Nowadays, OS are the main soft-elements in your computer. Platform which you use
will influence your computer performance and system environtments. PC have
released Windows Vista, and already improve security state, pleasant GUI, and
more reliable than earlier version of windows, such Windows XP. In XP, spyware
and malware can infected your system easily which cause your important document
lost, even microsoft have released Service Pack 3 for XP, that's not resolve the
problem. Honestly, not all software compatible with Windows Vista, and need
high-end hardware to optimize it performance. Different with Microsoft, Apple
more user friendly now since they released Mac-Intel, In other words, you can
install Mac OS in normal PC, surely without G4 processor,and obtain Tiger OS X.
You don't need additional hardware to install it, just 512mb ram,compatibatible
graphic-sound card, free space 20 gb(larger than vista requirements). 1280x1024
res. with 32bit color, and Intel Processor (pentium 4,amd, Xeon, core2duo, and
also support core2extreme). You'll have special extras too, that's
Darwin-emulator, which make your PC application works in Mac. As
graphic-designer,i'll have to install Adobe Creative Suite3, which need great
requirements. So if you don't want lose your windows, you can install multi-os
without affected your system crash, during you install each OS in each hardisk.
At least, you have Windows and Mac in one computer. Wanna try? That's excited,
very great for Mac lovers but don't have enought money to buy it.
While the new Macs are based on Intel processors it does not mean you can get
yourself a
legal copy of Mac OS X and install it, the software is still hardware tied.
Similar to a recovery disc, it first looks for that unique hardware, if it finds
it then it will continue if not then the process will halt. There is a way to do
it but since it involves violating MT's policy then it's best not to provide
links or sources on it.
As for running on a Multi-OS environment you can try VMs (virtual machines). Parallels Microsoft
Nowadays, OS are the main soft-elements in your computer. Platform which you use will influence your computer performance and system environtments. PC have released Windows Vista, and already improve security state, pleasant GUI, and more reliable than earlier version of windows, such Windows XP. In XP, spyware and malware can infected your system easily which cause your important document lost, even microsoft have released Service Pack 3 for XP, that's not resolve the problem. Honestly, not all software compatible with Windows Vista, and need high-end hardware to optimize it performance. Different with Microsoft, Apple more user friendly now since they released Mac-Intel, In other words, you can install Mac OS in normal PC, surely without G4 processor,and obtain Tiger OS X. You don't need additional hardware to install it, just 512mb ram,compatibatible graphic-sound card, free space 20 gb(larger than vista requirements). 1280x1024 res. with 32bit color, and Intel Processor (pentium 4,amd, Xeon, core2duo, and also support core2extreme). You'll have special extras too, that's Darwin-emulator, which make your PC application works in Mac. As graphic-designer,i'll have to install Adobe Creative Suite3, which need great requirements. So if you don't want lose your windows, you can install multi-os without affected your system crash, during you install each OS in each hardisk. At least, you have Windows and Mac in one computer. Wanna try? That's excited, very great for Mac lovers but don't have enought money to buy it.
While the new Macs are based on Intel processors it does not mean you can get yourself a
legal copy of Mac OS X and install it, the software is still hardware tied.
Similar to a recovery disc, it first looks for that unique hardware, if it finds it then it will continue if not then the process will halt. There is a way to do it but since it involves violating MT's policy then it's best not to provide links or sources on it.
As for running on a Multi-OS environment you can try VMs (virtual machines).
Parallels
Microsoft