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Simple question really, I would like to learn some cocoa, primarily for playing around with the Iphone SDK, but first i need a mac.

Macs are expensive, but I don't know at what point an old mac moves from a bargain to a doorstop.

  • How cheap and old can I go to have an ok mac development machine?

  • Is there any other way to have a good dev machine for the platform without buying a mac and without doing illegal virtualization / dual booting of OSx86?

  • Is virtualizing a real purchased OSX legal?

  • What Virtual Machines will run it?

Thanks in advance all.

EDIT 2009-03-05

Just wanted to say thanks for all who answered / commented on this, its been really useful and now there's a new Mac Mini I might have to splash out soon to get one!

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Thanks for asking this (and for everyone's great answers). I had just logged on to SO to ask this exact question! – CMPalmer Jan 30 at 15:50

19 Answers

vote up 32 vote down check

I bought a Mac mini and I downloaded XCode and the iPhone SDK from Apple's Developer Connection page. I connected an existing 20" display.

It worked for me, but I have to admit that I didn't work on huge projects. I did it just for fun and I never had any performance issues.

You can get the 1.83 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 1GB memory, 80GB hard drive model at $ 599,- or - if you live in Europe - € 499,- (October 2008).

In any case: if you want to develop for the iPhone, you'll need an Intel processor based Mac (iPhone SDK).

Off topic, but maybe this could influence your decision: I use the Mac mini at home to VPN in my Windows-based company network and connect to Windows machines using the Microsoft Remote Desktop Application for the Mac. Works great!

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You shouldn't need to download Xcode, it's on the OSX CD (though it'll probably want to update to the latest version, which is a big download so you might as well just download the latest version and not bother with the CD) – Mark Baker Oct 10 '08 at 9:54
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Mac Mini is fine but do yourself a favour and buy 2Gb of RAM – Dave Verwer Oct 10 '08 at 21:12
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Don't bother with the XCode on the DVD. To develop for the iPhone, you need to download the iPhone devkit, which comes with a more recent version of XCode. – Mark Bessey Oct 12 '08 at 19:42
I have to say "ditto" on the Remote Desktop for Mac. The new version they release a month of two ago really rocks. I routinely remote into my windows machine from my Macbook at home to work. It is almost as seemless as remote desktop for windows. – Jason Jackson Oct 15 '08 at 18:15
The mini works great, but if you want to upgrade the RAM yourself you will have to void the warranty. You may be better off buying the RAM from Apple. – Brian C. Lane Nov 21 '08 at 16:26
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Since when does Apple decide what is legal and what is illegal? Judges are there for that reason Microsoft was convicted for a lot less by antitrust: if this ever enters a court, I'm sure Apple's bones will come out broken So, for what matters, you may have troubles using your mac os x on a PC and Apple won't help, but that doesn't mean they are right When this issue will be legally solved, I'm sure Apple will have to allow people to develop on different platform (Unix on top of all...)

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One thing to keep in mind when buying from eBay is that if they have opened the Mac they have most likely voided the warrantee even if they have Apple Care. In fact they just wasted the Apple Care.

And if ANYTHING doesn't work, like the speaker, DO NOT BUY! It means the opened it and broke something.

You are often better off just buying a refurbished/clearance one from Apple because people have an unrealistic idea of what a used, warrantee voided computer is worth.

Oh and while you can run the iPhone SDK on the PowerPC Macs using some hacks it's not worth it to save a few dollars.

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Definitely keep your eyes on the refurb section of the apple store. A MacBook, Mini, or base iMac would be my choice in your shoes.

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While I am not a big mac fan, yes it is perfectly legal to run a virtual MacOSX(from what I understand)
EDIT: this statement is wrong apparently(see comments). Rest is golden though :)

virtualbox is an excellent virtual machine and its open source(free... a new concept to mac users).

I run this on linux(but other OSs are supported) and while it is slightly process hungry it does work perfectly, even in "seamless" mode where the windows on the virtual machine become integrated with my real machine desktop.

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Just want to know, why? I use this site to learn. – gnomed Mar 5 at 3:11
Gave you a +1. You even answered two out of four questions almost not covered by other answers. BUT: "it is perfectly legal to run a virtual MacOSX" .. this is wrong in many countries. It is true in Germany, because parts of the OS X EULA don't hold there. But it is not true for the U.S.... – ypnos Mar 5 at 17:14
Interesting, thanks. This might not be the place for such a conversation, but how exactly can Mac control what platform their OSs are run on? If an OS is purchased legally can't it be installed on any machine(including a virtual one)? Also, just out of curiosity for me, what about Canada? – gnomed Mar 5 at 18:29
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  • How cheap and old can I go to have an ok mac development machine?

