How one man made his own Hackintosh

John Biggs

Biggs is the East Coast Editor of TechCrunch. Biggs has written for the New York Times, InSync, USA Weekend, Popular Mechanics, Popular Science, Money and a number of other outlets on technology and wristwatches. He is the former editor-in-chief of Gizmodo.com and lives in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. You can Tweet him here and G+ him here. Email him directly at... → Learn More

Friday, May 8th, 2009

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The Houston Chronicle, bastion of high-tech reporting, has a cool article on making your own Hackintosh desktop using an ASUS mobo and 16GB of memory.

Not only did the author, Brent, discover that creating a Hackintosh is fun but he also found it fraught with peril!

I was so stunned when I saw the beautiful welcome-to-Leopard video playing on my monitor. I grabbed my speaker cable and plugged it into the headphone jack in the back of the computer because I love the music in that video. No dice – no sound. Since it was a new motherboard that I hadn’t used before, I hoped I’d just picked the wrong jack, so I tried all 6 headphone jacks on the back of the motherboard, but still no audio. Ah well, nothing’s perfect, I figured, so I excitedly went back to the keyboard and mouse to set up my account.
I put in my network information (I don’t use DHCP) but it couldn’t connect to the network. No big deal, I thought – I’ll just reboot, and -

It didn’t come back up.

Sadly, after all that work he went back to using Windows 7, albeit emulated on a virtual machine.

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