fryke said:
...so even _if_ you'd find a Puma/Jaguar/Panther build and even _if_ it had Rosetta, and EVEN IF you'd get it to run on an older PC, the result would probably not be really useable. (As in: Everyday use.) I know RacerX would oppose that he's actively using Rhapsody on PC as a working operating system for everyday tasks, but to that I'd say: Different expectations.
Actually, it would be more along the lines of different application availability. Rhapsody was given to developers and some developers wrote software for it... which I have licensed versions. That is what makes my Rhapsody ThinkPad a usable system for me.
And that is what would set Rhapsody for Intel apart from Puma/Jaguar/Panther for Intel, application availability. The best operating system in the world is only usable if there exists applications for it to do the tasks users need.
As for Rhapsody, I've always argued that usability of it for anyone is based on what tools they could find that would let them do the tasks they needed to get done. Seeing as I use many of the same application titles in OPENSTEP, Rhapsody and Mac OS X, moving to any of these systems doesn't hamper my productivity.
On the other hand, if I was sitting here with a copy of Jaguar for Intel... I wouldn't be able to do much with it. None of the developers of the software I use in OPENSTEP/Rhapsody/Mac OS X ever wrote/ported any apps to that system. Without apps, it would be pretty much useless for me.
And in the interest of full disclosure... I actually spend most of my time in Rhapsody on a Power Macintosh 8600/300. It is many times faster than my ThinkPad (Pentium at 133 MHz), has much more desktop space (it has two monitors) and there are more apps for Rhapsody for PowerPC than for Rhapsody for Intel. The ThinkPad is a great mobile system, but when I need to get work done, the 8600 is where I spend most of my time.