There is nothing particular about Mavericks that requires a rewrite.
On a different note, I no longer have this board in my possession. It was laying around for a while and I decided to put it in an AIO chassis (the
Intel Loop 2150 Touch) and give it to an older family member who will find it much easier and more intuitive (running Windows 8.1) than the old AMD Dell she had.
The "integration" process was very straightforward with both the
online video and the printed guide included in the box; all cables were properly labeled, and if you followed my guide above, the box contains all remaining parts necessary, even the special low-profile cooler. The result is a great machine, totally self-contained and competent: WiFi+BT, 1080p, webcam, 10pt multitouch, stereo speakers, etc.
I was not able to hackintosh the AIO because the screen would not make the jump to graphics mode at boot, having tried every available platformID for Capri and chosen the correct panel configuration from the BIOS menu. There are several theories about why this happens (the gray boot screen is fine, but the login screen does not appear, and there is no evidence the display is ever recognized by OS X), but the most likely in my mind is informed by
a white paper published by Intel [2] describing the particular implementation of LVDS they use. I have little doubt an AIO chassis using eDP would work, but I haven't verified that any exist. The key difference between eDP and LVDS is eDP has a (limited) ability to negotiate at connection time, whereas LVDS requires both sides to agree on terms before connection.
As such I can provide some support in the future, but most of the work has already been done, check earlier posts in this thread.