Yes and no. You can run Windows software on a PowerPC Mac using software such as VirtualPC for Mac or Q. A powerful Mac is required to do this as emulating a completely different CPU with a completely different architecture is VERY CPU taxing. However, running an Intel app on a PowerPC Mac is impossible. The code inside of the program is written for the Intel chipset and not PowerPC. If you find a "Universal" porgam, that means that there are two sets of code in that program, PPC and Intel.
PowerPC Mac OS X apps are emulated transparently on Intel Macs. For "Classic" programs, you'll have to use an emulator like SheepShaver.
Yes, Apple's Intel transition was the process of changing the CPU of Macintosh computers from PowerPC processors to Intel x86 processors.
Yes in fact if you have an Intel mac you can download the 32 bit iso and run it. If you have a powerpc you can use Ubuntu if you go into the downloads for a release you will see a powerpc option.
Nothing. If you have an Intel Mac, you can use Boot Camp to dual-boot Windows. There is nothing you can do to run it on a PowerPC Mac.
Older versions used a processor called PowerPC made by power.org New versions use Intel.
Classic Mac OS games can be used in Mac OS X if the Mac is a PowerPC Mac, the game was written for PowerPC processors, and the version of Mac OS X is Tiger or older. They cannot be used on Intel Macs except via the use of a third-party emulator, such as SheepShaver.
You can't Sorry, It made for Intel Macs only.
You can run Windows 95 in an emulator (such as VirtualPC or QEMU) on a PowerPC Mac. You can also use a virtual machine like VMWare, Parallels workstation, or VirtualBox to run it on an Intel Mac. You cannot install it directly on either, as the hardware is not compatible.
If the Mac is intel, install Windows with Bootcamp or use Crossover Games or Parrallels or VMWare. If you have a powerpc mac, then use Virtual PC or Q, but it will be slow.
Because you can't use Boot camp on a G5. Because a G5 uses a PowerPC processor, not an Intel one. There is no way to run Windows on such a Mac except via a (very slow) emulator.
No, the MacBook Pro is not a PowerPC. Apple transitioned from PowerPC processors to Intel processors in 2006 and later shifted to its own Apple Silicon (M1 and M2 chips) starting in 2020. The current MacBook Pro models use these Intel or Apple Silicon processors, which are distinct from the older PowerPC architecture.
IBM used to. Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple, Inc.) used to use the PowerPC chip in its computers, but they moved to Intel with the introduction of their line of MacBooks. Please see the related link.