Darwin Team Answers & Develop on Darwin 152
Lagos writes "In July Darwin developers at Apple had a call for questions. Their answers were posted on Monday and may be found here. There is some discussion of Apple's place within the Open Source community, though most of the questions answered are more technical." Along the same Darwinian lines, this submission came in: Maktoo writes "Maccentral is reporting that SourceForge.net has added PowerMac G4 Servers running MacOS X 10.1 into their Compile Farm. Now any apps you have going on SourceForge, you can test to see if it'll run on OS X! Gotta love that BSD heritage... OS X is already going to benefit greatly from all the apps it can use in the UNIX/Linux space. This just makes life easier for developers to bring even more."
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
UMCP (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:UMCP (Score:4, Funny)
Re:UMCP (Score:1)
?question (Score:1)
Re:?question (Score:3, Informative)
Get more info here: [apple.com]
http://www.apple.com/darwin/
Re:?question (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:?question (Score:1, Informative)
The higher level stuff in Mac OS X: graphics/drawing libs, application frameworks, and applications are all closed source and PPC only.
Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:2)
If running OS X, can you use linux/unix software?
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:1)
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:5, Informative)
the real answer: it all depends...
the explanation: if you can compile it, you can run it. if its a command line program, you're porting compile is considerably easier. if its Graphical, you've got a bit harder approach since OSX uses Aqua - a graphical display system which has bases in display PDF (some *nixes GUI systems used to be based on Display Postscript - see Solaris' OpenWindows v1.x)
however, since i've yet to see a linux/bsd / solaris / aix application that uses aqua, if its a gui program its probably doing Xwindows. to run X on X, you gotta do some tricks, theres a few methods, but Darwin has ported XFree86 to X. it runs pretty well too.
what i've found is that the quickest way to get an aqua app running is to find a java version of the application if possible since the awt/swing -> aqua stuff is abstracted by the osx implementation of java. but this doesnt solve all your woes.
Qt on Mac OS X (Score:2, Informative)
So any app that's written to Qt (and there's a lot of them out there for Linux) should require just a recompile and work perfectly fine under Quartz/Aqua.
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:5, Insightful)
The short answer is yes: OS X is a Unix variant - so you only need to recompile the software. In fact many tools of OS X are typical Unix programs, apache, perl, gcc, tcsh, etc...
The long answer is, it depends. While OS X is clearly Unix, there are some issues:
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:1, Informative)
Right now, I use a whole bunch of Linux/UNIX software on OS X, primarily Enlightenment, GIMP, XEmacs, XFig, Dia, TeTeX, Ghostscript, and a bunch of little GNOME utils. You can set up X to run side-by-side with Aqua in it's own desktop, or you can have your X apps share the screen with Aqua in "rootless" mode (although that has some quirks).
I was dual booting with YDL 2.0 for a while, but I don't bother anymore since I've got everything I want installed on OS X. There's even a full GNOME port available. I don't know about KDE though.
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:4, Informative)
The funny thing I've found however, is that after going to great lengths to install beta versions of XDarwin and hacking libraries to get them to compile (this was 6 months ago, all of this is much easier now), I found myself wondering what exactly to do with it. I put a lot of importance on running my old Linux apps, but when it came down to it there was nothing I needed to run under X! I used the Gimp for a bit, but then picked up a copy of Photoshop instead; Mozilla runs better under Aqua than X-Windows; Fire is a great ICQ client and I really like Apple's Mail.app for email; Microsoft Office for the Mac is hands down better than any UNIX clone (or even Office for Windows). The new Office for X looks phenomenal! Everybody using OS X should download the Word for X trial version [microsoft.com] and try it for themselves. StarOffice and the like don't even come close to this newest version of Word for the Mac. Amazing.
Sometimes I use the xterms in XDarwin just for old times sake, and it's nice to remotely connect to my linux box though the X Server, but what really struck me is how much better apps are in OS X than they are in Linux. Sure a lot of these apps aren't free, but I was never using them because they were free: I was using them because they got the job done well. Now I'm using no X-Windows apps, a handful of OS 9 apps, but the vast majority of the apps I use are OS X native. It's official, I'm a Mac convert
- j
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:2, Informative)
Actually there is a freeware/shareware program called Graphic Converter that does the job for a reasonable price.
