If you ever dig an old LGA775 board out of a closet, pair it with a GeForce 210 or Radeon 5450, and feel the urge to run OS X 10.6.8—you know which tool to reach for.
Disclaimer: MultiBeast and Snow Leopard are property of their respective owners. This post is for educational and historical purposes only.
If you are new to the Hackintosh world, you probably know MultiBeast as the all-in-one post-installation utility for macOS/OS X. But if you’ve been around since the early Intel days, you remember when a stable system meant running Snow Leopard (10.6.8) —and few tools were as iconic for that era as MultiBeast 3.10.1 .
If you ever dig an old LGA775 board out of a closet, pair it with a GeForce 210 or Radeon 5450, and feel the urge to run OS X 10.6.8—you know which tool to reach for.
Disclaimer: MultiBeast and Snow Leopard are property of their respective owners. This post is for educational and historical purposes only.
If you are new to the Hackintosh world, you probably know MultiBeast as the all-in-one post-installation utility for macOS/OS X. But if you’ve been around since the early Intel days, you remember when a stable system meant running Snow Leopard (10.6.8) —and few tools were as iconic for that era as MultiBeast 3.10.1 .