best of my knowledge the most likely candidate for that would be Vanderpool / Intel VT. All Intel Macs support it including the 32Bit CD models. The Atom does not. Even if Apple isn't directly using Vanderpool they may have some reason for the kernel to do some checking on it. Perhaps related to third party applications such as VMWare which do make use of Vanderpool -- an application which has been troublesome for some people using 64Bit kernels. Sounds plausible to me that Apple may have patched their code and simply didn't handle the condition that a CPU might be 64Bit AND lack Vanderpool. The Atom is the only modern Intel CPU that would fall into that category. It's entirely possible it was intentional but I tend to doubt it. Apple had 4 years to engineer some DRM to fight Hackintosh users. They know a simple CPU detection scheme isn't going to stop anyone.
(The only Intel CPU based product Apple sells that does not support Vanderpool is the Apple TV (Pentium M CPU) however it still runs 10.4.x ) |
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#214 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 155
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That Psystar behaves like a cross between a loose cannon and loose screw makes it being the least likely being a Pyrrhic victory for Apple. |
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#215 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: The Ansible
Posts: 12,207
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#216 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 155
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#217 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: The Ansible
Posts: 12,207
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#218 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 1
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All this concern about the fine print of the license addresses the what -- 200? -- Hackintosh users today. I say, "fine print" because I, for one, licensed the five-user version of the upgrade; I may have licensed the right to install on five machines that I own. Just saying; IANAL and am not interested in legalistic interpretations.
Rather, Apple, <b>by this report</b> by the way, a clear step down from "news," is mooting the question for everybody else. We may question the wisdom of Apple's preventing people from installing the OS on some non-Apple machines, but TS: apparently, they're going to do it, and 10.6.1 is the end of the line for OSX on the Dell Mini 9's etc. Nobody yet, anyway, is challenging Apple's right to design the OS the way that it sees fit. Some people are still happy with OS 9. Every now and then, I fire up my once-beloved Mac 2400c, a 4.4 lb, 10" screen ultra-portable WAAAY ahead of its time, that I hacked a 603PPC chip into. So 10.6.1 could function well enough for the economic lifetime of an Acorn netbook. But how many people will really work that way? Just like Google and Craigslist have put the final nails into many newspapers' coffins while inventing some wonderful new services, Apple is moving on. A moment of silence to recognize the cleverness of the Hackintoshers, please! OK, folks, nothing to see here any more. Time to move along. |
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#219 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 5
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Apple has no need for a "netbook" margins
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There not missing anything but a waste of resources. I hope that all the rumors pan out and we do see a category breaker that raises the bar and once and for all silences you guys who think Apple "needs" a netbook. Even without the iTablet if it exists, they don't need a netbook--at least not until they do it their own way, with added value, top quality materials and build with something new brought to the table. Get out from under your rock. |
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#220 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Georgia
Posts: 721
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#221 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 233
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Good! Crack down on the thieves!
I'd love for Apple to switch away from x86, but I don't think that'll happen anytime soon.
