by RealNC » Sun Jul 06, 2014 11:09 am
I can't stand using OS X, so what I did is virtualize it. I run Linux as my main OS.
I use VMware Workstation and patched it so that it allows OS X as a guest OS. This is locked by default due to the license of OS X; it only allows you to virtualize it on a Mac, so only the Mac version of Workstation allows it. But after patching it, you can install OS X in the Linux and Windows versions too.
I also started the SSH service in OS X, so that I can login to the OS X shell without having to use the OS X interface.
Installing OS X in VMware works out of the box, btw. You don't need a hacked version of it. You just create an ISO of the original, pristine DMG as distributed by Apple and it installs and runs just fine.
This is a nice setup, since I can keep using my computer as I normally do, and when I need to use OS X for something, I just start VMware and get "OS X in a window."
I can't stand using OS X, so what I did is virtualize it. I run Linux as my main OS.
I use VMware Workstation and patched it so that it allows OS X as a guest OS. This is locked by default due to the license of OS X; it only allows you to virtualize it on a Mac, so only the Mac version of Workstation allows it. But after patching it, you can install OS X in the Linux and Windows versions too.
I also started the SSH service in OS X, so that I can login to the OS X shell without having to use the OS X interface.
Installing OS X in VMware works out of the box, btw. You don't need a hacked version of it. You just create an ISO of the original, pristine DMG as distributed by Apple and it installs and runs just fine.
This is a nice setup, since I can keep using my computer as I normally do, and when I need to use OS X for something, I just start VMware and get "OS X in a window."