politik
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- Aug 7, 2009
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- 2005
Not illegal, just a violation of the EULA. Learn to be less shit before you come to CSE please.Illegal, too much effort, compatibility issues etc.
Not illegal, just a violation of the EULA. Learn to be less shit before you come to CSE please.Illegal, too much effort, compatibility issues etc.
Because OSX is a great operating system and is built on Unix?Why wouldn't you be able to put OSX onto a pc with windows installed? If you own the pc and you have a legitimate copy of OSX, then there should be nothing stopping you being able to dual boot it, or even format and install OSX. Is there actually something in the Windows EULA that specifies that you are not allowed to uninstall windows or dual boot it with another OS?
It would have thought it would be just like having two progams, and deleting one and installing another. You still have both disks and can change back whenever you want. I don't know why you'd want OSX in the first place though...
No you don't you stupid cunt. You break your contract with that provider and open yourself up to a civil dispute.Hmm, let's see.
Oh I know - you break the licensing agreement, you break the law.
How's that, sweetheart?
Relax son, no need to :burn: over nothingNo you don't you stupid cunt. You break your contract with that provider and open yourself up to a civil dispute.
You fucking moron.
1. Didn't say it was only a service pack... said it may as well have been with the few changes it's having. The difference feels like the step from XP to SP2... which was free. True it's written from the ground up to be better, but when the changes make very little difference to the user...Fact checking in this thread, first page:
1. It's not a service pack, it's a complete OS rewrite. Under the hood everything is being done differently, faster and takes advantage of new technologies such as GPU processing and GCD. Windows 7 inherits the bulk of its code from Vista.
2. Macbook HDDs are designed for easy replacement.
3. OS X actually has a richer Unix heritage than Linux, due to being based mostly off NeXTSTEP ideas.
4. The 'proper programmes' you'll not find on OS X are games. In 90% of other cases there's actually a better free solution than what's offered for Windows (see adium vs msn messenger. The latter dedicates just a third of its chat window to actual chat).
"So I can play COD:4 on OSX now? I can play C&C 3? I can run .exe files? I can get a decent AntiVirus for my computer now that Mac have hundres of viruses written for them? OSX now works out what components have driver problems etc?"
Sounds like somebody needs an XBox.
EDIT: From here on in, you can't tell me Windows isn't broken unless you can explain why the COM API was ever a good idea.
COM API for WMI (Windows)
Again, COM API, explain it.1. Didn't say it was only a service pack... said it may as well have been with the few changes it's having. The difference feels like the step from XP to SP2... which was free. True it's written from the ground up to be better, but when the changes make very little difference to the user...
2. and 3. I'm fine with. But I still think that Mac is retarded for doing so with 2.
4. You do realise that on PCs in many cases there are also much better free alternatives...
No I don't need an Xbox. My homebuilt desktop running Windows 7 has me going fine doing everything I need to do, with problems being my fault not the operating systems fault. The Mac I use for work stuff has given me more trouble than I ever thought possible. I swear the next time I have to wrestle with 'Rocketdock' for my freaking program buttons at the bottom of the screen I'm going to kill whoever is standing closest to me. Or the next time I have to wait for the thing to wake up and close the freakin program while waiting for the freaking spinning ball thingy...
You're misguided.Also, contracts/EULAs are legally binding
No, it releases Apple's responsibility from giving you any support, and/or being liable if something major occurs (data loss, etc).Hence, breaking the legally binding contract/EULA is illegal
You're misguided.
No, it releases Apple's responsibility from giving you any support, and/or being liable if something major occurs (data loss, etc).