Over the past few months, the so-called hackintosh netbook has become a hot topic. Boing Boing published a chart last December, showing which netbooks were likely to be the most compatible with Mac OS X Leopard, including the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 (the most compatible of the netbooks listed), the MSI Wind U100, the Lenovo IdeaPad S10, and the HP Mini 1000.
In February, Gizmodo published a step-by-step guide to installing Mac OS X Leopard on a Dell Mini 9. And PC World sibling publication InfoWorld recently added some spice to Gizmodo’s recipe by explaining how to turn a Mini 9 into a Mac “cloudbook,” which accesses files from the Internet, rather than from internal storage.
Admittedly, a Mac OS netbook that weighs 2.28 pounds (which is the Mini 9′s weight) and that’s ultra compact (the Mini 9 measures 1.07 by 9.13 by 6.77 inches) is hugely compelling. And both the Gizmodo and InfoWorld writers raved about how nicely Mac OS X plays with the Mini 9. Wrote William Hurley in InfoWorld, after converting a Mini 9 into a Mac netbook: “I had a sweet little machine that I’m happier with than any computer I’ve ever owned.”
But before you go down that path, allow me to feed you a little food for thought.
thanks to bro james ^_^










