Should Apple have courted Sun's SPARC instead of x86-64?
i think we all know how tightly Apple controls the hardware and the software back in the PowerPC days. Ever since they made the jump to Intel, quite a reasonable amount of that control has been lost.
With that in mind, do you think Sun's SPARC architecture would have been a better alternative for Apple to have jumped on instead of the x86-64? At the very least, with SPARC, they will still have tight control over both hardware and software and wont have to worry so much about people 'hacking' or ptaching OS X to run on generic box PCs. Furthermore, if Apple jumps to SPARC, Sun will then have to develop more efficient and competitive mobile chips to supply Apple, which means more revenue for them.
what do you think?
With that in mind, do you think Sun's SPARC architecture would have been a better alternative for Apple to have jumped on instead of the x86-64? At the very least, with SPARC, they will still have tight control over both hardware and software and wont have to worry so much about people 'hacking' or ptaching OS X to run on generic box PCs. Furthermore, if Apple jumps to SPARC, Sun will then have to develop more efficient and competitive mobile chips to supply Apple, which means more revenue for them.
what do you think?

Comments
We no longer have to worry about our processor speeds falling the to the wayside, we never have to worry about our processors going extinct. We may never be able to claim faster performance, but we are in a much safer, much more compatible connection to the world.
I'd say this is the best thing Apple has ever done. The PPC and the G5 were good chips, it's just a shame they never got the development attention. We lost a little but gained alot in this transition.
Furthermore, if Apple jumps to SPARC, Sun will then have to develop more efficient and competitive mobile chips to supply Apple, which means more revenue for them.
what do you think?
Yea because IBM and Freescale did a rilly, rilly good job of making mobile chips for Apple.
I've said it before and I'll say it again here: OS X is what desktop UNIX could have been and is what Linux should have been.
Finally, I agree with the others here that say Apple's moving OS X to the Intel CPUs significantly jump-started the "switchers" migration to Macs -- a group that includes me.