Recommended Posts

http://daemons.net/~clay/index.php/2006/03...-on-intel-macs/

Check that out, it's another guy who wwas working on it. He opened up all his work and code after blanka's code was submitted since it's assumed that their solution will win, now people can check out this guy's code to learn a little more about it, and maybe help out other people who want to work with this.

http://daemons.net/~clay/index.php/2006/03...-on-intel-macs/

Check that out, it's another guy who wwas working on it. He opened up all his work and code after blanka's code was submitted since it's assumed that their solution will win, now people can check out this guy's code to learn a little more about it, and maybe help out other people who want to work with this.

interesting

I don't see why he would fake it, but he could have just got a screenshot of the winXP installer and made it fullscreen :/

Yeah, we've gone over this a thousand times if you keep up with the thread. Also, there is a video now. That would be a lot harder to fake. Just get over it people, it's not fake. He's submitted this solution already. If it was fake the owner of the contest wouldn't have said he's given the code to 9 testers to test.

Also, on a side note following up after my last post, blanka says that the code that that guy posted is "strikingly similar" to his. Of course it lacks one of the most important parts, VGA. Hope to see this money given away by the end of the day :D

Still one question tho: Does this actually replace the iMac's default EFI or does it "disappear" and reset to the default the second you unplug the HD?

Kinda missed that.

If I understand your question correctly, this solution is a BIOS emulation layer for EFI. The iMac still runs EFI, that can't be changed without modifying board logic, however once you chose to access a Windows boot option (however that may be, pressing a key most people are saying has been the common method for Macs before, never owned a mac myself), the BIOS emulation layer will run under Windows, basically translating between Windows and the EFI.

The pictures and video looked fake (e.g. bad and crappy) to me, but if he has done it the way the blog post describes it, he has done it. :| :yes:

The video looks like bad crappy quality? :s What do you need, 1080p before it looks good enough for you? I'm afraid you might have missed that that's what nearly ALL videos on the internet look like ;) (Actually better than a lot of them)

Ah okay so basically the BIOS compatibility layer isn't loaded until you give the order to boot Windows?

From what I understand, yes. I don't claim to be an expert though, just following this casually. I don't even have, or have plans to have, a machine to run this on anytime soon. If someone knows more then feel free to add it and/or correct me.

The video looks like bad crappy quality? :s What do you need, 1080p before it looks good enough for you? I'm afraid you might have missed that that's what nearly ALL videos on the internet look like ;) (Actually better than a lot of them)

...

It was mainly the fact was blurry, out of focus, short, cut to hell, jumpy, etc.

And i wish i could watch 1080p video, this system cant even do 720p

From what I understand, yes. I don't claim to be an expert though, just following this casually. I don't even have, or have plans to have, a machine to run this on anytime soon. If someone knows more then feel free to add it and/or correct me.

That's okay, I won't quote you on it. ;)

It was mainly the fact was blurry, out of focus, short, cut to hell, jumpy, etc.

And i wish i could watch 1080p video, this system cant even do 720p

Look, the guy put up a video because people wanted one. It wasn't that blurry and out of focus for a home made video. The majority of it's bluriness is due to using a high compression codec to keep the file size down. That could have easily been nearly 100MB if it was crystal clear. It's also actually quite a nice length documenting all parts of install then bootup. He's not going to make an entire hour long documentary just to hopefully get a few less people to run around crying that it's a fake. It's hardly cut to hell considering it's only cut 3 times, and that's to jump ahead of the boring parts that no one but a few conspiracy theorists want to see. You're asking for too much to get any more than we already did.

Remember, there is a big difference in YOU not being able to tell if it's real, and it being fake. As I said before, the owner of onmac.net has already stated that he has recieved their solution and has given it to testers who are currnetly testing it out. That should put to sleep nearly all question of it being fake. It wouldn't have been given to people to test if there wasn't anything to give to people.

here is a quote from one of the testers.

