Freshmeat Launches Mac OS X Section 223
Liedra writes "After announcing Mac OS X software surreptitiously within its main section for the past several months, freshmeat has now launched a section totally devoted to the platform. Read the article by scoop and visit the section directly." Since I switched my primary laptop to OS X, I'm glad to see scoop do this. (Note, Freshmeat & Slashdot are both owned by OSDN.)
Wow (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Uhhh, it has been, but Freshmeat isn't "most".
Where's the software? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Where's the software? (Score:2)
OSDN ripening for Apple? (Score:3, Interesting)
Though it makes plenty of sense for freshmeat to have a dedicated Apple section, this certainly provides more fuel for the Sell-to-Apple hypothesis...
-A
Re:OSDN ripening for Apple? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:OSDN ripening for Apple? (Score:2, Insightful)
Sure, OSDN's interest in Apple is increasing, but that's only because Apple is a Unix vendor now.
I don't think OSDN is exactly a hot ticket, either.
Re:OSDN ripening for Apple? (Score:1, Funny)
Hello $95 OSDN subscriptions (Score:2, Funny)
If it's anything like the whole
Why Would Apple Toss Money Away? (Score:2)
Re:Why Would Apple Toss Money Away? (Score:2)
Rather than buying it out, Apple appears have been engaging in "friendship projects" with OSDN to increase its exposure. To name a few: giving Sourceforge OS X Servers for its compile farm, giving the Slashdot crew TiBooks, encouraging Apple sections of Slashdot and now Freshmeat.
Re:OSDN ripening for Apple? (Score:2)
In contrast to the dedicated yro.slashdot.org, developers.slashdot.org, bsd.slashdot.org... addresses?
You do know that every section has its own address?
>this certainly provides more fuel for the Sell-to-Apple hypothesis...
Certainly. Furthermore, Apple hasn't sued the hell out of OSDN for makeing the Apple section look like Aqua(TM)(C)(R).
Maybe OSDN should consult NASA on these matters [slashdot.org].
>someone here on slashdot speculated that OSDN [...]
This is ground-breaking news. Instead of posting a well-informed comment, purely based on facts, someone speculated.
Couldn't it just be that due to MacOs X and iPod and the like, some geeks got hooked up to Apple?
Platform favouritism (Score:1, Interesting)
If Freshmeat isn't going to restrict itself to Unix OSes, they ought to allow submitted software for all platforms. Yes, Mac OS X does have a lot of Unix software you can run on it, but the same is true of Windows with or without Cygwin. Both platforms have their own weird microkernel and various layers on top, of which some provide a Unix-like API.
Allowing Windows software on Freshmeat would be very useful in practice - I don't just advocate it out of some sense of 'fairness'. There must be many Freshmeat users who have to use a Windows PC at work and would like somewhere to look up software. And the increasing number of Windows-based free software projects could do with somewhere to make announcements.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:1)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:1)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:1)
Windows with Cygwin is arguably a 'Unix like' OS based on GNU... you can interpret the term as loosely or as strictly as you want.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:5, Informative)
You also say that "the GUI isn't UNIX." Well, I challenge you to tell me of a GUI that *is* UNIX. UNIX and windowing systems have nothing to do with each other. You need to have a better understanding of the issues before you blast Freshmeat for this.
Freshmeat's policy of UNIX-like operating systems holds perfectly true here. OS X is as much a UNIX as Linux, FreeBSD, AIX, Solaris, or OpenBSD.
And, you can't interpret "UNIX-like" loosely enough to call Windows + Cygwin UNIX. I don't even want to have to argue that =)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Perhaps the best definition of 'Unix' is that from Debian's definition of an important package - an important package is one where an experienced user sitting down at a box and finding it lacking this package would grumble and ask 'where the heck is foo?'. So you or I might say 'where the heck is awk?' if we found a supposedly Unix-like system which lacked it. Therefore having awk is some part of being a Unix system (though not the most important). X11 is another part, I believe.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2, Interesting)
And it works.
OS X qualifies. You don't need X-windows to be a Unix system: many of my Linux boxes have X explicitly removed, to save space and prevent sploits. All the tools are available. Jaguar even includes bash now, my earlier os x needed bash built from ports (yes, you could use FreeBSD ports on OS X, though I think that went away in favor of fink).
