Apple Updates Snow Leopard, Possibly Disabling 'Hackintoshes'
Apple releases Mac OS X v.10.6.2, its newest update to Snow Leopard, with a variety of tweaks to everything from Final Cut Studio to video watching, as well as a massive security patch. Of importance to those with "hackintoshes," or netbooks that run Apple's Mac OS X, is a much-rumored disabling of the operating system's ability to run with the Intel Atom processor, which powers most netbooks.
Apple released its newest operating system update, Mac OS X v10.6.2, on Nov. 9. In addition to fixing a number of underlying and user-facing aspects of Snow Leopard, the update reportedly also prevents netbooks from using Apple's operating system. Those netbooks running Snow Leopard, referred to as "hackintoshes," largely use Intel's Atom processor; Apple's update apparently denies devices using that processor the ability to run Mac OS X10.6.2.Click Here for 10 Reasons Why Mac OS X Security Could Get Worse
On the surface, the update fixes a number general operating system issues that have cropped up since Snow Leopard's release, including an issue in Front Row that "could cause sluggish or slow frame rates while watching videos," the "creation of mobile accounts for Active Directory users," and "general reliability improvements for iWork, iLife, Aperture, Final Cut Studio, MobileMe and iDisk." So says Apple, which posted a complete list of the updates and changes here. That update page makes no mention of Atom processors. For weeks, rumors had been circulating on forums such as MacRumors.com that Apple planned on disabling support for Atom in the next Mac OS X build. Apple executives have publicly voiced their disdain for netbooks in the past, and the very concept of "hackintoshes" doubtlessly irritates many of those up in Cupertino, Calif. The update also includes a massive security patch addressing nearly 60 vulnerabilities. This newest batch fixes nearly three times as many fixes as a similar security update pushed out in August. The most recent bugs fixed include a memory corruption issue in DirectoryService that could allow a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code or crash applications within a vulnerable system. The batch also corrects issues with Apple's Adaptive Firewall, as well as QuickTime and open-source components including Apache, OpenLDAP and OpenSSH. Apple has been busily releasing new updates for its various operating systems. At the beginning of October, the company issued an iPhone and iPod Touch update, 3.1.2, correcting bugs such as the smartphone's occasional refusal to awaken from sleep mode, something derisively referred to as "coma mode" by some device owners. Apple's recent updates to its iTunes not only tinker with various features, but also prevent the Palm Pre from syncing with the media-center application. Palm and Apple have been playing a game of cat-and-mouse over iTunes compatibility with the Palm Pre, which was launched on June 6 as a potential "iPhone killer" smartphone. Although that prediction has not panned out, at least in terms of unit sales, Palm's repeated attempts to sync the Pre with iTunes have been a consistent source of irritation for Apple.