As for TeX, I also use it, but I use a nice tool called TexShop [uoregon.edu] that is really nice, free and open source. It uses pdttex to compile and renders the file directly in pdf, so you get all the nice features of Quartz, like anti-aliasing.
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:4, Interesting)
Photoshop is major $$$. Why do you think so many Mac users have been interested in a GIMP port?
Well photoshop is available to students for only about $200, which is how I first bought it years ago. Anybody who isn't a student will have a job and therefor money, but even then one can still find photoshop for about $500, sometimes less if you pick up an older version and upgrade.
Add to all this the fact that the GIMP is useless for print, and if you're not doing print then you'd be better off buying Photoshop Elements [adobe.com] for a mere $99. There are even upgrade programs to buy Photoshop Elements for as low as $70 if you have a copy of Photoshop LE (included with many scanners, and I've even seen it included free with magazines and at tradeshows!)
It should also be noted that while I've seen many Mac users interested in the GIMP (hey, everybody likes free stuff), I've run into exactly zero who were impressed by it when they finally got it running. The GIMP is a nice idea, but despite what many (ignorant) zealots preach, the GIMP does not, in any way shape or form, come close to the power of Photoshop Elements, nevermind Photoshop.
- j
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:1, Interesting)
You're right that GIMP is useless for people doing professional printing. But I'm not one of those people. Just because I have a job doesn't mean I can justify $500 for Photoshop in my budget, especially since it's not something I use very often, and (as I said above) it's not native yet.
GIMP provides everything I need, and I've been using it for ~2 years so I'm used to the interface. Why change?
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:1, Informative)
Layers are there, with all the layer blending options from PS6, the text support is the same as PS6 (for better or worse...), and it comes with a large variety of filters.
The show-stopper for me was the absence of guides. I often need to take Photoshop files made by other folks and "cut them up" into various components for use in HTML pages and/or Flash components. Without guides, that's a major PITA.
The common idea is that PSElements must be useful for the web, because it lacks things that are critical for print work - CMYK support among others. But, it also lacks features that many web pros consider critical. I'm not certain who, really, would find it useful.
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:2, Informative)
Wrong to all of the above. Everything you mentioned is there, and it includes all of the basic Photoshop filters, completely un-crippled, which is more than enough for 99% of users. Many of the features are presented in a much more intuitive way for beginners, though just about every function you'd find in the GIMP is there.
I'm not going to spend a dime on anything that isn't Carbon or Cocoa.
That's understandable; I'll give you this one
GIMP provides everything I need, and I've been using it for ~2 years so I'm used to the interface. Why change?
Well sure, use what you're most familiar with, but the conversation started with a reference to Mac users switching over to the GIMP. If you're familiar with the GIMP, that's fine, but you would be doing a great disservice to a beginner if you told them to use the GIMP over Photoshop Elements.
- j
beer vs speech (here we go again...) (Score:2)
The problem, to most open source advocates, is not that your new applications aren't (beer) free - we all like to see developers well compensated for their efforts - but rather that they aren't (speech) free. You will never see the source code, and the community will never have the benefit of the work of those developers... at some point in the not-so-distant future, you will no longer even be able to "purchase" any license for that software you're using; you'll have to lease it instead. Both Microsoft and Adobe have expressed interest in this new-and-improved revenue model - which they will undoubtedly market (consumer inconvenience aside) as merely their best response to "software piracy".
Of course you are (speech) free to use the software that you prefer. But I hope you consider the political benefits of (speech) free software to be a point in its favor - above and beyond any price differential.
-Renard
Re:beer vs speech (here we go again...) (Score:1)
Re:Simple Clarification Needed... (Score:2, Informative)
Question of the day... (Score:5, Interesting)
-As beautiful as KDE is, I would drop it in a heartbeat for Aqua.
Re:Question of the day... (Score:4, Informative)
Aqua is not simply a window manager and widget set you can install on top of a X11 server. It relies on a different drawing sub-system
A simple port would imply rewriting the low-level IOKit functions for BSD/Linux and then recompile the foundations classes, and the Quartz rendering engine and then finally the Aqua layer. While it would not be very difficult, most of the code as been ported to many architectures. I suspect that a lot of work went into optimising Aqua for the PPC processor and the Atlivec unit. Aqua implies a lot of processing, and I would think that a straigtforward port would be very slow.
