Created in early 2004, UNEASYsilence aims to deliver daily coverage of offbeat & generally geeky news. Subscribe via RSS or Email.

READING single

Easiest and Fastest way to get Mac OS x86 working (Using a Mac)

Posted in Howto, Tech by Dan at 1:08 am
closeThis post was published 4 years 3 months 7 days ago and its content may not be valid anymore.

This was sent in via Tom:

If you are not familiar with Linux, or do not want to use DD in Windows try this if you have a real Mac running OSX:

1. Download and extract “tiger-x86.tar.bz2″
2. Mount “tiger-x86-flat.img”
3. Use “Carbon Copy Cloner” to clone the image into a real hard drive connected to your mac (Firewire, USB, Internal…)
4. Put that hard drive as primary master on a PC that’s SSE2 capable, and enjoy.

9 Responses to “Easiest and Fastest way to get Mac OS x86 working (Using a Mac)”

  1. Derek says:

    LOL this would be the quickest way. Unfortunately, CCC would require that we have OSX running already considering that it is an OSX application. I like the simplicity though.

  2. Rich says:

    This was the process I followed (I also have an iBook) but the final result was a computer that booted to the “Non system disk or disk error” message.

    Back to the drawing board…

  3. obskure says:

    I got the same message Rich.

    I checked the disc for integrity in disc utility, everything looked fine.

    I also tried the pc only way and same deal there.

  4. kwanbis says:

    what i wonder is if a ghost image would work ..

  5. Zack says:

    I’m using an external lacie firewire disk and a vaio s, but apparently there is no way to let the vaio boot from that disk? Any help?

  6. FooBar says:

    I used dd on my powerbook to write the image out to a drive in an external enclosure successfully. Plugged the usb drive into an intel machine and it booted although my mouse and keyboard stop working after Aqua starts.

    If you use OS X to write out the image make sure that you unmount the destination drive first. Also, make sure that you are dd’ing to a device like /dev/disk1 and *not* a disk slice such as /dev/disk1s3.

  7. Rick Jones says:

    So should I just use LimeWire to find the zipped file, or can it be downloaded from somewhere? Acquisition (which uses LimeWire servers) can’t seem to find it.

  8. Rick Jones says:

    NVM, I found the file. You can get a torrent from Seedler.

  9. jimbo says:

    when i try to do this with my iBook, when i am authenticating carbon copy cloner it freezes. any ideas? (or other ways to do this?)

Additional comments powered by BackType