Computers are so absurdly fast now anything made in the last 2-4 years will be more than usable. The current Mac Mini will be more than enough for most things - it may not be the "fastest", but it has a dual-core CPU, and you can fit at least 2GBs of RAM into it..

  • Is there any other way to have a good dev machine for the platform without buying a mac and without doing illegal virtualization / dual booting of OSx86?

The cheapest (legal) way of running OS X is to borrow a machine.. Even if it's an old G4 iMac, you can still run XCode (and Leopard, if I'm not mistaken). It wont be the fastest, most pleasant experience, but it'll work.. Another alternative is to use a friends machine remotely, via SSH and/or VNC.

  • Is virtualizing a real purchased OSX legal?

Both Parallels and VMWare Fusion can now legally (and easily) virtualise OS X Server, but only on OS X, so this will not be very useful to you..

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I did some development on the Mac Mini, which worked out well for me. It is eerily silent.

However that seems to be the consensus of this thread, my recommendation for your mini purchase would be to wait a few months. Macworld is coming in January and the rumor is they will be giving the mini a much needed update. The current model has been unchanged for about a year, it honestly isn't worth the money as it stands right now.

Some good sites to check on to see when apple is planning on refreshes, http://www.macrumors.com/ and http://www.appleinsider.com/.

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There are basically three ways to get a discount on a Mac as mentioned in other posts the Mac Mini is the cheapest Mac but the white laptop may be the most convenient way to get a Mac.

1) Educational discount - you can just take an evening class and still qualify for this, usually about 5% off;

2) Refurb store - discounts can be up to 50% but you need to act quickly and be aware of suitable prices - this is available from the front end of the Apple.com website. My iMac came from here and didn't have a scratch on it and I got 18% off;

3) Ex-demo and old stock from resellers, particularly if they are moving or selling up, once got about 25% off an iPod on Christmas Eve and 40% off a laptop in a closing down sale - you have to wait for these though.

Personally I'd avoid buying on e-Bay - Macs attract scammers and you don't often see genuine bargains, plus laptops may be in a dubious state. I would sell on eBay though as Macs hold their value well. See my page http://www.squidoo.com/cheapmac for more details.

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Buy one off ebay. If you don't need an intel one you can get PPC970 based Powermacs quite cheaply. Even intel ones are somewhat cheaper than retail.

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I think you could get by with a G5-based imac, tho there's probably intel-only libs now. I upgraded one to leopard for a friend, for graphics and video editing, but no code dev, it works pretty well (2G RAM). I wouldn't get a G4, they're just too underpowered.

Contact the folks at powermax.com and smalldog.com, they carry inventories of used and refurbs and open-box special. Also the apple store does refurbs

http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/AppleStore.woa/wa/RSLID?sf=wHF2F2PHCCCX72KDY&nclm=CertifiedMac

Here's another thread

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I also started out with a Intel Mac mini but the 5400rpm drive really slowed things down and it had a max of 2GB of RAM. Also was I running on a 24 inch monitor, so its slow video card didn't help.

The next upgrade, without a monitor, would be the mac pro which is really expensive. But i'd suggest to go on ebay and you can buy the dual 2.66 models for around $1500-$1700 depending on the upgrade. Just make sure you can getcAppleCare to cover the parts on you're good to go.

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If you're willing to tinker, it's quite easy to replace the drive on a mac mini with a 7200 rpm model. I had to replace mine because the included drive broke and noticed an instant speed boost. – Joeri Sebrechts Oct 15 '08 at 18:53
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It's not the cheapest solution, but affordable and mobil: get the white macbook.

It is plenty fast for development, remember your iphone is about the speed of a decade old imac. I use the external display as a second monitor, dual screen setup is a must I think (you often need the documentation when starting ;) You can only have one monitor on a mac mini, at least without getting an external display splitter.

And you'll thank me later for being able to take it to starbucks or your venture capitalist.

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A few things of note:

  1. You need apple hardware to have any form of OS X be in accordance with the OS X end user license agreement. wether or not this "contract" is legally binding is still up for debate.
  2. If you want to do any kind of iPhone development your xcode environment requires the CPU architecture to be x86, so no G4 or G5 systems
  3. I get by perfectly on a stock Macbook Pro (revision 1) But realistically i believe you can get by with any Core Duo or Core 2 Duo Mac regardless of speed, but you will need at least 1GB RAM, preferably more.
  4. be careful, Core Duo macs usually support only upto 3GB ram thanks to some flaw in the ram chipset. But if you want to max it out, you'll have to put in 4GB (2x 2GB) and leave 1GB completely unused

If you're not going to be requiring a laptop, I'd recommend you go for the biggest screen current iMac you can afford (new).