Then again if Apple did this, they would roughtly have changed kernels, using the Linux/BSD kernel instead of Mach - what would be the point?
Re:Question of the day... (Score:1)
Marketshare.
Marketshare of what?
- Scott
Re:Question of the day... (Score:1)
Apple's crown jewels (Score:2)
Open source is really cool and all that jazz, but there are times when a company's best interests are served by keeping some code proprietary. You don't see Veritas giving away their volume manager, and you won't any time soon, either. Same deal with Apple.
Re:Question of the day... (Score:1)
Re:Question of the day... (Score:1)
Potential danger (Score:4, Interesting)
I think it's a great testament to Open Source that Apple chose to heavily base their OS on it; Apple decision makers aren't idiots, they know a good thing when they see it. But in the end, it takes a piece of the market owned wholly by *nices and allows a commercial entity to have a share of it.
Re:Potential danger (Score:2)
Re:Potential danger (Score:2, Informative)
Yeah, and I am using GIMP and Photoshop today, that is Classic(OS9.2.1) OSX, and XDarwin. Let's see ya do that on your GateWay. OSX is about flexibility. Jobs knew that butting heads with Gates is a losing strategy, OSX is an end run. He is uniting the NIX world.
Insisting on Purity will only slow our movement. It was good to get a solid base, but now it is time to be inclusive.
Get yourself an iBook and see what OSX is all about.
Re:Potential danger (Score:3, Flamebait)
Oh, I absolutely concur! It's a magnificent strategy for Jobs! Absolutely it will boost the market share of MacOS! But will it be at the detriment of Linux? Seriously, I doubt that this will pull many Windows users away, as the majority of them are set in their ways, and it isn't MacOS doing anything new that Windows does. Instead it is MacOS seeping in to a share of the market, and in fact, potentially completely blanketing it, that is currently proudly held by BSD/Linux, when they have greater right/authority/capacity to hold that share of the market, except for the fact that they don't have a marketing department.
Why is Microsoft the big OS right now? Marketing! Is MacOS (pre-X) better than Windows? In very many ways! Is Linux better than Windows? Also in very many ways! Is Windows better than either of them? Not in very many ways at all! My brother just exceeded 400 days uptime on his home server running RedHat. On Netcraft, of the top 50 uptimes, last I checked, only ONE was Windows, and it was a machine run by Microsoft, with the express purpose of proving Windows' uptime capacity, and not a machine that was being used in a production environment. So why is this inferior OS in possession of the largest share of the desktop environment, with an inferior less stable environment that Linux, and a less intuitive, more difficult to use interface than MacOS? You better have guessed it by now (I'm such a cynic), MARKETING. MacOS is absorbing a lot of the strategic advantage of BSD/Linux, and inserting it into their marketing machine under the name MacOS.
My concern is over whether this pushes BSD/Linux out of the picture, as they are about operational quality not visual quality while OSX focuses a lot more on visual quality (which has proven to be an exceptionally marketable aspect; translucent windows and a warping docking bar, wow, way better than some boring uptime!) and leaves the operational quality to the BSD programmers, who are pouring their hearts and souls in to a project, which Apple might, in the end, turn around and stab them in the heart with.
Very loose simile: It's like the greatest swordsmiths (Open Source programmers) on earth collectively working for years to create the greatest sword ever for a king (the public, and perhaps Apple), who kills the smith with it to prevent the smith from making a better one. Your greatest source of pride might very well be your undoing in an irony that belongs in fairy tales. (This is not to imply that Apple has its goal laid out to squash BSD, indeed, BSD is proving to be a great aid to them, thus the loosness of the simile.)
Re:Potential danger (Score:2)
Competition with a really polished desktop Unix OS can only help Linux in the long run. Although OS X will likely do quite nice things for Apple's market share, I seriously doubt that everyone is going to abandon x86 hardware, or that OS X will be ported to such hardware any time soon. This means there's still going to be a huge potential market for Linux, and being able to learn from OS X will be of much help in the battle against Windows.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
I think this is clearly wrong. The growth of that operating system was mostly the result of a deliberate strategy to exploit the network-effects of controlling APIs, protocols, document formats, and distribution channels. Marketing played a role, but does not deserve singular credit for the success of Windows.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Re:Potential danger (Score:2)
All of which I'd classify as marketing. (esp. the distribution channel bit, which along with Pricing is exactly what marketing is supposed to worry about.)
