![]() This is mostly just a compilation of information available on different parts of the internet. I’m going to do my best to explain what to do. In order to create a VMware virtual machine of Mac OS X 10.4, there are several challenges that you have to overcome. Who knows - maybe it’s still useful for certain developers who still need to test how things work on 10.4 without keeping an old power-hungry machine around that is capable of running it. ![]() With that said, I really doubt Apple cares about such an old version of OS X these days, and I think creating a VM of it is a really cool thing to do for educational purposes. And technically, it’s against OS X’s license agreement to virtualize it (same with the non-server versions of 10.5 and 10.6). ![]() Nobody’s really using it anymore because it’s so old. ![]() It was only bundled with the first Intel Macs before 10.5 “Leopard” came out in 2007.īecause of the way it was weirdly released, it’s not super common to virtualize OS X 10.4 for Intel. There wasn’t a retail copy of the Intel version of Tiger. Because the Intel version came out in 2006 after the PowerPC version had already been in stores, it’s kind of a weird release. It was also the version that Apple first used on its Intel Macs in 2006. If you can believe it, Mac OS X 10.4 “Tiger” is over 12 years old as of this writing.
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