G4 Cube
Late 2007 MacBook 2G iPod nano iPhone 3G |
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#222 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Northwest
Posts: 2,714
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``Who knew she was under age? She approached me officer. If anyone is the victim me it's me officer. Look at her. She took advantage of me. How was I to know she was lying? And besides, in some countries it's a compliment.'' Sorry, but both of my statements show the warped reality people live in to rationalize their motivations in life. |
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#223 | ||||
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 355
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Same with DVD's. Fair use allow you to record using the analog hole without breaking encryption. (Though you may have to deal with marcovision.) So that you can get a VSH or Beta copy to play on your video tape machine. But you would not have an "exact" copy. Even if you use it to burn back to DVD. In order to get an "exact" copy you have to break the encryption. Which mean that you can not legally back up your DVD's on to disc or computer. But really, the reason it's illegal to break encryption is to give the Studios more leverage when they catch people pirating to make money. It's not really enforced when it comes to the average home users. It makes it more difficult to do. Of course I'm referring to US Copyright Laws. I heard that in countries like Australia, you can't even legally copy a CD on to your computer HD. Let alone make another disc. Quote:
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#224 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 127
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This one is a bad example, but at least closer to my point. You buy a DVD of your favorite movie. According to the license of that disk, you are entitled to watch that movie on any compatible device that you own, but you are not allowed to create a copy for any reason (including backup and personal use), nor are you allowed to watch that movie on another device (like an iPhone). Now, I bought the movie - I own it. Why shouldn't I be allowed to rip it and watch it on any device I own as well? Again, not the greatest example, but still hits a point. I own Apple hardware. I own Apple software. Not only do they get a good $20 a month from me on iTunes, but they're also going to get at least $2k between a new notebook and Mini server from me soon. Between the iPhone and all the Apple software I purchased, what exactly is the big problem with me running a little project by installing OS X on a Mini netbook as a hobby? |
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#225 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Milwaukee, WI
Posts: 664
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I guess I'll keep my Dell Mini 9 on Windows 7 then. It's funny. I bought that computer for $199 with Ubuntu. Installed the free Windows 7 Release Candidate and it works great. I needed a "real" Windows machine for a specific project. After it is over, I had intended to Hackintosh the mini9. Oh well, I guess. Hopefully this means that Apple has something in the works to occupy this niche in the tech ecology.
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#226 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Toms River, NJ
Posts: 243
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So the wildly unpopular netbooks are suddenly popular enough to be targeted by Apple.
It sucks, but it makes sense. If an ultraportable Apple product is on it's way, cutting off new purchases of netbooks for hackintosh purposes is a good decision. It was never something that would last, nor did it have even tacid approval from Apple. |
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#227 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: The Ansible
Posts: 12,207
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Quote:
Try comparing it to the other ultra-light 13” notebooks on the market. The MBA is not an netbook! |
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#228 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 678
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Quote:
also, they have actually be fairly nice by not going out to the community and slapping a ton of DMCA violations on folks for all the bootloaders, terminal hack instructions etc that are out there. because money changing hands is not required under said laws. nope. this issue was addressed in the Psystar case. they tried to argue the existence of a Macintosh Market. they lost. the market is Personal Computer Systems. of which Apple is a small piece. and because of the small size they can legally tie hardware and software and there's no market abuse Quote:
as for PearC, German laws as of about a year ago said that you can not enforce an EULA that can not be read prior to money changing hands. Since you had to buy the disk to open the box and put in the disk to see the terms, Apple couldn't enforce the EULA in Germany. This is what PearC was using as a 'we can do what we want' defense. HOWEVER, since that time, I believe that Apple put the EULA on the website and the laws in Germany, if I recall correctly, didn't say that the EULA had to be on the box. just available. so Apple could now be in the right on that issue. so long as the EULA doesn't go against any legally protected rights of the consumer. which gets a tad interesting. Because the US and Germany are both part of the Berne treaty. and that treaty states that member countries will grant their copyright protections to any work by another country that is published in a treaty country. So one has to examine if the sale of a software is the same as publishing and what protections goes Germany give to software. it is possible that German law does not allow for the restriction of hardware the way that the US laws currently do. so there's nothing Apple can do at this point. Last edited by charlituna; 11-03-2009 at 12:53 PM.. |
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#229 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Clovis, California
Posts: 322
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I think his point is however, what exactly kind of tasks do you plan on doing with the MBA's CPU, like audio/video/photo editing, or mundane tasks like e-mail and web browsing? The Atom can do all that too, but it's just slow (relatively), designed for low-power consumption and cheap. I can't complain about the size of the devices it power; seriously, most netbooks are only around 3 pounds and they're small. (the 11.6" are tweeners, but have better CPU's and GPU's). If I want power, I'll grab something else, but it wouldn't be a MBA either. |
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#230 | |||
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: The Ansible
Posts: 12,207
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