Of course, most folks here think of marketing as equal to advertising. But that's why Microsoft has 'good' marketing, and Apple/IBM/etc have 'bad' marketing. In other words, when MS's slogan was "Windows Everywhere!", they really meant it.
Re:Potential danger (Score:3, Interesting)
When BSD/Linux gets a stronger desktop following (I give it about two years), we could revisit your argument.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1, Flamebait)
What a bunch of crap! What utter bullshit. The fact that the poster was modded up indicates to me that we have less than perfectly bright moderators out there.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1, Insightful)
Simply disagreeing with an opinion does not make the opinion invalid, and moderation points aren't intended to allow the moderators to improve people's comments with which they agree, but instead to improve people's comments which make some valid point, or raise a valid concern, grounded in truth, or agreeing with their own opinion or not.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Darwin/BSD developers know that their work, if it's any good, will help Apple make lots of money. Realistically, I don't think anyone is planning to use Darwin separate from OSX. We help out anyways (at least I do) because we see the potential of a really nice OS coming out of this.
I just want a great OS, not a corporation-free state.
My 2 cents,
Rob
Mod parent up (Score:1)
I didn't intend to imply that Apple will necessarily backstab the BSD developers, let alone plan to for the future. As I said in another post on this thread, BSD is clearly adding a lot to OS-X, and they would be foolish to intentionally squash it. Looks like I might have unintentionally forged a mini holy war here. My original intent was to basically say "Watch out for embrace and extend"
Huh? (Score:2)
I'm afraid that I don't see your point. Apple is now just another commercial unix vendor, much like Sun or IBM. The only difference is that they're targeting the desktop market instead of servers. How does this threaten the open source community, or specifically, BSD?
Are BSD coders going to drop everything and start hacking on Darwin? Not likely. Darwin is pretty nifty, but projects like OpenBSD have different goals. People might lose interest in Linux PPC, but that will only happen if Apple puts out a superior (and free) product.
Besides which, Apple's been a pretty good neighbor. They've given a lot back to FreeBSD and GCC, and that says a lot. The traditional way of squashing a technology is "embrace and extend", but that requires your extensions to be closed-source. Darwin is totally open, and the contributions to GCC and FreeBSD are anything but closed.
Your rant seems more born from fear than reason. Why are you scared of OS X? It's a full-featured unix that my mom can use. Why is that threatening?
Re:Potential danger (Score:3, Informative)
BSD UNIX was a US government funded project intended to advance the state-of-the-art for the computer industry as a whole. The entire intent was to allow commercial companies to 'steal' the code to improve interoperability -- in fact iconic BSD developers like Bill Joy got very rich doing just that. BSD code is used in virtually every OS -- it's a significant chunk of every commercial Unix, probably a bunch in GNU, and there's small bits in Windows, as has been repeatedly discussed.
Not to take away anything from the people who deUNIXifed BSD and have been doing a excellent job maintaining it ever since. Just that Apple won't be the first nor the last to use BSD code in their OS. Compared to every other commercial user of BSD code, they've been saints.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1, Informative)
The software that runs under Linux is already available on plenty of other platforms. In fact, a lot of it was developed on other platforms, including the various BSD flavors, Solaris, IRIX, UNIXware, etc. Most of the command line stuff even runs on Windows NT & 2000 with Cygwin. And numerous ports are available for BeOS, Atheos, QNX, etc.
There's nothing wrong with the software being ported to commercial platforms. All that means is that there may be more people using and contributing to the software. And remember that the majority of the UNIX world is still commercial. Linux is still a niche player.
Linux is a means to an end, not an end in itself. This is an OS were talking about here, not a religion. World domination is a joke, remember? Seriously, Linux will have to compete based on the merits of the platform, and the less we tie software to a particular platform, the better.
