Hereās a conceptual piece on the topic: ā written in an informative, retrospective style. macOS for AMD Turion: A Hackintosh Journey into the Unsupported In the world of Hackintosh, Intel has long been the safe path. But for a brief, wild era, AMDās Turion 64 mobile processors became unlikely candidates for running Appleās macOS. This is the story of that fringe experiment. The Hardware: AMD Turion 64 Introduced in 2005, the Turion 64 was AMDās answer to Intelās Pentium M. It was power-efficient, 64-bit capable, and surprisingly capable for its time. Laptops like the HP Pavilion dv6000, Compaq Presario V3000, and Acer Aspire 5100 shipped with Turion CPUs. But macOS? Apple had never supported AMD. The Challenge: Kernel Compatibility macOS (then OS X) was built for Intelās x86 architecture starting with 10.4.4. But under the hood, Appleās XNU kernel assumed Intel-specific features like SSE3 , HPET , and Intelās local APIC . AMD Turion lacked some of these or implemented them differently.