I've worked with AIX, SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX, Digital Unix, IRIX, OpenBSD, Linux, and FreeBSD. IMEAO OSX qualifies as a fully-fledged member of the Unix fraternity. Don't let the fact that it's easy to use and pretty fool you. It's kinda like IRIX without all the security flaws, frankly.
Decomposing horse: Coroner reports it was beaten. (Score:2)
I did have XFree86 installed but I realised that I didn't need it and it was just taking up space on my drive. However, if you had the slightest hint of a clue you would know that XFree86 compiles on OS X from the same source tree as Linux. OS X doesn't come bundled with XFree86 but who gives a shit about that? Are you implying that PicoBSD [picobsd.org] isn't Unix?
BTW, GNU stands for GNU's Not Unix! The presence or absence of GNU tools (such as bison) does not make or break a Unix. Nor does the lack of an XWindow system.
This same stupid, pedantic, ill-informed point was argued to death on Mac forums a year or more ago. ("A: Is this a Unix application? B: No, idiot, it's a Carbon app. Only Cocoa apps are Unix! C: I'm pretty sure it has to run in the Dos terminal to be Unix").
The point is: Who really gives a shit? You do realise that technically Linux isn't a unix either? Here's my definition of a Unix: /dev exists. Probably also the idea of mount points instead of drive letters or a 'Desktop'. (Before you use this as proof that Mac OS X isn't unix, please realise that disk mounting on the desktop is GUI only. Disks are mounted under /Volumes, which is practically identical to /mnt except that it is more automatic.)
Oh yeah, Merry Christmas! :-)
Re:Decomposing horse: Coroner reports it was beate (Score:2)
- Mac OS X does not include X11;
- The Mac OS X GUI is not X11 or even vaguely related to it;
- Graphical applications written for Mac OS X will not run on other Unixes, even those that have XFree86.
This last point seems the most important to me - sure you _can_ disregard the native windowing system, compile an X server and libraries and run only X11 applications. You can do that on Windows too. But the Mac's standard user interface, the one that 99% of its users run, is not X11 and not particularly Unix-like.
Yes, I know that under some definitions Linux is not 'Unix' either. That is my whole point, that trying to include or exclude operating systems based on whether they are 'Unix' or not is silly. Almost any system can be classified as 'Unix' by some criterion or another - even MS-DOS with DJGPP has a fairly complete Unix environment. Freshmeat should just accept software for all platforms.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Not Unix.
Darwin refers to the userland stuff, and it seems a bit odd to equate "heavily based" with "100%".
Quartz clearly isn't unix, but that doesn't necessarily mean that X isn't either.
Historically, X is the unix GUI, and has as much justification for being considered part of a full-fledged unix system as say, 'tar'.
As for freshmeat deciding this warrants its own section, I could care less. Just another category for me to filter out. I would not consider this newsworthy by any means, though. Maybe if they were specifically excluding OS X packages, or excluding everything else except OS X, but not this. This lands in importance just above "Freshmeat fixed a typo" and just below "Freshmeat redesigned the look of the site again"
-transiit
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:1)
I don't think you should be overly concerned that Windows users are being left out in the the cold. I think you're argument for fairness would have been a stronger one.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm more interested in free software for Windows than the latest shareware. Those two sites are more oriented towards binary-only software and towards users rather than developers. Freshmeat is pretty much perfect, at least it is better than any other site I've found, except for the small detail that it won't carry Windows software.
If anyone knows of a comparable site to Freshmeat but dealing with the Windows platform, please do post details.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2, Informative)
Indeed, the site doesn't even allow a link to download the Windows version or to give more information about a Windows port. In the release information the field for entering a zipfile URL says 'It is not intended for any Win32 version of the software'. Yet there is a separate field for a Mac OS X package. One platform is encouraged, another is explicitly forbidden. I don't pretend to understand why.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Freshmeat is about Unix software. Mac OSX is Unix. Windows is not.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope more people re-engineer X11 apps with a Cocoa frontend. Or, perhaps someone ought to start a project similar to WINE, but for the Cocoa API? Just don't put the look and feel in exact, and do it for interoperability... who knows, maybe you can slip under Apple's legal radar.
Or not. Bleah.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:5, Informative)
I really don't know why, but GNUStep [gnustep.org] doesn't seem to be very popular. GNUStep is an implementation of the OpenStep specification and they even track changes from Apple! It's what you are looking for - with a little effort, applications can be made to compile under both GNUStep and Cocoa (completely legal too, since OpenStep is open(duh)). Foundation seems to be pretty much complete and AppKit lacks just a few Apple-specific things like Drawers and Sheets (which will be added at some point in the future).
