Yes, there is a version of World of Warcraft for Mac OS X on Intel processors.
MacOS 10.0
Apple uses various processors from Intel for their range of computers.
No. Apple only writes programming language in Mac OS X for Intel and PowerPC processors.
Around 2006 Apple changed over to Intel processors.
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.
They both support Windows, Linux (& other Unix variants such as BSD), and can also support Mac OS X. However, most Mac OS X use primarily Intel instead of AMD.
In order to run a Windows OS you need to have an Intel processor. Mac OS X will only run on an apple computer. Some apple computers are using an Intel processor so you can run a Windows OS or Mac OS.
Providing the Intel processor is in an Apple Mac computer, and the rest of the computer parts are present too, then Mac OS X can be installed.
No, Mac OS X requires a Power PC processor (supported through Leopard) or an Intel Core Duo (or newer) processor since these are the only processors that are used in Apple hardware and Mac OS X may only be installed on a Mac.
There are 2 major OS for Macintosh computers: the original, Mac OS 9 or earlier, which was a single threaded system. Now there is Mac OS X, a UNIX based operating system, found on later computers. Modern Intel based Macs can run Windows and Linux as well as Mac OS X.The original Apple computers, including the Macintosh had a proprietary operating system named Mac OS and ran on Motorola 68000 processors and its descendants: 68020, 68030, 68040. Starting in 1994, Macintosh starting using the IBM PowerPc processors: PowerPC 601, 603, 604, G3, G4, G5.In 2006, Apple switched to Intel processors running with Mac OS X (Macintosh Operating System version 10), an implementation of the Unix operating system.
no, you can covert info from a mac to a pc, but not a pc to a mac