Whenever Apple comes out with a major new release of its OS, some
Macintosh hardware gets left behind. While Leopard includes support for
PowerPC Macs, itis worth looking at Appleis history to see if
Mac OS X 10.6 will abandon the entire PowerPC line, according to Daniel
Dilger at Roughly Drafted.
“Previous versions of Apple?s OS have drawn the line for officially supported Macs based on practical considerations, rather than just being arbitrary or artificial. Hereis what the past suggests for Mac OS X Leopard and the version that comes after it,” Mr. Dilger wrote.
It turns out that there are some fairly frequently used metrics for deciding
whether a new OS version needs to leave a line of hardware behind. By looking
at how Apple has done this going all the way back to System 7 in 1996,
itis possible to make a good prediction about what Mac OS X 10.6 will support.
While Apple has a tendency to make radical changes in hardware, such
as the Motorola 680×0 transition to PowerPC, then PowerPC to Intel, the
pace of change has still afforded a rather generous position by Apple
in how far back they go.
For example, “The release of Mac OS X Panther 10.3 in 2003 extended support back to Macs with G3 processors and built-in support for USB. This wasnit due to an actual requirement for USB, but rather a shorthand way to describe a cutoff for the support of the significantly different architecture of “Old World” Macs designed prior to the iMac, as all New World Macs also provided support for USB. Panther retained a roughly five year support window for existing Mac models,”
Mr. Dilger noted.
Another major factor to consider is the aggregate of how many Macs lie within,
say, a five year window in the past. For example, the majority of the
installed base of Macs today, about 22 million, is still PowerPC. These customers will be
buying software well into 2010. In addition, the architecture of recent Macs,
even through the PPC to Intel transition, hasnit changed that much since 2003.
There are additional technical considerations, thanks to the way Apple has set up its 32- and 64-bit architectures, something Microsoft has had trouble with. The bottom line was easy to arrive at. “Worrying about 10.6 or even 10.7 being Intel-only shouldnit be among anyoneis greatest concerns,” Mr. Dilger concluded.