Touche! (Score:1)
Of course, I'm getting bogged down in thinking of Linux as a distribution, not a kernel. Linux is a kernel; it's a core OS. The software that was developed FOR Linux, while significantly adding to its marketability, does not COMPRISE Linux. That might be considered a weakness of relying entirely on the Open Source movement (which I wholeheartedly believe in), in that any advantage that you hold, your competitors can very easily absorb... embrace and extend... frightening.
open source software and the software ecosphere (Score:2)
> other OS's if everything that Linux does can
> be done by them as well, in a completely
> identical manner?
Now you're getting it! Open source is the graveyard of revenue-producing intellectual property -- when an idea is sufficiently well-understood and unencumbered by patents, it is implemented in open-source and thus commoditized.
Apple understands that unix's base functionality is no longer a source of proprietary advantage. That's why they weren't afraid to open their kernel and BSD userland source. But their graphics and user interface software contain real innovation and valuable proprietary ideas.
Open source software can provide considerable value to the world by providing a baseline. Part of the idea of BSD-licensed software is that no new implementation has any excuse for being worse than the BSD-licensed implementation, because they can use the BSD-licensed implementation with basically no strings attached.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
However, how many Apache-based servers are running under Windows rather than *nix? It's been available for some time, yet most folks running Apache are doing so specifically to get out of the Microsoft hole.
Plus, in the case of open source software, a big part of it is being open. This applies to other OSes as well as within *nix-land. Sure some Mac users get to play with your toys (and let me tell you, I'm enjoying it!). This isn't the end of the world, particularly as Apple (and other commercial *nix vendors) are pretty in tune with the open source scene and their role in it.
What is more dangerous is if one of these companies starts breaking the GPL and extending the software (making it incompatible with open versions) and then pushing it as the standard. (Just as Microsoft has done with Java, web standards, etc...)
As ever, be vigilant, but don't bundle your undies just yet.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
One comment:
iNik said, 'As ever, be vigilant, but don't bundle your undies just yet.'
nahdude812 points to the subject; Potential Danger
nahdude812 said, 'I'm just keeping an eye on the future, someone needed to bring it up!'
Re:Potential danger (Score:2)
Don't quit your day job to be a strategic consultant, is all I can say.
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
I think that rather than providing a potential danger to Linux and BSD, OS X will provide the perfect compliment to them; it will actually strengthen their position as servers in the office space.
Before OS X, if you needed to use a desktop for say, something like editing resume.doc (because you can't be certain that those annomalies Star Office puts into documents won't be there again, and some ass-clown in HR wants everything to be .doc), you started up the old token Windows box, or booted up from your FAT partition. If you were at the office, chances are a Windows box is all you've got anyway.
With OS X, there's no need to have two boxes, or to have half of your disk taken up by FAT partitions. All the tools are there, and with the FreeBSD ports tree, most of the applications that you know from Linux are still there.
By running a VNC server on localhost, you can have an X session open and be working with The Gimp or gplot at the same time you're working with Illustrator, Maya, or Word.
The real benefit OS X gives is to those who know how to use UNIX. No more sad sessions in a MS-DOS command prompt window. Among the many benefits are all the tools, a full man page set (no more cls --help bull$h1t), SSH client and server already installed, and the ability to utilize the FreeBSD ports tree.
And for a systems administrator, having the ability to utilize those tools means all the difference.
Anyway, when was the last time you saw a G4 used as a web server?
I guess I must be a piece of the market that Apple has stolen away. I ran FreeBSD for nearly two years as the only operating system on my laptop. Server Desktop Using OS X, I have all the command line server tools on my desktop. I don't have to confine myself to the twenty some sad "command prompt" commands available under Windows. Where BSD and Linux shine is as se
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Even us x86 chumps know that you're not getting any performance enhancements out of Apache because it's not specifically compiled for the rhapsody engine.
And us x86 chumps know how to separate services for security. I'm glad you're not responsible for protecting any mission-critical data. Either that, or the idiots that hired you are even more stupid than you are.
Oh, and this x86 chump owns 1 G4 and 1 G3 ibook and knows enough not to use them as servers.
Sit down and shut up. Go back to the company whose server is probably already 0wnzed and try to convince them you know something about systems administration and security, because you're not fooling anyone here.
Re:Potential danger - Not really (Score:1)
The real threat is the other direction. If Windows apps ran on other platforms wouldn't that reduce the marketability of Windows?
