Please support our IT Water Cooler advertiser: Affiliate Marketing
Apr 21st, 2008, 12:33 am
I could have sworn that only Apple was making Apple-compatible computers. I remember well the era in which Apple famously granted—then revoked—licenses to Motorola and others to manufacture hardware that would run Mac OS.
As I read today that a company called Psystar Corp. (www.psystar.com) was selling “an alternative to pricey Apple hardware,” I thought the rules had changed while I wasn’t looking. Or did they?
Unfortunately, the whole thing appears to be a complete scam, and one that almost every media outlet that covered it fell for hook, line and sinker. Googling “psystar” returns about half a million hits, mostly of web-only news sites, bloggers and rumor mills, giddy with the prospect of a low-cost Mac. Most coverage ignored completely Psystar’s Linux, Windows and high-end models.
The company, which its Web site locates it in Doral, Fla., hosts an extremely convincing-looking Web site offering the Open Computer, an “OSx86 compatible hardware platform that is capable of running ‘vanilla’ OS X Leopard kernels,” for US$399.99. And for purchasers of OS X 10.5 for US$155 more, the company “will even preinstall Leopard for free.” Other operating system options according the site’s configurator include Ubuntu Linux 8.04 (no extra charge), Windows XP Pro and 32- and 64-bit Vista Home Premium (add $150).
Still not convinced it's a hoax? There’s more. The $400 base unit includes a 2 GB DDR2 RAM, a Intel Core2Duo 2.2 GHz processor, 250 GB SATA hard drive and an Intel GMA 950 video circuit. Apple’s cheapest model, the Mac Mini, costs $599 and is significantly less equipped.
My advice to anyone looking for low-cost Mac hardware would be to stick with Apple.com and eBay.
As I read today that a company called Psystar Corp. (www.psystar.com) was selling “an alternative to pricey Apple hardware,” I thought the rules had changed while I wasn’t looking. Or did they?
Unfortunately, the whole thing appears to be a complete scam, and one that almost every media outlet that covered it fell for hook, line and sinker. Googling “psystar” returns about half a million hits, mostly of web-only news sites, bloggers and rumor mills, giddy with the prospect of a low-cost Mac. Most coverage ignored completely Psystar’s Linux, Windows and high-end models.
The company, which its Web site locates it in Doral, Fla., hosts an extremely convincing-looking Web site offering the Open Computer, an “OSx86 compatible hardware platform that is capable of running ‘vanilla’ OS X Leopard kernels,” for US$399.99. And for purchasers of OS X 10.5 for US$155 more, the company “will even preinstall Leopard for free.” Other operating system options according the site’s configurator include Ubuntu Linux 8.04 (no extra charge), Windows XP Pro and 32- and 64-bit Vista Home Premium (add $150).
Still not convinced it's a hoax? There’s more. The $400 base unit includes a 2 GB DDR2 RAM, a Intel Core2Duo 2.2 GHz processor, 250 GB SATA hard drive and an Intel GMA 950 video circuit. Apple’s cheapest model, the Mac Mini, costs $599 and is significantly less equipped.
My advice to anyone looking for low-cost Mac hardware would be to stick with Apple.com and eBay.
This blog entry was written by Edward J Correia, staff writer aka EddieC. It has received 758 views, 0 comments, and 35 linkbacks. It was promoted to featured status Apr 21st, 2008.
•
•
•
•
apple china computer dell desktop development fedora firefox google gpl graphics hardware ibm intel internet iphone ipod laptop linux mac microsoft mobile news novell open open source openoffice operating operating systems os patents pc pirate red hat safari security server software source storage sun system technology ubuntu unix upgrade virtualization vista windows xp
All Recent Tags Post Comment
•
•
•
•
Only community members can start a blog or comment on blog entries. You must register or log in to contribute.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
DaniWeb IT Water Cooler Marketplace
Related Blog Entries
- Open Web Foundation to Help Shepard Standards (7 Hours Ago)
- Intel To Focus on Devices, Again (9 Hours Ago)
- Google Knol's a 'Wiki,' Not a 'Pedia' (11 Hours Ago)
- Much Ado About Apple: What Will it Take to Make Wall Street Happy? (14 Hours Ago)
- Families in UK face curbs over piracy (18 Hours Ago)
- Rampant Apple speculation (2 Days Ago)
- MindTouch Deki: A "Why-Didn't-I-Think-Of-That?" Enterprise Solution (1 Day Ago)
- AT&T Rides iPhone to Rescue (1 Day Ago)
- Oil, Earnings Buck Up Markets, But Clouds Still Ahead (1 Day Ago)
- Moving Headlines in Newspapers? Never! (1 Day Ago)
Featured Entry