Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 24th Sep 2007 20:01 UTC
Mac OS X Just weeks ahead of its public launch, Apple has updated the minimum system requirements for its next-generation Leopard operating system to exclude 800MHz PowerPC-based Macs, AppleInsider has learned. Apple has yet to officially announce the hardware requirements to run Leopard, due out in October, but had long stated in developer documentation that the software would require "an Intel processor or a PowerPC G4 (800MHz or faster) or G5 processor." According to people familiar with the matter, engineers for the company recently determined that Leopard installs on 800MHz PowerPC G4 systems ran "too slow". Support for those systems was subsequently pulled from the most recent pre-release copies of Leopard, which inform testers that the software "cannot be installed" on those computers. My take: Assuming this turns out to be true, there are going to be a lot of unhappy G4 owners - including yours truly.
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RE[4]: I hope Apple reconsiders
by smashIt on Tue 25th Sep 2007 01:14 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: I hope Apple reconsiders"
smashIt
Member since:
2005-07-06

* An 800mhz x86 chip != an 800mhz powerpc chip

and as we all know, thanks to 2000 years of apple hype, 800mhz ppc are at least equal to 2ghz x86

well, i'm still using my 500mhz p3m laptop with xp-prof for office, internet, watching videos/dvds, image-editing and other random stuff i throw at it.

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