Fizza wrote:
I was always on the understanding that the hack would come from a third party, either shareware or whateverelseware. If so, then there would be no legal ramifications for Amiga Inc, Hyperion or Apple, although I'm not sure why Apple would be bothered, fair play OS4 is nice, but I'd imagine if Apple were worried right now about their OS being thrown off the machine, it would be Linux, or even Windows that they'd be concerned about. Amiga's probably not on their radar whatsoever.
Basically some cunning person(s) come up with the way to get it running, and we all just go out and buy boxes of OS4 and take it from there. Although I guess, the main concern now is whether OS4 Classic can be made to run, and/or the availability of the 'normal' OS4, is that still being sold?
Yes, the "Hack" must come from a third party that cannot be identified. It must be anonymously released, or "Leaked" to the public and further improved anonymously as well to protect those persons from any litigation from AInc., or Apple. It must include all the drivers needed for the specific Mac model that it is intended to be installed onto.
I am sure it can be done, and also believe that it has already been done, as reported, on a MacMini. I don't know how "refined" and bug free the port to the MacMini is/was, or how much work it took to get OS4 running on top of, or booted in place of the MacOS. I am positive that if, or when the hack becomes available, it will make a huge impact on the number of sales of Hyperion's OS4.
Someone mentioned that the version of OS4 that was probably running on the MacMini was not the same as the recently released for sale version for Classic Amigas with CyberStorm or Blizzard PPC accelerators. I agree with that assumption, but that does not mean that a hack or patch to the version that is currently selling can't be done.
Again I will ask for the person, or persons that were responsible for getting OS4 to run on a MacMini to somehow "Leak" the code necessary to make it possible to run OS4 on PPC Macs to the Amiga community.
If that does not happen, then perhaps another very smart developer can duplicate the work required to run OS4 on PPC Macs and release it, or sell it to the hundreds (and hopefully thousands) of Amiga users and curious Mac and Windows users that want to find out what all the buzz is about that OS4 users have been and will be shouting about with excitement in their "Internet voices".
OS4 on PPC Macs will be a great day for the Amiga community!