D3v1L80Y said:
EDIT: And before anyone jumps in and attmepts to discredit this, I offer this... All of these supposed screenshots, and videos all have the PC running the Tiger devkit OS. If it is truly as easy to crack OS X for a PC as it is claimed, then any version of it should work. Why then are there no screenshots/videos with older versions of OS X (Panther, Jaguar, etc.) or even an off the shelf retail version of Tiger?
Actually, we've already run those versions, but in a less than optimal form; PearPC. The difference between the dev version of OSX86 and previous versions of OSX running in PearPC is that the dev kit is native to the PC architecture. There's no abstraction layer translating the PPC calls to X86, and it signifigantly speeds things up. It's still got problems to be sure, but from what I've seen on my own box (a 3.4 gHz AMD) it's just as snappy, if not more snappy than a MacMini.
I have little doubt that the official version of OSX86, when it comes out, will be cracked within the month. There will just be too many eyeballs looking at this thing, so many that no security feature is going to be able to stand up to that level of scrutiny. Personally I think that Apple is aware of this, and they've very cleverly decided that this is the way to dip their toe in the water. Were they to come right out and say, "We're releasing OSX for all commodity PC hardware" they'd essentially be declaring war on Microsoft who'd immediately yank Office away and go after Apple guns 'a blazing. This way they have plausible deniability.
Steve Jobs may be an arrogant *******, but he's not stupid. He's got to realize that Apple's superiority in the OS realm isn't something that can be taken for granted, especially considering that MS has been putting out decent OSes since Win2K. The only lure that Apple has to sell the hardware they depend on to survive is the OS. The answer to that, then, is to slowly but surely take the hardware out of the equation and increase your revenue streams through stuff like increased OS sales, iPods, etc.
Of course, I could be completely wrong and Apple just believed too much in their own infallibility. I don't think I'm wrong about this, though.