Hey I was just wondering if this will ever run on a power pc or is there any way to run it on a power pc, and maybe ever just a plain old windows computer?
As I send my Intel Mac off to the Apple depot on Monday for repairs (for "4-5 business days"), I'll be going through GS withdrawal!!!
Would be nice to transfer things over to my old PowerBook so I could keep working, but not critical. A lot of the work in building a game happens outside the tool.
Please continue developing GS for PowerPC, I'm a Windows person and just ordered an iBook G4 to do iPhone development. I'm disappointed to learn about the lack of PowerPC support....
That's not true at all, there is a trick you can use to install IPhone SDK on your PowerPC Machine!, cuz the SDK is compiled using the universal binary tech. ^^.
This is a tutorial on how to get the iPhone SDK to work on PPC Macs (normally it only works on Intel-based macs). Here we go ...
First of all, you have to join apples developer connection. This is free of charge so don't be afraid. After you did this, you have to download the SDK from their page. Both can be done over at http://developer.apple.com/iphone/
Alright. When you downloaded the SDK (it's about 2.1GB) mount the .dmg-file. When you did this, install the iPhone SDK normally. So click "iPhone SDK", follow the normal installation procedure. This will take a while since it takes about 4.3GB or something on your hard drive. When you're done you'll have to reboot your mac. do that.
Now the interesting part: After you rebooted, mount the .dmg again. this time, click "Packages". On the top of the list you see five packages starting with "Aspen". Install all five of them. After you installed all packages, open up Finder and go to /Platforms/ on your local hard drive. This folder contains two subfolders called "Aspen.platform" and "AspenSimulator.platform". Take those two folders and copy them to /Developers/Platforms/ on your hard drive. Make sure to copy the subfolders and not the "Platforms"-Folder itself! This is important because I made the mistake to just take the /Platforms/ folder and copying it to /Developers/ when I first tried it. The problem is that this overwrites the already existing Platforms-Folder in /Developers/, thus causing XCode to stop working. So, anyway, just copy the two "Aspen"-Folders to /Developers/Platforms/. That's it. Start up XCode, create a new project and you'll have the iPhone-Application-Category up and working, including the iPhone Simulator.
Yes , please keep working on this for Power PC. I love my power pc and don't want to have to shell out loads for a new mac when this 1 is working just fine. I really wana try this program and start developing fun games that i can share with people and play on the go games. Keep up the good work And thanx for the Xcode work around , will try it later 2day
I don't see why you would want a powerpc mac still. Once you get an intel mac, you don't have to worry about upgrading for at least another 5 years. Intel is hear to stay. Throw away the powerpc and get a cheap white 13 inch macbook on ebay for around $400. You not only have a 5 year computer, you get faster speed, more reliable snow leopard and a clearer screen. There's no need to have a powerpc anymore.
List the benefits (if you can) of having a powerpc and maybe I'll change my mind.
List of Benefits of PowerPC architecture:(the most important)
- Is the best RISC arch, powered by IBM with constants upgrades (the power7 cpu is the best cpu ever develop).
- The assembler instructions are retro-compatible, so you can made upgrades of PPC (32/64 bits), with no effort (With Intel, there are a lot of new intructions sets "SSE3/SSE4" that cannot be applied simply because you can drop compatibility with older intel chips).
- PowerPC arch creates much more stable executables (because RISC arch is aim to work with a lot of little pieces of code very fast, on the contrary CISC "Intel" works with big pieces of code, and if a piece of code have an illegal instruction or similar, is very difficult to make a recovery, that is why Leopard is much more stable on PPC).
- It's true that the idiots of Apple drops PPC arch (indeed they are idiots), but I hope that soon some company will create new PC with PPC arch.
- For me is not an excuse the "We can run windows now"... If you wanna run windows, buy a PC... If you wanna hardware + software quality... buy a PPC MAC.
BTW, I have a PowerMac G5, and I think that is the last apple that i'm gonna buy, If you want Intel power, buy an AlienWare, that is more powerful and cheaper than the Mac Pro (and you can Install HAckintosh with no problem).
i told my dad that i wanted to crate apps, so he bought me a mac:D but it turned out to be a power mac wich didn't even work with gamesalad... so now i had to buy a brand new mac 1000$ gone...
Hi, i just bought a powerpc Imac g5 hoping to use it with gamesalad. Upset now i just wasted my money Please make a version available for leopard, pleease guys!
tenrdrmerMember, Sous Chef, Senior Sous-ChefPosts: 9,934
edited January 2012
Gamesalad doesn't work on leopard because apple didn't support leopard for Xcode. So even if it did work you would not be able to publish yor games. this is a learning experience for you. You need to make sure when your buy 5 year old hardware it will work for the software you want.
