A continuation of part 2, it talks about restarting and boot loading again after Leopard 10.5 install, and choosing your boot drive from prompt. It shows you the Mac OS X operating system booting up for first time on his pc hardware. Fox also talks about how ethernet networking should work, and if not it is possible you chose a non-compatible motherboard.
Here’s a guy name Fox from Japan and his 4 part video tutorials are quite informative, he offers up a lot of good tips for your Mac OS X installation on PC hardware. In this video he will tell you what hardware and software components you need to build the a hackintosh.
Here’s a video by MukeLarvin that details the honest trials and tribulations of building a PC and then trying to install Mac OS X (hackintosh) on it. Sometimes, it doesn’t go that smoothly, most people don’t get it on first try so this a lot of you reading this can relate to it, if you do get it to work right away then you are considered one of the great hackers
This is a good video on how to install Mac OSX Snow Leopard 10.6 on a PC using I think the only Snow Leopard OSX86 (hackintosh) distribution out there right now called “Snow OSX Universal v3.5″ to get it, you will of course need to Google it and most likely download it by torrent.
MacOSXonPC.com believes that people shouldn't pay such high prices for Apple computer hardware with such low hardware specifications, when you are able to take advantage of the stability and ease of use of the Mac OS X operating system with affordable and powerful PC hardware.
Ask yourself, if you can build a powerful Quad Core Intel CPU computer with 4 GB of RAM, and powerful NVidia Graphics running Mac OS X Leopard natively for less than $500 why wouldn't you?
A similar specification from Apple for a Mac Pro desktop starts at $2499 on the Apple website.