I find it amazing that the Psystar supporters cannot form a valid argument to save their lives. They also have a penchant for demonstrating that they are not only totally ignorant of anything and everything about Apple, but of personal computer history in general.
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Microsoft does not only allow internet explorer to run on the windows os.
If you actually knew anything about Internet Explorer, you would not have posted such a categorically incorrect statement. Microsoft dropped the UNIX version of Internet Explorer at version 5.01. Support for the Classic Mac OS was dropped with version 5.1.7 and for OS X with version 5.2.3. Microsoft cut off all IE development for other operating systems more than 5 years ago.
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they only spend billions of dollars on the OS to support their browser, so that is why you can not put any other browser on their operating system.
So it is OK for Microsoft to ban software development for
their operating system if the software competes with a Microsoft application, but it is illegal for Apple to enforce the license for their operating system that forbids undermining Apple?s hardware sales by installing OS X on unsupported competing PCs. Wow. That must be a great stash that you are smoking.
First of all, there are several other browsers available for Windows and as nearly all Mac users, unlike Windows users, that do not and cannot live in a vacuum we are well aware of that fact. Microsoft can in no way prevent anyone from developing software for their operating system. Microsoft embedded key components of the browser in the operating system thus illegally using their monopoly to give Internet Explorer an unfair advantage over any competing products. Illegal embedding of code notwithstanding other browsers do and have always existed for Windows.
Apple, unlike Microsoft or any other PC OEM, has wholesale ownership the Macintosh platform. Therefore, Apple has the exclusive right to dictate how the components of the platform operate. Mac users buy and own their purchased Macs. Therefore, Apple is not within their rights to dictate what software is used by someone that buys a Mac, how the buyer conducts business using their Mac or even what operating system the buyer ultimate opts to use, nor does Apple attempt to do so. On the other hand, you can only buy a license the operating system and must therefore use it within the terms of the licensing agreement. Apple does, always has and will for the foreseeable future retain exclusive ownership of the Mac OS.
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Since you can surf the web with internet explorer, consumers dont need firefox or safari. It only serves to cause confusion for the consumer.
WTF ? So having a choice of browsers is unnecessary because Microsoft develops and embeds it into Windows in an attempt to stifle completion (read: monopoly abuse), but Psystar, you and others like you have the right to force Apple to allow you to use whatever hardware you wish to run an operating system developed exclusively for their hardware? Your iWant? egoism shines here.
rhemy1 wrote:
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Apple knows exactly what they are doing. Funny you should say that they are a hardware manufacture, yet there commecials speak more about the software they sell than the actual hardware in the product itself.
Once again you demonstrate you utter ignorance of anything Apple. Not a single Apple commercial is and, to the best of my recollection, not a single Apple commercial ever has been about software. Apple has ads to promote the Mac, iPods and the iPhone, period.
rhemy1 wrote:
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Apple is playing in everyones sandbox and yet have no direct competition due to them tying there services together across different markets.
Apple has competition in every market they participate in. The fact that
you do not understand the concept of a market does not change that fact.
rhemy1 wrote:
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Mac osx is the real cash cow, not the hardware they sell.
As
Grapho stated, this one statement demonstrates the grandeur your ignorance. Apple makes next to nothing from the Mac OS. Development of the Mac?s operating system is and has always been subsidized by the sale of Macs because Apple is and has always been a hardware company. Were that not the case, OS X would cost as much as the complete versions of Windows. Actually, the basic fundamentals of price determination would dictate that OS X would cost significantly more than the complete version of Windows due to market share.
rhemy1 wrote:
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It was one thing when the hardware was fundamentally different. But now that the hardware is nolonger different. The hardware does not require its own particular os to operate. It can run windows or mac osx. Why do they forcibly tie osx only to their hardware.
Firstly, no hardware requires a particular operating system in order to operate. Operating systems are made of operate on certain platforms, hardware
is not made to fit an operating system. Microsoft does not make hardware, so they designed an operating system that runs on x86 hardware that meet a certain set of criteria. The Mac does not meet that criteria and that is why you have to have OS X and Boot Camp to facilitate a Windows boot volume in order to run Windows as the primary operating system. OS X was designed to work on Apple hardware and only Apple hardware. Running OS X on any other hardware requires hacking the OS.
