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Apple–Intel architecture

The Apple–Intel architecture, or Mactel, is an unofficial name used for Macintosh personal computers developed and manufactured by Apple Inc. that use Intel x86 processors,[not verified in body] rather than the PowerPC and Motorola 68000 ("68k") series processors used in their predecessors or the ARM-based Apple silicon SoCs used in their successors.[1] As Apple changed the architecture of its products, they changed the firmware from the Open Firmware used on PowerPC-based Macs to the Intel-designed Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI).[not verified in body] With the change in processor architecture to x86, Macs gained the ability to boot into x86-native operating systems (such as Microsoft Windows), while Intel VT-x brought near-native virtualization with macOS as the host OS.

Technologies edit

Background edit

Apple uses a subset of the standard PC architecture, which provides support for Mac OS X and support for other operating systems. Hardware and firmware components that must be supported to run an operating system on Apple-Intel hardware include the Extensible Firmware Interface.[2]

The EFI and GUID Partition Table edit

With the change in architecture, a change in firmware became necessary.[3] Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) is the firmware-based replacement for the PC BIOS from Intel. Designed by Intel, it was chosen by Apple to replace Open Firmware, used on PowerPC architectures. Since many operating systems, such as Windows XP and many versions of Windows Vista, are incompatible with EFI, Apple released a firmware upgrade with a Compatibility Support Module that provides a subset of traditional BIOS support with its Boot Camp product.

GUID Partition Table (GPT) is a standard for the layout of the partition table on a physical hard disk. It is a part of the Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) standard proposed by Intel as a substitute for the earlier PC BIOS. The GPT replaces the Master Boot Record (MBR) used with BIOS.

Booting edit

To Mac operating systems edit

Intel Macs can boot in two ways: directly via EFI, or in a "legacy" BIOS compatibility mode. For multibooting, holding down "Option" gives a choice of bootable devices, while the rEFInd bootloader is commonly used for added configurability.

Legacy Live USBs cannot be used on Intel Macs; the EFI firmware can recognize and boot from USB drives, but it can only do this in EFI mode–when the firmware switches to BIOS mode, it no longer recognizes USB drives, due to lack of a BIOS-mode USB driver. Many operating systems, such as earlier versions of Windows and Linux,[4] could only be booted in BIOS mode, or were more easily booted or perform better when booted in BIOS mode, and thus USB booting on Intel-based Macs was for a time largely limited to Mac OS X, which can easily be booted via EFI.

To non-Mac operating systems edit

 
Mac Mini with Intel Core

On April 5, 2006, Apple made available for download a public beta version of Boot Camp, a collection of technologies that allows users of Intel-based Macs to boot Windows XP Service Pack 2.[5] The first non-beta version of Boot Camp is included in Mac OS X v10.5, "Leopard."[citation needed] Before the introduction of Boot Camp, which provides most hardware drivers for Windows XP, drivers for XP were difficult to find.[citation needed]

Linux can also be booted with Boot Camp.[6][better source needed]

Differences from standard PCs edit

Intel-based Mac computers use very similar hardware to PCs from other manufacturers that ship with Microsoft Windows or Linux operating systems. In particular, CPUs, chipsets, and GPUs are entirely compatible. However, Apple computers also include some custom hardware and design choices not found in competing systems:

