So here's my gameplan:
I've been out of town a lot with work this summer, so I'm long overdue (about 6 months, haha) on a thread update. My apologies for the endless delays - this thread has become a long and complicated discussion, so a new thread is definitely in order!
First, I will make a 10.5.7 guide this month for the ES2L, DS3L, and UD3P. As I don't personally have a Core i7 rig, I'm not planning on anything Core i7-based. I am considering upgrading when the 24-gig DDR3 kits are made available later this year, but until then, I have no plans for any other rigs. So this will be another intro-to-Hackintosh/recipe guide. For more in-depth information, Mosslock has put together a terrific forum on Google Groups with TONS of info & discussion for advanced and alternative topics. So my goal is to keep our Anandtech thread here for (1) introductory purposes, (2) for specific guides on the three boards I post, and (3) for general help & how-to.
Second, in September/October, I will make a new thread for Snow Leopard. Thanks to the recent RTC fix, Snow Leopard is now usuable on all boards. Yay developers! The big deal with Snow Leopard is using 64-bit drivers. Right now the basic drivers are available, but you will need a PCI Ethernet card (unless someone recompiles the Psystar R1000 driver for 64-bit, which I'm sure will happen) and a USB sound card (unless VoodooHDA gets fixed). The drives are still orange, so hopefully BlockStorage will be put in the 64-bit pipeline as well.
Installation of Snow Leopard is as easy as Leopard, if not easier - the OS X install process is *much* simpler and I already have the basic building blocks setup for a kit. You will need to do a fresh install of the OS, not an upgrade - Snow Leopard is 64-bit and thus uses 64-bit drivers, so your current 32-bit Leopard drivers will screw things up. So plan on doing a full, fresh install if you want to go with Snow Leopard. In fact, I'd recommend testing it on a spare drive, in order to verify that all of your software still works.
So that's the timeline. July 2009 for the 10.5.7 thread, and probably early October for the Snow Leopard thread. I may or may not upgrade to Core i7 this year; I have no pressing need to upgrade (2.4ghz Quad + 8 gigs of RAM, hehe), so please don't ask.
Cheers!
