Yes. Macintosh and other UNIX based systems are still at risk of getting viruses and trojans, however they are extremely rare.
There are no active viruses that attack Mac OS X.
There are no active viruses that affect Mac OS X.
There are no viruses affecting Mac OS X.
There are no viruses that affect Mac OS X. If a Mac is running the Windows operating system then it is liable to be infected by the thousands of viruses that exploit the inherent vulnerabilities in Windows.
There is an older version of ClamXAV available (See links below) for Mac OS X 10.3 but as there are no viruses that attack Mac OS X anti virus software is superfluous.
There are no viruses infecting Mac OS X.
There are no active viruses targeting Mac OS X.
There are no viruses that affect Mac OS X. There is always a possibility that a user may be tricked into downloading and installing (with their administrators password) some form of malware. There is no record of this ever happening when using Disney's ToonTown.
The second name of Mac OS X v10.4.5 is Mac OS X v10.4 Intel.Mac OS X 10.4 was known as Mac OS X Tiger.
Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) needs to be purchased as it is not possible to update from Mac OS X 10.2.8
Mac OS X is an operating system released by Apple Inc. It is designed for Apple branded computers, which is why you will never see a Dell, or an HP computer run Mac OS X. There are only two important versions of Mac OS X, Mac OS X Server, and regular Mac OS X. Mac OS X server was designed for servers, while regular Mac OS X was designed for most computers. The current version of Mac OS X (10.6) is named Snow Leopard.
Yes, it is. Any type of MacBook that comes out now is a Mac OS X. The most recent version of Mac OS X is Mac OS X Lion, coming out soon.