  • System Management Controller is a custom Apple chip that controls various functions of the computer related to power management, including handling the power button, management of battery and thermal sensors, among others.[7] It also plays a part in the protection scheme deployed to restrict booting macOS to Apple hardware (see Digital Rights Management below). Intel-based Mac doesn't implement TPM.
  • Laptop input devices. Early MacBook and MacBook Pro computers used an internal variant of USB as a keyboard and trackpad interconnect.[8] Since the 2013 revision of MacBook Air, Apple started to use a custom Serial Peripheral Interface controller instead.[9] The 2016 MacBook Pro additionally uses a custom internal USB device dubbed "iBridge" as an interface to the Touch Bar and Touch ID components, as well as the FaceTime Camera.[10] PC laptops generally use internal variant of the legacy PS/2 keyboard interconnect. PS/2 also used to be the standard for PC laptop pointing devices, although a variety of other interfaces, including USB,[11] SMBus, and I2C,[12] may also be used.
  • Additional custom hardware may include a GMUX chip that controls GPU switching,[13] non-compliant implementations of solid-state storage[14] and non-standard configurations of HD Audio subsystem.[15]
  • Keyboard layout has significant differences between Apple and IBM PC keyboards. While PC keyboards can be used in macOS, as well as Mac keyboards in Microsoft Windows, some functional differences occur. For example, the Alt (PC) and Option (Mac) keys function equivalently; the same is true for Win (PC) and Command (Mac) – however, the physical location of those keys is reversed. There are also keys exclusive for each platform (e.g. Prt Sc), some of which may require software remapping to achieve the desired function.[16] Compact and laptop keyboards from Apple also lack some keys considered essential on PCs, such as the forward Delete key, although some of them are accessible through the Fn key.[17]
  • Boot process. All Intel-based Macs have been using some version of EFI as the boot firmware. At the time the platform debuted in 2006, it was in a stark contrast to PCs, which almost universally employed legacy BIOS, and Apple's implementation of EFI did not initially implement the Compatibility Support Module that would allow booting contemporary standard PC operating systems. Apple updated the firmware with CSM support with the release of Boot Camp in April 2006,[18] and since the release of Windows 8 in 2012, Microsoft has required its OEM partners to use UEFI boot process on PCs,[19] which made the differences smaller. However, Apple's version of EFI also includes some custom extensions that are utilized during regular macOS boot process, which include the following:
    • Drivers for the HFS Plus and APFS file systems with support locating the bootloader based on the "blessed directory" and "blessed file" properties of HFS+ and APFS volumes.[20] The EFI System Partition is thus not used or necessary for regular macOS boot process.[18]
    • Rudimentary pre-boot GUI framework, including support for image drawing, mouse cursor and events. This is used by FileVault 2 to present the login screen before loading the operating system.[21]
    • Other non-standard EFI services for managing various firmware features such as the computer's NVRAM and boot arguments.[22]

Some of these differences can pose as obstacles both to running macOS on non-Apple hardware and booting alternative operating systems on Mac computers – Apple only provides drivers for its custom hardware for macOS and Microsoft Windows (as part of Boot Camp); drivers for other operating systems such as Linux need to be written by third parties, usually volunteer free software enthusiasts.

Digital rights management edit

Digital rights management in the Apple–Intel architecture is accomplished via the "Dont Steal Mac OS X.kext," sometimes referred to as DSMOS or DSMOSX, a file present in Intel-capable versions of the Mac OS X operating system.[citation needed] Its presence enforces a form of digital rights management, preventing Mac OS X being installed on stock PCs.[citation needed] The name of the kext is a reference to the Mac OS X license conditions, which allow installation on Apple hardware only. According to Apple, anything else is stealing Mac OS X. The kext is located at /System/Library/Extensions on the volume containing the operating system.[23] The extension contains a kernel function called page_transform() that performs AES decryption of "apple-protected" programs. A system lacking a proper key will not be able to run the Apple-restricted binaries, which include Dock, Finder, loginwindow, SystemUIServer, mds, ATSServer, backupd, fontd, translate, or translated.[24] If the check fails, a short poem is displayed, reading "Your karma check for today: There once was a user that whined, his existing OS was so blind, he'd do better to pirate an OS that ran great, but found his hardware declined. Please don't steal Mac OS! Really, that's way uncool. (C) Apple Computer, Inc."

After the initial announcement of first Intel-based Mac hardware configurations, reporting a Trusted Platform Module among system components, it was believed that the TPM is responsible for handling the DRM protection. It was later proven to not be the case. The keys are actually contained within the System Management Controller, a component exclusive to Apple computers, and can be easily retrieved from it.[25] These two 32-byte keys form a human-readable ASCII string copyrighted by Apple,[26] establishing another possible line of legal defence against prospective clone makers.

Virtualization edit

The processors found in Intel Macs support Intel VT-x, which allows for high performance (near-native) virtualization that gives the user the ability to run and switch between two or more operating systems simultaneously, rather than having to dual-boot and run only one operating system at a time.

