Please check the relevant repositories for up-to-date information on this. While the guide should remain useful for all subsequent releases as-well as the eventual full release, the fetch-macOS script might need updating for future beta releases and the eventual full release. As of this writing, Big Sur 11.0.1 Release Candidate 2 (Beta 3) is the recent-most beta release. In this article I'll focus on steps and commands that are tailored towards Ubuntu 20.04, but I'm sure you'll be able to tweak things a bit to tailor towards whatever flavor you're running to get things to work similarly. Today I'd like to walk you through how to get Big Sur installed and up and running in a virtual machine on your Ubuntu or similar host machine. Update : This guide has been updated to support Big Sur 11.0.1 Release Candidate 2 (Beta 3). Update : For the specific steps required to get the Big Sur public release to work, I made a companion post that you can find right here. With the death of Kexts looming and the transition away from Intel CPUs spelling disaster for Hackintoshers and multi-OS users alike, it's certainly an interesting time.
So big that this time it's really, completely and definitely not OS X any longer.
A new macOS release is nearing release, and it's a big one.