Apple’s Mac OS X turns 25, has prospered across three hardware architecture changes — from PowerPC, through Intel x86, to Apple Silicon

Test old and new Mac operating systems
(Image credit: Infinite Mac)

This week, Apple’s Mac OS X hit a quarter-century milestone. It officially launched on March 24, 2001, though a public beta had been available for tinkerers for almost six months. Heralded by Steve Jobs as “the future of the Mac,” the fresh new operating system presented an ‘Aqua’ aesthetic dipped GUI over a Unix-based foundation. In 2026, even after three upheavals to the underlying Mac computer architecture, OS X is more popular than ever, and looks set to win flocks of new converts with the affordable MacBook Neo.

You can’t just launch an OS on an established platform without some mitigations and workarounds. I remember at the time of OS X’s introduction, we had a very polished ‘classic’ Mac OS version 9, though it may have been slightly fragile. As a transition user (I used Macs at work and home at the time), OS X felt rough, a big step backwards in usability, despite all the marketing bombast of Jobs and Co. For several years, Mac users had to juggle with ‘Carbon’ apps running natively and others causing the computer to start up the ‘Classic’ environment – an OS9 instance in a sandbox.

It wasn’t a very smooth experience mixing legacy and newer applications for several years. Nevertheless, in many ways, it was an achievement by Apple to transition its users from one OS to another while gaining popularity. This transition occurred when Macs were enjoying pretty good momentum from the colorful iMac G3 era.

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Stepping back a little, it must be remembered that Apple’s development teams already had transitional success moving from the Motorola 680X0 architecture (from 1984 to around 1994-6) to PowerPC (1994 to 2006). They might have had an inkling at the time of OS X’s development and release that there would be another underlying hardware shakeup on the way.

Apple’s developers were very likely better prepared for the PowerPC to Intel architecture transition, not only thanks to prior experience, but also due to the UNIX underpinnings of OS X being built on components that already had portable multi-architecture support. While the 68K to PPC transition saw the necessity is the mother of invention, ‘fat binaries’ of mixed architecture code were introduced, OS X reused this concept with ‘Universal Binaries.’ Moreover, the Rosetta PPC-x86 (2006) translator was simpler than the 68K emulator that the first versions of Mac OS X had to incorporate.

Test old and new Mac operating systems at Infinite Mac (Image credit: Infinite Mac)

OS X was introduced to modernize Apple’s desktop OS with features like protected memory, preemptive multitasking, a real kernel, and modern graphics stack. However, probably by accident rather than design, it ended up being much easier to transition to Intel.

The latest version of Mac OS X is currently macOS 26 (they changed the nomenclature about a decade ago), Tahoe. Apple’s grown-up OS hasn’t risen without a few of its own ‘Vista’ or ‘Windows 11’ moments over the years, though. For example, the newest release has been criticized for gatekeeper tightening behavior, making running unapproved or unsigned apps tricker than before. It also had a ‘Vista UAC’ type issue with users being annoyed by re-authorization prompts for app permissions.

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Mark Tyson
News Editor
  • Findecanor
    .. And the lower layers of MacOS X were derived from NextStep, which was first released in 1989. You're still using NextStep API:s if you're doing Mac programming in Objective-C.
    Reply