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Chameleon Wizard is a forthright updater application designed for the Chameleon boot loader app designed to help you take advantage of all OS X capabilities on your hackintosh computer.
The app will deploy the latest Chameleon revisions by using different methods: boot0, boot0hfs and boot0md. At the same time, Chameleon Wizard is also able to update a previous installation by replacing the boot file.
Working with Chameleon Wizard will prove to be fairly intuitive: simply launch the app, select the installation method, choose the target partition, and simply press the Install button from the bottom right corner or the main window. Note that you have the option to choose which Chameleon revision you want to install.
Moreover, Chameleon Wizard allows you to use the built-in Chameleon revision, or use boot loader that has been previously downloaded to your disk. As a result, the whole installation procedure is reduced to simple, intuitive actions.
Chameleon Wizard comes with a built-in Plist editor designed to handle the org.chameleon.Boot.plist file. This way, you can adjust details related to the Boot flags, CPU usage, graphics adjustments, or Kernel flags.
At the same time, Chameleon Wizard allows you to visualize the content of the SMBios.plist file that contains general information about your device, such as the family, manufacturer, serial number, Bios version, or date, and so on.
Among other things, Chameleon Wizard comes with a collection of OS X themes that you can easily preview and choose to apply to your own installation.
Chameleon Wizard is a great tool to have around if you want to install the Chameleon boot loaders without too much hustle: the app provides support for multiple installation methods, while keeping the user interaction to the minimum.
Moreover, Chameleon Wizard can also be used to update your Chameleon boot loaders to the latest revisions, and even personalize their appearance.
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Runs on Catalina, in Beta test.
Won’t run on Catalina.
The releases above will be our last Mac release. We'll leave them up through end of 2020, then we'll take them down as well. We recommend you run G-Wizard on Windows, either on a PC, or on your Mac using a virtual machine.
I am personally sorry to see the Mac go. I own multiple Apple products, and am a committed Mac user, especially where my music software is concerned.
Oh no! Why did you stop supporting Macs?
The short answer is not enough Mac users to offset the increasing pain that Apple has caused developers who want to support the platform.
In the period from October 1, 2019 to April 22, 2020, a little over 6 months, only a little over 300 people logged into G-Wizard from Macs. By contrast, there were about 10,000 Windows users who logged in during the same time. We see similar results for the percentage of people browsing our web site via Mac OS vs Windows, so it isn't just G-Wizard. CNC'ers, as a group, don't seem to be strong Mac users.
It's not surprising, as very little CNC software will run on a Mac.
I'm making this decision in the depths of the Covid-19 situation as well, when business has been depressed and it is important to focus scarce resources.
This is compounded by Apple making it more and more difficult for developers to support the platform, especially small developers like us.
Apple has changed the requirements to run apps with the latest Catalina version of OSX. Before Catalina, it was possible for developers to self-certify their applications. That's the model essentially all general purpose computers have used since the beginning.
With Catalina, that's much harder. The preferred method is for Apps must go through Apple's App Store. That's considerably more overhead for small developers like ourselves. It also means that new features and bug fixes will arrive on the Mac platform more slowly than on the PC Windows platform. We think that's a shame.
We spent time investigating what it will take, but we do not have a version that will install on Catalina via the App Store at this time. Even Apple realizes Catalina is a real curve ball as they have announced they would temporarily (slightly) relax Catalina's requirements. We are taking advantage of the extended timeframe by releasing versions that will install via download on Catalina. We consider those versions to be in Beta Test.
One of our greatest concerns is that having sealed off OSX from self-certified apps, Apple will be in a position to demand a revenue share from every app that runs on their machines. They already do this for mobile apps on iOS and that share is substantial. We have had iOS prototypes of our software running for years, but did not choose to bring them to market because the Apple revenue share is just too expensive. If they choose to implement a revenue share on OSX apps, that may mark the end of our support for the Apple platform.
Apple has never been a big player in the CNC world. Users running on Macs only amount to about 4% of traffic to the CNCCookbook web site and a similar number of sales of our software. As a small business, we can't afford an inordinate cost in supporting the platform.
At some point in the future, we hope to be back on the platform. This will probably happen when we develop thin client (i.e. browser-based) versions of our software in the not-too-distant future.
Sincerely,
PS It is possible to disable this Catalina function, and potentially install and run G-Wizard anyway. I'm not fond of this option if only because it isn't something Apple supports and recommends. But, for those that have no other way to run software not set up for Catalina, it may be useful.
This article describes what's required: https://www.imore.com/how-open-apps-anywhere-macos-catalina-and-mojave