P.S. check the link to the refurbished items, it is on the lower left of the main store page. apple store (USA)

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My Core 2 Duo MacBook handles 4G of RAM just fine. – Brian C. Lane Nov 21 '08 at 16:23
That's a Core 2 Duo (64bits) not the older Core Duo (32bits) They sport somewhat different specs... – Kris Dec 5 '08 at 12:37
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The next MacBook releases are meant to include some cheaper machines. It is possibly that Apple will come out with a cheaper Mac Mini as well, but maybe not at the same time.

what this ultimately means is that the refurb shop MacBooks and Mac Minis could be significantly cheaper in just a week's time (or whenever the updates are released).

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I feel sad that I wrote this in October, and nearly 5 months later they haven't released a new Mac Mini still :( – JeeBee Feb 27 at 0:50
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You should check Apple's refurb shop. You get a nice shiney mac with full warranty and a few quid off the retail price. I bought my 2Ghz mini from the UK online refurb outlet which knocked £75 off the price. I got mine to try out development on a non-windows platform without all my usual MS dev toys.

But it all depends on how much you want to spend. I thought about getting a Power PC based model from ebay but decided spending the extra on an Intel model was better value in the long run (and who knows when Apple might decide to stop supporting the PPC units). It was a bit more expensive, but I'm glad I did now because I'm really pleasantly surprised by how nice OS X is.

I bootcamped mine with Vista and installed Parallels which is real nice because I can launch Windows apps in their own windows without having them live in a single VM console window. It now kinda makes me wish I'd blew a bigger wad on a MacPro 8 core :).

I'd also thought about the Hackintosh thing but decided against because it's a license violation and also who knows how long it'd be before it broke after some Apple update. I'm a great believer in doing stuff right first time, I've been a cheapskate in the past and it bit me later.

I'd say spend the money and get as late a model as you can afford, you won't regret it...and that's coming from a dyed in the wool windows kinda guy.

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I was gonna post this but you beat me to it, but here is the link for the US store: store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/… – Unkwntech Oct 10 '08 at 10:28
And I agreed with everyhing you said, especaily about spending the money now, it will pay off in the future, my main system is 2.5 years old and still out preforms a ton of the new stuff, because I put the money into, all my friends that baught systems around hte same time have all had to upgrade. – Unkwntech Oct 10 '08 at 10:31
@Unkwntech: yeah I hate compromising, these days I'd rather do without until I can afford the best money can buy :) – Kev Oct 10 '08 at 10:57
Refurbished units are a good suggestion. Stay away from the PowerPC machines if you want to do iPhone development, though. – Mark Bessey Oct 12 '08 at 19:45
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Why don't you just use your PC? you can just create a hackintosh, it's a bit of work setting up but it means you don't need dedicated hardware :)

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Not to mention its illegal. – Unkwntech Oct 10 '08 at 10:18
Also I did specify in the question that I don't want the illegal options, more interested in the actual cost of a cheap mac – Matthew Rathbone Oct 10 '08 at 10:41
You actually specifically asked for the illegal option: <quote>s there any other way to have a good dev machine for the platform without buying a mac and without doing illegal virtualization / dual booting of OSx86?</quote> – lajos Oct 10 '08 at 22:30
Never mind illegal, it's unstable as hell and often takes > 15 hours to set up. Compare that with 20 minutes to get my shiny new MacBook (bought from Apple just last week) online with dev tools ... No brainer! If your time is worth more than $50 an hour, buy a Mini ... $100, buy a MacBook. :) – John Rudy Nov 24 '08 at 12:16
"and without doing illegal virtualization / dual booting of OSx86?".. – dbr Dec 1 '08 at 13:29
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The first generation Intel iMac (the white one) are good enough for xcode development. You can find them pretty cheap on second-hand markets. Just remember to load up the memory as far as you can, I think the white iMacs can take 2gb, which is enough for a starter.

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I have worked on many large projects, and I can happily say that my little mac mini is fully up to the task. As a hint, though, buy as much RAM for it as it will support, otherwise it won't run very fast at all.

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Developing on a Mac Mini works quite well: it's not the fastest machine out there (especially when it comes to disk access) and expandability is limited, but unless you're planning on building huge projects, you should be fine.

Running OS X on any non-Apple hardware (whether virtualized or not) is a violation of the license agreement, so you don't want to go down that road. As far as I know, there are no off-thes-shelf emulators that run it anyway, and the custom-built hardware I've seen for it has been quite dodgy as well...

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VMWare Fusion 2.0 for mac can legally run Leopard Server (no sound support). Fusion is cheap, but I don't know about Server. – Rhythmic Fistman Oct 10 '08 at 20:26
VMWare Fusion only (legally) runs on Apple hardware... – mdb Oct 10 '08 at 21:12
new version of Fusion supports 10.5.6 (Snow Leopard) server as well – sascha Feb 26 at 21:44

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