sgillen 6 years ago

I’m sure it’s technically feasible, but it’s very labor intensive, there is very little demand (as far as I can tell), and there is a very high risk of a lawsuit.

guitarbill 6 years ago

Last time I checked, it was possible to boot macOS in VirtualBox.

What macOS-exclusive apps would be worth running in your opinion? The only one that I use is Photos, and maybe Pixelmator. So it'd probably be quicker just to write completely new software, which is what seems to happen.

Also, Apple has a nasty habit of breaking things between macOS versions and messing with APIs. Maintaining a compat layer would be horrible.

  • moron4hire 6 years ago

    The only piece of Apple software I can't live without is XCode, to make iOS builds of my Unity3D apps.

    • guitarbill 6 years ago

      Right. VirtualBox + overnight compiles might work (perf is going to suck). There exist cloud macOS offerings which work well, I've used them for iOS continuous integration. Depending on how much money those apps are making, could also be an option?

tinus_hn 6 years ago

Wine is an absolutely amazing piece of software that’s easy to take for granted. There is a large library of software exclusive to Windows so there are enough people motivated to build it. There isn’t a whole lot of software exclusive to Mac OS X so it’s much more difficult to get enough people together to run such a project.

orionblastar 6 years ago

If there was, Apple might sue them for it.

So far there are GNUStep and Darling but they are not ready for prime time.

You can buy an old MacBook for $99 That can run an old MacOSX on it like 10.7 or under but it would only be a Core 2 Duo, but would use Boot camp to run Linux.

Ice_cream_suit 6 years ago

I ran OS X under vmware for some time. It worked well on my box.

However, I failed to find any Mac applications that were sufficiently compelling.

So I ended up deleting the OS X disk image.