because for some reason they think if you’re building a hackintosh that you already have a mac for some of the things you need
those can run on almost anything now adays XD
Not really, if you want an actual good experience
I’m having flashback to trying to get OSX Snow Leopard on my old Asus Q8300 system, could get it running but didn’t go so well with hardware support for literally anything.
we have macs at our highschool. You could have gotten some of the shit from their
Yes and No. it will boot and run some programs but certains things dont really work 100% well life wifi, graphics, etc
i had some old acer laptop i tried getting leopard running on, it was not a fun time
yeah, but i didn’t have plans to get a hackintosh set up at the time lmao
I could maybe get some of the things for you. I still keep a copy of Mac OSX on here for obvious reasons
tbh i’m not even sure how much of a good experience i would have with it
i ALMOST want to throw this on my phone https://forum.xda-developers.com/xperia-xz/development/f8331-aosp-8-0-builds-t3685200
And what about retail prices/availability?
maaybe. but retailers are also scalping so meh
(also i generally ignore new stuff so… because used is generally great but lately not as much but still)
As long as those aren’t normal I don’t care if used price rise or drop tbh.
used markets show the drops in price much faster and more reliably.
Because now that Newegg (etc) have raised the prices they aren’t going to lower them until the cards no longer sell at those prices so
Me writing:
I never thought I’d write a basic explanation for how to deposit money in a bank. Here I am writing it.
This for the law firm? or sams wasteland?
Actually for the fantasy story. The bank is run by the Dwarven Kingdom. So I’ve had to come up with how the bank is run. It is kind of similar to a bank but there are differences.
Interesting video and he makes some very good points. The big standout for me with Ryzen is the life of the platform and being able to upgrade to multiple generations of Ryzen chips while still being very relevant. My only regrets being a Ryzen early adopter is not waiting a couple of months for some of the issues to be ironed out especially given the trouble I had getting Linux to boot at launch and for the 1700X to go down in price to where it made sense to get one over the 1700 but overall I’m very happy with Ryzen and the platform.