Second, your argument that Apple?s hardware is no longer different is specious at best. Running on the same processor does not make a computer the same. If you had actually been involved with and kept up with computer hardware in the 1980s, you would know better than to make such a puerile statement. Apple gets their processors and periphery components from the same suppliers as many Wintel OEMs, but that does not mean that they are making the same product. Macs are now more similar to Wintel PCs, that does not make them the same.
There were hundreds of desktop computers sold in the 1980s running on any of less than 10 different processors. Few of those computers were compatible with one another despite having the exact same CPU. In fact, there were incompatible systems that used the ?same hardware? and were manufactured by the same company. So do spare us the BS about Apple?s hardware being just like any other Wintel PC.
rhemy1 wrote:
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It's apple's anti-competitive policies that got them in trouble in the EU, when they started selling itunes songs that could only play on ipods.
Wrong again. Apple?s problems in the EU are cases against pricing in the various ITunes Stores throughout Europe and due to DRM, which is imposed by the labels.
rhemy1 wrote:
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Who is to say that is the end of Apple if they open up the software to run on multiple devices. They opened up itunes and the ipod to windows machines and look what happen. They dominated that industry.
Oh I do not know, how about those of us that were paying attention 10+ years ago as Apple was being eroded by the Mac clone market. By bringing up the iPod and iTunes, you again demonstrate that you cannot form a proficient argument. The iPod is nothing like a Mac because iPod sales are distinctly separate from the Mac sales. What computer you use an iPod with has no bearing on Apple?s bottom line for portable digital music player market, because you still buy the profit earning Apple product: the iPod. iTunes is free, so allowing it to be dual-platform affects nothing beyond providing cross-platform support for their non-Mac product.
The Mac OS exists to run the Mac not to be sold on the open market to run on any piece of crap PC you opt to purchase. It is as its name implies the
Mac OS. Windows is designed for an open platform in which anyone can create hardware. Microsoft does not own a platform nor do any of the Wintel OEMs. Microsoft depends on the OEMs to manufacture computers to run their operating system. The Wintel OEMs, through years of illegal coercion, now mostly depend on Windows licensing in order to have any hope of selling their hardware to the general public.
The Mac OS is a part of Apple?s platform and it is not designed to support any hardware that is not a part of the platform without Apple?s expressed consent. Apple gave that consent once and it nearly destroyed the company. The
only company that makes hardware for Apple?s platform is Apple and that is the only way Apple can remain viable. Anyone can opt to design an operating system to run on a Mac unhindered by Apple, but without mainstream software to run atop that operating system, it is now a near futile venture outside of the *NIX OSes.
rhemy1 wrote:
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I find it funny when people talk about how much better apple hardware is over pcs, but then when people say apple should open its software to pcs, they go berserk talking about how it will be the end of the company.
More proof that you do not get much of anything. The argument is not about whether or not Apple?s hardware is superior. Only the most zealous of Mac users would fail to recognize that there are other well-made, make that, well-assembled, PCs on the market, but that is not the point. The crux of the argument against running OS X on non-Apple hardware is about quality control. Apple has a level of quality control that Microsoft does not, never has and never will have, because Apple can test a version of OS X under development on every single Mac that that version of OS X is designed to work with. Microsoft cannot feasibly test the current version of Windows on every single Wintel PC available today, let alone over several years past.
Permitting OS X to be run on other hardware will result in OS X becoming as problematic as Windows due to a several orders of magnitude increase in unknown variables being introduced.
rhemy1 wrote:
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A free market needs competion to weed out inferior products and services. If the hardware is good then it will survive. Apple has a million more ways to earn a great deal more money without working against free market principles.
Right, because your post clearly demonstrates that
you understand free market principles. The personal computer market has plenty of competition because Apple
is one player in the personal computer market* . Do you get that? Computer buyers have choices, no one forces them to buy a Mac and based on market share the vast majority of people buying personal computers do not buy Macs. So your lack of competition argument falls flat along with everything else you have posted.