The first virtualization software for Intel Macs was Parallels Desktop for Mac, released in June 2006.[27] The Parallels virtualization products allow users to use installations of Windows XP and later in a virtualized mode while running macOS. VirtualBox is another piece of virtualization software originally from Innotek (now Oracle Corporation), which had a first public beta release for Mac OS X in April 2007.[28] It supports VT-x and can run multiple other guest operating systems, including Windows XP and later. It is available free of charge under either a proprietary license or the GPL.[29]

VMware also offers a Mac virtualization product competing with Parallels called Fusion, released August 2007.[30] VMware's virtualization product also allows users to use installations of Windows XP and later under macOS.

Regardless of the product used, there are inherent limitations and performance penalties in using a virtualized guest OS versus the native macOS or booting an alternative OS solution offered via Boot Camp.

See also edit

References and notes edit

  1. ^ "CPU Architectures". docs.elementscompiler.com. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  2. ^ "UEFI firmware security in an Intel-based Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  3. ^ "Apple to Use Intel Microprocessors Beginning in 2006". Apple Newsroom. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  4. ^ Note, Linux and X.org rely on BIOS mode to initialize the video hardware, and hence under EFI-booting, Linux and X do not have hardware accelerated video.[citation needed]
  5. ^ "Technology | Apple makes Macs run Windows XP". BBC News. 2006-04-05. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
  6. ^ Anon. (2012). "Linux netticasinon asentaminen MacBook Pro tietokoneeseen" [Finnish language organizational blog entry], Mactel (May 29), see [1], accessed 11 October 2015.[better source needed]
  7. ^ "Reset the System Management Controller (SMC) on your Mac". Apple Inc. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  8. ^ "Program crash on open, will not load iTunes library". Software help archive. serato.com. 2009-10-29. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  9. ^ "Apple MacBook Air 13-inch 2013: Windows struggles in Boot Camp". The Register. 2013-07-15. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  10. ^ Daniel Roschka. "State of Linux on the MacBook Pro 2016". github.com. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  11. ^ Jan Steinhoff. "Linux driver for Synaptics USB devices". Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  12. ^ "TouchPad Driver Support". Synaptics. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  13. ^ Andreas Heider. "GPU switching support for Apple Macbook Pro". github.com. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  14. ^ TJ (2015-09-29). "Bug 99891 – Macbook8,1 12-inch (Early 2015) keyboard and trackpad don't work – Comment 11". bugzilla.kernel.org. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  15. ^ Leif Liddy (2016-01-09). "Bug 110561 – Macbook8,1 12-inch (Early 2015) No speaker sound output". bugzilla.kernel.org. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  16. ^ "Print Screen on Windows 7 with Apple Keyboard". superuser.com. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  17. ^ "How do I type Home/End/PageUp/PageDown on a MacBook Pro?". superuser.com. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  18. ^ a b "Myths and Facts About Intel Macs". refit.sourceforge.net. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  19. ^ "Windows Hardware Certification Requirements for Client and Server Systems". Microsoft. January 2013.
  20. ^ "bless(8) Mac OS X Manual Page". Apple, Inc. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  21. ^ vit9696 (2016-10-28). "FileVault 2 – UEFI – InsanelyMac Forum". insanelymac.com. Retrieved 2017-04-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ "VBoxAppleSim in vbox/trunk/src/VBox/Devices/EFI/Firmware/VBoxPkg – Oracle VM VirtualBox". Oracle Corporation. Retrieved 2017-04-09.
  23. ^ Victor Mihailescu (January 13, 2006). "Don't Steal Mac OS X!". Softpedia. Retrieved 2007-01-17.
  24. ^ Amit Singh. "Understanding Apple's Binary Protection in Mac OS X". Osxbook.com. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
  25. ^ Amit Singh. . Osxbook.com. Archived from the original on 2020-01-03. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  26. ^ Gabriel L. Somlo. "Running Mac OS X as a QEMU/KVM Guest". Retrieved 2017-03-30.
  27. ^ "Parallels Celebrates 10 Years of Innovations and Industry Firsts in Parallels Desktop for Mac". BusinessWire. 2016-06-14. from the original on 2023-08-11. Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  28. ^ "News (older entries)". virtualbox.org. from the original on 2023-08-11. Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  29. ^ "The GNU General Public License (GPL) Version 3". virtualbox.org. Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  30. ^ Cheng, Jacqui (2007-02-08). "VMware to release Fusion for Mac into the wild on Aug. 6". Ars Technica. from the original on 2023-08-11. Retrieved 2023-08-11.

