There is a VMWare virtual Mac floating around the internet.  If you
run the VMWare app creator on a real Mac, you can create a virtual Mac
to play on the player.  You cannot install from install disks as the
VMWare player does not emulate a machine, it simply plays virtual
machines that have been created on the real machines.

In theory if you had the virtual machine files, you could have a
virtual Winbox and a Virtual Mac both running on your Linux box, at
the same time.

However, virtual machines are never as fast as the real time thing.  I
played with the virtual Mac, and it was not particularly exciting.  On
a quad core pentium, the virtual Mac was not particularly speedy, and
sound files were full of hesitations.  Needless to say, that even had
it not been a legal issue, it would have not been something that I
wanted to install on my machine.

If you just want to see what a Mac looks like and play around, it's
OK.  But if you really want to accomplish any work, then you are best
off running Linux native software, or second best running Windoze apps
under Wine.

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