Personally I think there is a real opportunity for
some software
company here.
Well, the situation isn't nearly that dire; there's Basilisk II and
SheepShaver, both of which do have native OS X builds. But you have to
run them within an emulator, which is kludgey and not nearly as
integrated -- if not elegant -- as Classic is.
Personally, I wonder why Apple decided to stop. I guess Steve wants to kill
the Old Ways once and for all. I suspect that was a bigger motivation for
the Intel switch than the promise of more powerful chips.
--
--------------------------------- personal:
http://www.armory.com/~spectre/ ---
Cameron Kaiser * Floodgap Systems *
www.floodgap.com * ckaiser at
floodgap.com
-- Never trust a computer you can't lift. -------------------------------------