The solution is confirmed working on the 17in iMac and the MacBook Pro. It needs to be tweaked for the Mac Mini, and the 20in iMac. Once these tweaks are done then it will be released. We want to make sure that there arent 200 messages from angry 20in iMac users who cant get it to work. It will save a lot of time later by verifying it working on all systems now!
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • GeekBook X16 Pro Intel Core Ultra 9 thin and light laptop gets a 17% discount by Steven Parker GEEKOM is back with a 17% discount on its top-of-the-range X16 Pro laptop. You may remember that we reviewed the X14 Pro back in February, which marked GEEKOM's debut into the ultrathin laptop segment. You can view the full specs below. GEEKOM X16 Pro Model NX14CM Dimensions 322.58 × 213.36 × 5.8 mm (12.7"L x 8.4"W x 0.23"T) Weight 997 g / 2.2 lbs Material Unibody Magnesium Alloy CPU Intel Ultra 5 125H (14C/18T, 24MB L3, 2.3-5.1 GHz, TDP 20W) Intel Ultra 9 185H (16C/22T, 24MB L3, 2.3-4.5 GHz, TDP 35W) Graphics Intel Arc graphics 8 Xe-cores @ 2350MHz 1024 shading units/stream processors (128 CUs), 8 Raytracing Cores, 64 texture mapping units, and 32 ROPs NPU Intel AI Boost, 11 TOPS / Up to 33 TOPS (CPU+NPU+GPU) Memory 32GB Dual-channel LPDDR5x 7467 MT/s Micron SODIMM Storage 1 x M.2 2280 PCIe Gen 4x4, Wodposit 1TB, 2 TB Display 16.0" IPS LCD, 2560 × 1600 (16:10) 100% sRGB, 120Hz Refresh Rate Camera 2MP 1080P 1 × Light sensor in camera module 1 × LED indicator in the camera module Windows Hello Support: No Mic 2 x Digital Mics integrated in the camera module Speakers 2 x 3813 (4Ω×2W) built in body Audio Codec: ALC269QN-VC3-GR Certificate: DTS: X Ultra Operating System Windows 11 Pro 25H2 Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4 Wireless LAN MediaTek MT7922 M.2 Wi-Fi 6E LAN card Left I/O ports 1 x HDMI 2.0 2 x USB4 (40 Gbps) Right I/O ports 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (5 Gbps) 1 x 3.5 mm Audio jack 1 x Camera Privacy Shutter Keyboard 78Key 1.2±0.2mm / Height 3.5±0.2mm (with backlight) White LED light in Caps Lock and Fn key Language: Default US Touch Pad Dimension: 120 x 71mm Material: Mylar Position: Middle Interface: I2C, Dualpoint button Dock Input port: 1 x Type-C 2 x USB 3.0, 1 x RJ45 1 x PD 1 x HDMI (Bio) Security Fingerprint sensor (in the power button) SD Card slot No Kensington Lock No Battery 77Wh (Input 20V, 3.25A) Power 65W PD GaN Fast Charge, USB-C to USB-C Warranty 2 years (Early Bird 1+1 Years) Deal price $1119.67 The X16 Pro is powered by the Intel Ultra 9 185H, which was released in Q4 2023 and is a 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPU designed for laptop/mobile using the Intel 4 architecture based on a 7nm process. The Ultra 9 185H features 16 cores and 22 threads running at up to 5.1 GHz. It also includes a dedicated NPU utilizing Intel AI Boost at 11 TOPS. On the graphics front, the 185H includes the still fairly capable ARC Graphics (not to be confused with the newer ARC 140T) integrated GPU with a max GPU frequency of 2350 MHz across 8 Xe-cores. It has been said that the iGPU is equivalent to the NVIDIA GeForce 3050 and GTX 1650 in gaming and synthetic benchmarks. Other highlights include an AMOLED display, LPDDR5x memory at 7467 MT/s, WiFi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4, and a fingerprint sensor built into the power button. AI PC? Although the Intel Core Ultra 9 185H includes a dedicated NPU, it's only 11 TOPS; therefore, it does not qualify as a Copilot+ PC. However, it can reach up to 33 TOPS with a combination of NPU, CPU, and GPU. As I said, although we only reviewed the X14 Pro, the unboxing is the same for the X16 Pro, which I noted in my review. The packaging is quite a nice experience. The outer box houses the X16 Pro box with a small compartment that contains the 5-in-1 Dock ($40 value), which appears to be an "Early Bird" inclusion. Upon removing the box cover, the X16 Pro is revealed sitting in a cardboard compartment with two small booklets of documentation. To the left of the X16 Pro are two cardboard compartments containing the 65W charger and Type-C USB cable. What’s In The Box 1 x GEEKOM X16 Pro Ultra-thin Laptop 1 x Type-C to Type-C cable 1.8M 1 x 65W GaN PD Fast Charger 1 x Warranty Card 1 x Thank You Card 1 x User Guide All products sold by GEEKOM receive a 3-year free Warranty from the date you receive the product. If needed, you can RMA or return locally relative to your region (the U.S. has a U.S. warehouse, mainland E.U. has a German warehouse). GEEKOM X16 Pro at GEEKOM U.S. for $1,119.67 was $1,349 (17% off) Use coupon code NWGBX1617 when checking out. This flash deal expires on July 2. Huge Summer Sale As a reminder, yesterday GEEKOM kicked off their Huge Summer Sale, in which there are deep discounts on a range of other GEEKOM products. From June 15 to June 30, the GEEKOM Official Store will be running its Summer Sale, with discounts starting from 15% off across the entire lineup, up to 50%! This is their biggest promotion of the year so far, offering pricing that is even lower than select Prime Day deals. You can check out the discounts at the dedicated Summer Sale landing pages below. GEEKOM U.S. Summer Sale GEEKOM U.K. Summer Sale While the Summer Sale ends on June 30, this deal will remain active until July 2.
    • We are reached to the point that apple looks affordable and better choice than anything else, in what dystopia are we living in....
    • Ouch. $1600 for 256GB SSD / 16GB? Even Apple, the purported "target" of Surface devices for a long time, has its MacBook Air M5 at 512GB SSD / 16GB RAM for $999 MSRP. Surface will never be reasonably priced with such low volumes.
    • Sadly price is pretty in line with the other new X2 devices so far. RAM/SSD prices have ruined everything.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      522
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      201
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      89
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!