I've survived for two months or more without my MacBook Pro but I really miss a Windows app called. With that, I'd set up a search in ten seconds, start it, and come back a half-hour later to find what would have taken me days with Kayak, SkyScanner, Adioso, Momondo, Matrix, Rome2Rio, etc. I did a web search but the only hit was an Italian video that had 'IOS' in the title but had a MacOS screen for the whole first minute. I can read Italian, but I can't follow it as audio without the help of lip reading. So, I'm wondering if anyone knows of a way to run Windows apps on IOS. (Actually run them on IOS, not on a networked Windows host via RDP, Citrix, VNC, etc.) I can't even try to port Wine myself, since I don't have anything to run XCode on. You need an Intel/AMD chip to run Wine so running on an Apple chip (A7, A8 A9.) is simply not going to happen.

From the: 2.9.2 Can I use Wine on an older Mac without an Intel chip? No, not even in Linux. Older Macs used PowerPC processors are incompatible with code compiled for x86 (Intel and AMD) processors, unless the code is run under CPU emulation. Wine Is Not a (CPU) Emulator, nor does it include one. The Darwine project was an effort to do just that, but it has not been maintained in many years.

Download

Silverlight 5 for mac. While the statement is about PowerPC CPUs, the key here is Wine is not a CPU emulator. Meaning if the CPU isn't supported, it's simply not going to work.

A recompile won't make the missing APIs suddenly available. While there is some limited, it's pretty much unsupported when it comes to x86 applications: This configuration is not supported, but you'll be able to run some Applications. Don't ask for support on winehq.org, Your best bet is to get, (Requires XenDesktop), or some other RDP client for iOS and run your app that way.

Mac Wineskin is a tool used to make ports of Windows software to Mac OS X. The ports are in the form of normal Mac application bundle wrappers. Ati rage 128 gl drivers for mac. It works like a wrapper around the Windows software, and you can share just the wrappers if you choose. Wine (originally an acronym for 'Wine Is Not an Emulator') is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows applications on several POSIX-compliant operating systems, such as Linux, macOS, & BSD. This is the current development branch of Wine. The name is a bit misleading as it is superior to the stable build in most aspects. If your program is laking some functionality under wine, this is the version to go with, as it is evolving very fast. Wineskin is a Mac app that brings Wine to your Mac, OS X style, allowing you to create custom packages including everything your favorite Windows programs need to run on your Mac (well many of your favorite Windows programs).