I prefer the powerPC over intelPC and fondly, perhaps foolishly, hope that with the ARM cpu in the devices (they do run so fast) Apple might use ARM instead IntelPC
Okay let me get this straight. The GS website is still incapable of remembering our password. But GS is putting resources to accomodating 10 year old computers....?
no, no @andrewn2211 … GS resources are committed to the latest computing advances!
Power PCs are OS-X architecture and capable of running Apple's Leopard OS … so they were up-to-date till October 2009; and Apple's switch to only Intel chip commitment with the release of Snow Leopard. (though do remember getting a few updates to Leopard after that!)
believe, in early 2010, GS dropped Leopard and therefore PowerPC platform support; has more to do with needing the latest Xcode for iOS platform development … than not providing builds for older computers.
and, ah! a PowerPC work so nice … if you owned one, you would want to keep using it!
Comments
Would be nice to transfer things over to my old PowerBook so I could keep working, but not critical. A lot of the work in building a game happens outside the tool.
Steve
This is a tutorial on how to get the iPhone SDK to work on PPC Macs (normally it only works on Intel-based macs).
Here we go ...
First of all, you have to join apples developer connection. This is free of charge so don't be afraid. After you did this, you have to download the SDK from their page. Both can be done over at
http://developer.apple.com/iphone/
Alright. When you downloaded the SDK (it's about 2.1GB) mount the .dmg-file. When you did this, install the iPhone SDK normally. So click "iPhone SDK", follow the normal installation procedure. This will take a while since it takes about 4.3GB or something on your hard drive. When you're done you'll have to reboot your mac. do that.
Now the interesting part: After you rebooted, mount the .dmg again. this time, click "Packages". On the top of the list you see five packages starting with "Aspen". Install all five of them.
After you installed all packages, open up Finder and go to /Platforms/ on your local hard drive. This folder contains two subfolders called "Aspen.platform" and "AspenSimulator.platform". Take those two folders and copy them to /Developers/Platforms/ on your hard drive.
Make sure to copy the subfolders and not the "Platforms"-Folder itself! This is important because I made the mistake to just take the /Platforms/ folder and copying it to /Developers/ when I first tried it. The problem is that this overwrites the already existing Platforms-Folder in /Developers/, thus causing XCode to stop working.
So, anyway, just copy the two "Aspen"-Folders to /Developers/Platforms/. That's it. Start up XCode, create a new project and you'll have the iPhone-Application-Category up and working, including the iPhone Simulator.
Enjoy this! I will!
Keep up the good work
And thanx for the Xcode work around , will try it later 2day
Eventually you'll just want to dive into the new Mac world, it is worth it
List the benefits (if you can) of having a powerpc and maybe I'll change my mind.
or else you wont have to buy more cellphones, machines, software, and they don't get a new YAGHT.
"What does this year's upgrade do that last year's version didn't?" "It has version 12 stamped on the box." - Tron Legacy
Despite the poll results, we'll try to get a PowerPC version of GameSalad available in the near future.
1 Year Ago...ery important. I only have a PowerPC. : (14 votes)
47 %
When will gonna launch it?
- Is the best RISC arch, powered by IBM with constants upgrades (the power7 cpu is the best cpu ever develop).
- The assembler instructions are retro-compatible, so you can made upgrades of PPC (32/64 bits), with no effort (With Intel, there are a lot of new intructions sets "SSE3/SSE4" that cannot be applied simply because you can drop compatibility with older intel chips).
- PowerPC arch creates much more stable executables (because RISC arch is aim to work with a lot of little pieces of code very fast, on the contrary CISC "Intel" works with big pieces of code, and if a piece of code have an illegal instruction or similar, is very difficult to make a recovery, that is why Leopard is much more stable on PPC).
- It's true that the idiots of Apple drops PPC arch (indeed they are idiots), but I hope that soon some company will create new PC with PPC arch.
- For me is not an excuse the "We can run windows now"... If you wanna run windows, buy a PC... If you wanna hardware + software quality... buy a PPC MAC.
Bye.
Please make a version available for leopard, pleease guys!
here is a link for GS 0.5 download
but think that might be intel … can't test for you; my son uses my powerPC as a server
I prefer the powerPC over intelPC and fondly, perhaps foolishly, hope that with the ARM cpu in the devices (they do run so fast) Apple might use ARM instead IntelPC
@};- MH
The GS website is still incapable of remembering our password.
But GS is putting resources to accomodating 10 year old computers....?
Power PCs are OS-X architecture and capable of running Apple's Leopard OS … so they were up-to-date till October 2009; and Apple's switch to only Intel chip commitment with the release of Snow Leopard. (though do remember getting a few updates to Leopard after that!)
believe, in early 2010, GS dropped Leopard and therefore PowerPC platform support;
has more to do with needing the latest Xcode for iOS platform development … than not providing builds for older computers.
and, ah! a PowerPC work so nice … if you owned one, you would want to keep using it!
@};- MH