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
If Apple somehow gained Microsoft-like market share I would be truly concerned. I think almost any company would do unsavory things with that kind of market power.
Ultimately, however, I am convinced that OS X will do much more to harm M$ than linux. Why? Because massive market share is something that's greatest benefits are to companies like M$ that are just trying to profit. In the open-source community, market share may help a project gain testing and credibility, but the goal is to make great software, not get rich. The way I see it, open source hackers are open source hackers, if they get drawn off of a certain project, it is most likely because there is something more interesting/better to work on. The value in open-source software is the hours these people have put into it, and thanks to the open source nature, that value will always be present for free, no matter what product happens to have the current lead in marketshare.
The only way I could see linux users losing out is if somehow all the open source hackers got hired to write proprietary software full-time (meaning 80 hours a week, cuz I think most of them already work 40
Re:Potential danger (Score:1)
Now that's flamebait
Better is the enemy of good enough (Score:1)
Why don't you switch to BeOS? It's probably better than both Linux and OSX. Go ahead, do it and see if it's better.
Re:Potential danger (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, as usual, the conventional wisdom is wrong in their explanation. Beta was actually well ahead in unit sales until the rise of pr0n on VHS. No, really.
See, to RECORD a Beta tape, you needed a Sony-licensed machine; very expensive. On the other hand, anybody could make a (comparatively) cheap VHS camera. And the numbers tell the story; when Beta and VHS had about the same number of titles available, Beta led in sales. About seven months after the first VHS cameras hit US shelves, VHS had six times as many titles available, of which not quite half were cheap pr0n flicks. And, needless to say, VHS piracy was rampant, while Beta piracy was next to nonexistent.
Sales of the two respective systems, which until then had moved along similar trendlines, promptly diverged radically.
Lesson to be learned from this: Technology adoption is driven by piracy and pr0n. As if looking at any contemporary P2P network hadn't made that clear to you already...
To reward the developers... (Score:3, Funny)
Ask Slashdot - OSX? (Score:1)
Speaking as a Mac user who uses Linux at my job, why should I bother with OS X? IMHO Linux is much more flexible and seems to me to have more of a future in business than Apple or OS X ever will. I was very exited when Apple bought NeXT, but after waiting 5 years, OS X 1.0 just left me cold. Why should I spend time learning about OS X when I could be honing my Linux skills?
Re:Ask Slashdot - OSX? (Score:1)
OSX is going to give you support from major vendors--Adobe, Macromedia, Microsoft--with the kind of desktop software that many people need. I'm a web developer, I love Macromedia products. Try not to flame me. However, I also build dynamic sites using PHP, MySQL and Java. The ability to perform both of these tasks from a single machine--my G3 laptop--is awesome.
The reality is, Linux is going to have a very hard time garnering this kind of desktop software support. Open Source alternatives, such as OpenOffice or any wysisyg html layout tool, are always a step behind, running just to stand still with the comercial competitors. I love linux--on my webserver. I can't design with it.
Use whatever works for you (Score:3, Insightful)
Alot of my job revolves around web development. For me, OS X is perfect because I have Apache, PHP, Perl, MySQL, Photoshop, Flash, Dreamweaver, and vi all on the same machine. I tried to use Linux, but alot of my time was spent dual-booting.
You probably do other things, so another machine might be better suited for what you do. Whatever. Better or worse is all relative to what you want to accomplish.
Re:Ask Slashdot - OSX? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, Linux has penetrated the corporate server market. But it has not penetrated the corporate desktop market.
OS X has the potential to do so. Time will tell - it may not, but at least it's got a chance.
Wade
Re:Ask Slashdot - OSX? (Score:1, Interesting)
Pretty much all the software you can run under Linux you can run under OS X as well. The converse is not true. That's the real selling point. The pretty interface and friendly development APIs are nice too.
Not exactly the answer you want (Score:2)
Re:Ask Slashdot - OSX? (Score:1)
If by "honing my Linux skills" you mean doing stuff on your computer at home that doesn't matter what OS you are using, then it really doesn't fucking matter
If by "honing my Linux skills" you mean printing color documents from the $100k printing press connected to your iMac and needing CMK support when you know fucking well that the printed image is always going to be a different color than what you see on the screen anyhow, then you should spend the $100 for OSX and $500 for photoshop or just wait one year until CMK is supported in the Gimp
So, OS X 10.1 has /dev/random now? (Score:3, Informative)
Q: Porting Unix software to Mac OS X, one thing that is often sorely missed (especially in cryptographic tools) is
A: Although
So does this mean that OS 10.1 has a
Anyone (early 10.1 users) know the answer?
