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Single-user licenses and "family pack" licenses for up to five computers are available.
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Snow Leopard is available as an upgrade for Intel-based Macintosh computers. A hardware device capable of being attached to a PC's motherboard has also been released, EFI-X, but it is essentially a USB mass storage device with the needed bootloader. Modified installation DVDs are also available illegally which offer a more outdated approach to installing.
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This method of installation allows the use of an unmodified Apple installation DVD and the updating of the operating system from the built-in Software Update utility, but will work only on modern Intel-based PCs, unless a modified kernel is added to the pre-boot CD. A variety of installation processes can be used, the most common being to use Darwin-based bootloaders commonly known as " Boot 132" designed to emulate an EFI which Intel Macs use instead of a BIOS.
#Apple snow leopard serial number for mac os
Since Apple moved to using Intel processors in their computers, the OSx86 community has developed and now also allows Mac OS X Tiger and Leopard to be installed and run successfully on non-Apple x86-based computers, albeit in violation of Apple's licensing agreement for Mac OS X. Alternatively, the Snow Leopard Installation DVD can be booted on a supported Mac, then installed on an unsupported Mac via the Firewire Target Disk Mode. Users who have access to supported hardware have installed Snow Leopard on the supported machine then simply moved the hard drive to the unsupported machine. Some ways of running Mac OS X Snow Leopard on certain unsupported hardware have been discovered.
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Snow Leopard does not support PowerPC-based Macs (e.g., Power Macs, PowerBooks, iBooks, iMacs (G3-G5), all eMacs, plus pre-February 2006 Mac minis and the Power Mac G4 Cube), although PowerPC applications are supported via Rosetta, which is now an optional install.

"Yonah" processors such as Core Solo and Core Duo can run only 32-bit applications later x86-64 architecture processors such as Core 2 Duo are also able to run 64-bit applications.

The release of Snow Leopard came nearly two years after the introduction of Mac OS X Leopard (version 10.5), the second longest time span between successive Mac OS X releases. As a result of the low price, initial sales of Snow Leopard were significantly higher than that of its predecessors. On August 28, 2009, it was released worldwide, and was made available for purchase from Apple's website and its retail stores at the price of US$29 for a single-user license.

Snow Leopard was publicly unveiled on June 8, 2009 at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference. Mac OS X Snow Leopard (version 10.6) is the seventh major release of Mac OS X, Apple's desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. Closed source (with open source components)