External links edit

apple, intel, architecture, this, article, about, architecture, intel, based, apple, computers, information, about, transition, this, architecture, transition, intel, processors, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, t. This article is about the architecture of Intel based Apple computers For information about the transition to this architecture see Mac transition to Intel processors This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The article s lead section may need to be rewritten The reason given is introduction lead presents unsourced information potentially resolvable by adding citations to main body Furthermore the article scope is not yet fully reflected in the lead Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Apple Intel architecture news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The Apple Intel architecture or Mactel is an unofficial name used for Macintosh personal computers developed and manufactured by Apple Inc that use Intel x86 processors not verified in body rather than the PowerPC and Motorola 68000 68k series processors used in their predecessors or the ARM based Apple silicon SoCs used in their successors 1 As Apple changed the architecture of its products they changed the firmware from the Open Firmware used on PowerPC based Macs to the Intel designed Extensible Firmware Interface EFI not verified in body With the change in processor architecture to x86 Macs gained the ability to boot into x86 native operating systems such as Microsoft Windows while Intel VT x brought near native virtualization with macOS as the host OS Contents 1 Technologies 1 1 Background 1 2 The EFI and GUID Partition Table 2 Booting 2 1 To Mac operating systems 2 2 To non Mac operating systems 3 Differences from standard PCs 4 Digital rights management 5 Virtualization 6 See also 7 References and notes 8 External linksTechnologies editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Background edit Apple uses a subset of the standard PC architecture which provides support for Mac OS X and support for other operating systems Hardware and firmware components that must be supported to run an operating system on Apple Intel hardware include the Extensible Firmware Interface 2 The EFI and GUID Partition Table edit Main articles Extensible Firmware Interface and GUID Partition Table With the change in architecture a change in firmware became necessary 3 Extensible Firmware Interface EFI is the firmware based replacement for the PC BIOS from Intel Designed by Intel it was chosen by Apple to replace Open Firmware used on PowerPC architectures Since many operating systems such as Windows XP and many versions of Windows Vista are incompatible with EFI Apple released a firmware upgrade with a Compatibility Support Module that provides a subset of traditional BIOS support with its Boot Camp product GUID Partition Table GPT is a standard for the layout of the partition table on a physical hard disk It is a part of the Extensible Firmware Interface EFI standard proposed by Intel as a substitute for the earlier PC BIOS The GPT replaces the Master Boot Record MBR used with BIOS Booting editTo Mac operating systems edit Intel Macs can boot in two ways directly via EFI or in a legacy BIOS compatibility mode For multibooting holding down Option gives a choice of bootable devices while the rEFInd bootloader is commonly used for added configurability Legacy Live USBs cannot be used on Intel Macs the EFI firmware can recognize and boot from USB drives but it can only do this in EFI mode when the firmware switches to BIOS mode it no longer recognizes USB drives due to lack of a BIOS mode USB driver Many operating systems such as earlier versions of Windows and Linux 4 could only be booted in BIOS mode or were more easily booted or perform better when booted in BIOS mode and thus USB booting on Intel based Macs was for a time largely limited to Mac OS X which can easily be booted via EFI To non Mac operating systems edit Main article Boot Camp software nbsp Mac Mini with Intel Core On April 5 2006 Apple made available for download a public beta version of Boot Camp a collection of technologies that allows users of Intel based Macs to boot Windows XP Service Pack 2 5 The first non beta version of Boot Camp is included in Mac OS X v10 5 Leopard citation needed Before the introduction of Boot Camp which provides most hardware drivers for Windows XP drivers for XP were difficult to find citation needed Linux can also be booted with Boot Camp 6 better source needed Differences from standard PCs editIntel based Mac computers use very similar hardware to PCs from other manufacturers that ship with Microsoft Windows or Linux operating systems In particular CPUs chipsets and GPUs are entirely compatible However Apple computers also include some custom hardware and design choices not found in competing systems System Management Controller is a custom Apple chip that controls various functions of the computer related to power management including handling the power