Re:So, OS X 10.1 has /dev/random now? (Score:1)
Then it will be there.
Ive heard rumors about it, but cant confirm it.
Re:So, OS X 10.1 has /dev/random now? (Score:3, Informative)
[entropy:/dev] znu% sw_vers
ProductName: Mac OS X
ProductVersion: 10.1
BuildVersion: 5G64
[entropy:/dev] znu% ls | grep random
random
urandom
Re:So, OS X 10.1 has /dev/random now? (Score:2, Informative)
tcsh% ls -al *rand*
crw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 1, 0 Sep 26 17:47 random
crw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 1, 1 Sep 25 21:23 urandom
That enough for you?
Re:So, OS X 10.1 has /dev/random now? (Score:2, Informative)
Louis
Re:a great fear (Score:1)
Anyways, the point is that traditionally they would have to buy both the OS *and* the app. But if they could get away with just paying for the app, then I think that Linux/*nix will suddenly be an attractive option to many folk. Lets face it M$ make really good office software.
Least not the corporates which is somewhere M$ completely dominates. Linux/*nix needs a killer app or at least something that will draw normal users to it. The techies are already sold but we need that something else to bring people in....
As the desktop environments evolve (new KDE is swweeet), and programs such as Mozilla are becoming more professional in their operation and presentation, it wont be too long hopefully before there will be shift.
Besides it would be sweet to see people migrating off Windows and onto something else but by M$ own hand no?
Po
Re:a great fear (Score:1)
I hear ya man.
I never get tired of the look on peoples faces when I suggest something else apart from M$.
And I dont know if those people ever get use to my face when they tell me they dont like what I offered cause it doesnt *look* familiar.......
Regards,
Po
Compiling apps like GtkRadiant (Score:1)
Why don't they use bugzilla? (Score:1)
Re:Why don't they use bugzilla? (Score:2)
The darwin pages that interface to it are rather primative. But slowly, they're becomming better integrated with Radar.
Opening up Radar to the public is not an option. With millions of bugs related to every aspect of Apple's business, darwin represents only a tiny sliver of the active Radar bugs.
-pmb
X11 Support (Score:1)
http://fink.sourceforge.net/
Re:Must be asked... (Score:1)
Does Darwin have a kernel panic if you try to boot with a mouse that has more than one button?
I'll assume that you're not a troll, since I prefer to give the benefit of the doubt.
No. I use a MSFT Intellimouse with X, and it works just fine. The scroll wheel even works in some apps; the right mouse button is recognized for the limited contextual menus that X has.
Re:too bad I can't afford the hardware to go with (Score:1, Informative)
Hardware (Score:2, Informative)
$3,499.00
Dual 800MHz PowerPC G4
256K L2 & 2MB L3 per processor
256MB SDRAM memory
80GB Ultra ATA drive
SuperDrive
NVIDIA GeForce2 MX w/TwinView
Gigabit Ethernet
56K internal modem
But this is some pretty serious hardware. The TwinView thing is a video card with two ports on it. The SuperDrive is a DVD/DVD-R/CD-RW drive.
iMacs start at $999. Towers start at $1699. Apple averages ~30% gross margins because it has a software, hardware and a platform to develop and maintain. Much of the software is outright free, and all Mac users also get free email and 20MB web space/nework storage -- all without ads.
- Scott
Re:Hardware (Score:1)
I'd be interested where you can a dual ~1.4GHz machine with a DVD-R/CD-RW drive, gigabit ethernet, and dual port video card for $2500.
"it has a software, hardware and a platform to develop and maintain. "
That is why Apple has been almost completely marginalized, trying to sustain their 4% market share. They have NO CHANCE competing with thousands of PC companies.
Competing in what terms? PC manufactuers are dropping like flies. Selling lots of units does not mean you have a successful business.
The fact Apple has its own platform and accompanying line of software provides choice in the industry. The last thing we need is less choice.
- Scott