No, it is a Windows application only.
No, Microsoft ActiveX controls cannot run on Mac OS X.
It is possible to run Mac OS X on a server but it is not legally as the current license tern of Mac OS X server is installing and running on Apple hardware.
No , you cannot run OS X on a windows machine. Buy a mac
Mac OS X PPC is a version of Apple's Mac OS X operating system that runs on Power PC (PPC) architecture. This is opposed to Mac OS X for X86 which runs on Intel-based Macs. Mac OS X 10.0 through 10.5 can run on PowerPC based macs whereas Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard will only run on Intel-based Macs.
You cannot without erasing your hard drive and installing Mac OS 9 from scratch. Even then Mac OS 9 may not run on modern Mac hardware because Mac OS 9 needs the ROM chip to boot. Modern Mac OS X hardware uses EFI to boot the system instead of a ROM chip to boot. Mac OS X v10.0 - Mac OS X v10.4 support Mac OS 9 applications and can run them, you just need to install the Mac OS 9 compatibility program which can be found on the Mac OS X Install CD.
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.
You cannot run OS X on a windows machine.
Mac OS X - legally. Some people have altered the code in Mac OS X so that it can run on PC hardware (Hackint0sh)
The 4 Applications that were released were: 1. iTunes 2. iMovie 3. iPhoto 4. iDVD All of these were created to run on OS 9 until OSX came out. All Mac OSX Releases (in order): -Mac OS X Server 1.0 "Hera" -Mac OS X Public Beta "Kodiak" -Mac OS X 10.0 "Cheetah" -Mac OS X 10.1 "Puma" -Mac OS X 10.2 "Jaguar" -Mac OS X 10.3 "Panther" -Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger" -Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard" -Mac OS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard" -Mac OS X 10.7 "Cougar" (still in development, scheduled for 2011 release)
You misunderstand the purpose of Boot Camp. The purpose of Boot Camp is to allow you to set up a dual-boot of Mac OS X and Windows on your Mac. It does not allow you to run Windows programs directly on Mac OS X.
Apple created Mac OS X to run on their Macintosh range of computers. The licencing agreement that you agree to when installing Mac OS X specifies that it can only be used on Apple's own hardware.
Which operating system will work on Apple Macintosh computers depends on the CPU of the computer. Apple computers with PPC CPUs can run Apple's OS 9 Intel CPU computers can run Apple's OS X, and using Boot Camp, can also run Linux and Microsoft's Windows XP operating systems.