button management of battery and thermal sensors among others 7 It also plays a part in the protection scheme deployed to restrict booting macOS to Apple hardware see Digital Rights Management below Intel based Mac doesn t implement TPM Laptop input devices Early MacBook and MacBook Pro computers used an internal variant of USB as a keyboard and trackpad interconnect 8 Since the 2013 revision of MacBook Air Apple started to use a custom Serial Peripheral Interface controller instead 9 The 2016 MacBook Pro additionally uses a custom internal USB device dubbed iBridge as an interface to the Touch Bar and Touch ID components as well as the FaceTime Camera 10 PC laptops generally use internal variant of the legacy PS 2 keyboard interconnect PS 2 also used to be the standard for PC laptop pointing devices although a variety of other interfaces including USB 11 SMBus and I2C 12 may also be used Additional custom hardware may include a GMUX chip that controls GPU switching 13 non compliant implementations of solid state storage 14 and non standard configurations of HD Audio subsystem 15 Keyboard layout has significant differences between Apple and IBM PC keyboards While PC keyboards can be used in macOS as well as Mac keyboards in Microsoft Windows some functional differences occur For example the Alt PC and Option Mac keys function equivalently the same is true for Win PC and Command Mac however the physical location of those keys is reversed There are also keys exclusive for each platform e g Prt Sc some of which may require software remapping to achieve the desired function 16 Compact and laptop keyboards from Apple also lack some keys considered essential on PCs such as the forward Delete key although some of them are accessible through the Fn key 17 Boot process All Intel based Macs have been using some version of EFI as the boot firmware At the time the platform debuted in 2006 it was in a stark contrast to PCs which almost universally employed legacy BIOS and Apple s implementation of EFI did not initially implement the Compatibility Support Module that would allow booting contemporary standard PC operating systems Apple updated the firmware with CSM support with the release of Boot Camp in April 2006 18 and since the release of Windows 8 in 2012 Microsoft has required its OEM partners to use UEFI boot process on PCs 19 which made the differences smaller However Apple s version of EFI also includes some custom extensions that are utilized during regular macOS boot process which include the following Drivers for the HFS Plus and APFS file systems with support locating the bootloader based on the blessed directory and blessed file properties of HFS and APFS volumes 20 The EFI System Partition is thus not used or necessary for regular macOS boot process 18 Rudimentary pre boot GUI framework including support for image drawing mouse cursor and events This is used by FileVault 2 to present the login screen before loading the operating system 21 Other non standard EFI services for managing various firmware features such as the computer s NVRAM and boot arguments 22 Some of these differences can pose as obstacles both to running macOS on non Apple hardware and booting alternative operating systems on Mac computers Apple only provides drivers for its custom hardware for macOS and Microsoft Windows as part of Boot Camp drivers for other operating systems such as Linux need to be written by third parties usually volunteer free software enthusiasts Digital rights management editDigital rights management in the Apple Intel architecture is accomplished via the Dont Steal Mac OS X kext sometimes referred to as DSMOS or DSMOSX a file present in Intel capable versions of the Mac OS X operating system citation needed Its presence enforces a form of digital rights management preventing Mac OS X being installed on stock PCs citation needed The name of the kext is a reference to the Mac OS X license conditions which allow installation on Apple hardware only According to Apple anything else is stealing Mac OS X The kext is located at System Library Extensions on the volume containing the operating system 23 The extension contains a kernel function called page transform that performs AES decryption of apple protected programs A system lacking a proper key will not be able to run the Apple restricted binaries which include Dock Finder loginwindow SystemUIServer mds ATSServer backupd fontd translate or translated 24 If the check fails a short poem is displayed reading Your karma check for today There once was a user that whined his existing OS was so blind he d do better to pirate an OS that ran great but found his hardware declined Please don t steal Mac OS Really that s way uncool C Apple Computer Inc After the initial announcement of first Intel based Mac hardware configurations reporting a Trusted Platform Module among system components it was believed that the TPM is responsible for handling the DRM protection It was later proven to not be the case The keys are actually contained within the System Management Controller a component exclusive to Apple computers and can be easily retrieved from it 25 These two 32 byte keys form a human readable ASCII string copyrighted by Apple 26 establishing another possible line of legal defence against prospective clone makers Virtualization editThe processors found in Intel Macs support Intel VT x which allows for high performance near native virtualization that gives the user the ability to run and switch between two or more operating systems simultaneously rather than having to dual boot and run only one operating system at a time The first virtualization software for Intel Macs was Parallels Desktop for Mac released in June 2006 27 The Parallels virtualization products allow users to use installations of Windows XP and later in a virtualized mode while running macOS VirtualBox is another piece of virtualization software originally from Innotek now Oracle Corporation which had a first public beta release for Mac OS X in April 2007 28 It supports VT x and can run multiple other guest operating systems including Windows XP and later It is available free of charge under either a proprietary license or the GPL 29 VMware also offers a Mac virtualization product competing with Parallels called Fusion released August 2007 30 VMware s virtualization product also allows users to use installations of Windows XP and later under macOS Regardless of the product used there are inherent limitations and performance penalties in using a virtualized guest OS versus the native macOS or booting an alternative OS solution offered via Boot Camp See also editMac transition to Intel processorsReferences and notes edit CPU Architectures docs elementscompiler com Retrieved 2023 08 10 UEFI firmware security in an Intel based Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2023 08 10 Apple to Use Intel Microprocessors Beginning in 2006 Apple Newsroom Retrieved 2023 08 10 Note Linux and X org rely on BIOS mode to initialize the video hardware and hence under EFI booting Linux and X do not have hardware accelerated video citation needed Technology Apple makes Macs run Windows XP BBC News 2006 04 05 Retrieved 2015 10 11 Anon 2012 Linux netticasinon asentaminen MacBook Pro tietokoneeseen Finnish language organizational blog entry Mactel May 29 see 1 accessed 11 October 2015 better source needed Reset the System Management Controller SMC on your Mac Apple Inc Retrieved 2017 03 30 Program crash on open will not load iTunes library Software help archive serato com 2009 10 29 Retrieved 2017 03 30 Apple MacBook Air 13 inch 2013 Windows struggles in Boot Camp The Register 2013 07 15 Retrieved 2017 03 30 Daniel Roschka State of Linux on the MacBook Pro 2016 github com Retrieved 2017 03 30 Jan Steinhoff Linux driver for Synaptics USB devices Retrieved 2017 03 30 TouchPad Driver Support Synaptics Retrieved 2017 03 30 Andreas Heider GPU switching support for Apple Macbook Pro github com Retrieved 2017 03 30 TJ 2015 09 29 Bug 99891 Macbook8 1 12 inch Early 2015 keyboard and trackpad don t work Comment 11 bugzilla kernel org Retrieved 2017 03 30 Leif Liddy 2016 01 09 Bug 110561 Macbook8 1 12 inch Early 2015 No speaker sound output bugzilla kernel org Retrieved 2017 03 30 Print Screen on Windows 7 with Apple Keyboard superuser com Retrieved 2017 03 30 How do I type Home End PageUp PageDown on a MacBook Pro superuser com Retrieved 2017 03 30 a b Myths and Facts About Intel Macs refit sourceforge net Retrieved 2017 03 30 Windows Hardware Certification Requirements for Client and Server Systems Microsoft January 2013 bless 8 Mac OS X Manual Page Apple Inc Retrieved 2017 03 30 vit9696 2016 10 28 FileVault 2 UEFI InsanelyMac Forum insanelymac com Retrieved 2017 04 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link VBoxAppleSim in vbox trunk src VBox Devices EFI Firmware VBoxPkg Oracle VM VirtualBox Oracle Corporation Retrieved 2017 04 09 Victor Mihailescu January 13 2006 Don t Steal Mac OS X Softpedia Retrieved 2007 01 17 Amit Singh Understanding Apple s Binary Protection in Mac OS X Osxbook com Retrieved 2015 10 11 Amit Singh TPM DRM In Mac OS X A Myth That Won t Die Osxbook com Archived from the original on 2020 01 03 Retrieved 2017 03 30 Gabriel L Somlo Running Mac OS X as a QEMU KVM Guest Retrieved 2017 03 30 Parallels Celebrates 10 Years of Innovations and Industry Firsts in Parallels Desktop for Mac BusinessWire 2016 06 14 Archived from the original on 2023 08 11 Retrieved 2023 08 11 News older entries virtualbox org Archived from the original on 2023 08 11 Retrieved 2023 08 11 The GNU General Public License GPL Version 3 virtualbox org Retrieved 2023 08 11 Cheng Jacqui 2007 02 08 VMware to release Fusion for Mac into the wild on Aug 6 Ars Technica Archived from the original on 2023 08 11 Retrieved 2023 08 11 External links editIntel EFI open source implementation code name Tiano permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apple Intel architecture amp oldid 1173904781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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