Really, GNUStep needs a little more exposure - I switched to a Mac, but I still think GNUStep is great and could be something better than GNOME/KDE.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:5, Funny)
Bash/tcsh/sh/*sh ? OSX Has it
X11? OSX has it
Unix kernel? Got that too
ssh? Yup
Stability? Yup
Bad UI that's hard to use and not fully intergrated? Hmm... maybe OSX has a ways to go.
Hell... it *should* be possible to port any unix app to darwin and run it in an xserver on OSX.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
X11: not included with Windows - but IIRC an X server is not included with Mac OS X either. Has this changed? You can certainly get X servers for Windows.
Unix kernel: here I have to disagree with you. Mac OS X is based on the Mach microkernel, I think, which is rather different to the classical Unix kernel. It's closer to NextStep or even Minix than it is to traditional Unix.
ssh: but that's just an application isn't it? Ports of ssh exist for the Mac, for Windows and for a whole bunch of other platforms.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
And that's where you are off base. You are not totally wrong, but you're not right either. Yes, OS X/Darwin uses Mach, but it' s hardly used as a microkernel. Sure, you can have mach threads, but the BSD subsystem sits next to Mach, on the bare metal. The BSD stuff isn't done like a personality, like you would expect with a Mach MK.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
You can't just take out Mach and expect it to still work. You wouldn't have any Virtual Memory! However, you could write another scheduler etc, and apple probably will at some point. The Mach and BSD sections of XNU should not be considered separate. BSD processes *are* Mach tasks, they just have a bit more semantics. Apple's insistence on saying "Mach" all the time is pure marketing. Forget it is there.
Apple tries to keep the BSD stuff synced with FreeBSD as much as possible and makes lots of modifications to everything. XNU is no more a microkernel than Linux is. They both use modules (called Kernel Extensions in Darwin) but are pretty monolithic.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
X Window is not included with Mac OS X, but you can install it just by downloading a binary installer from XDarwin or compile it from the main XFree86 distribution, which supports Mac PPC hardware now.
In fact, if you really want to, why not build your own Darwin kernel? [apple.com]
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2, Informative)
Since OS X is a UNIX, it should be included as a category on Freshmeat. I'm glad it finally is.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
If it runs on a Unix machine it is Unix software. An XWindows program will not run on a Unix that doesn't not have an X Server installed. What about a Gnome app on a KDE only Linux workstation? You can't judge Unixness based on what APIs it supports. Gnome apps are no more unix than Carbon apps are.
Open Source != Unix. Just because the carbon API hasn't been ported to Linux doesn't make Carbon apps any less "Unix" than say a Qt app. The real problem with your line of thinking is that there isn't a standard UNIX API when it comes to GUIs. "Unix applications" don't exist. OpenStep apps exist, Gnome apps exist, Motif apps exist, etc.
BTW, how is having a Mac-only app on Freshmeat any worse than something Linux only, such as a kernel module? Does a bit of software have to run on every single Unix distro out there before it is accepted? There is plenty of unportable, Linux-only (sometimes Linux-x86 only!) software out there. A lot of it is on Freshmeat.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:2)
% uname -a
Darwin Johns-Computer.local. 6.2 Darwin Kernel Version 6.2: Tue Nov 5 22:00:03 PST 2002; root:xnu/xnu-344.12.2.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC Power Macintosh powerpc
http://www.daemonnews.org/200104/bsd_family.htm
indicates that OS X is a kind of UNIX.
Apple indicates (http://www.apple.com/macosx/jaguar/unix.html):
It quacks like a duck, walks like a duck and looks like a duck, I think it's a duck.
Re:Platform favouritism (Score:3, Interesting)
As we often say to contributors: (Score:2)
http://freshmeat.net/faq/view/34/
Compare our Unix software section and the Palm section. The Palm section is microscopic in comparison; it's dwarfed by the Themes section, which is in turn dwarfed by the Software section.
But imagine what would happen if we allowed Windows software. A flood of applications, to say the least. Sometimes it gets a bit hectic keeping up with all the Unix software and themes, and I think we'd be totally swamped if we added Windows software, thus reducing the usefulness of the site.
Finally, as the FAQ says, there are plenty of software download sites for Windows. We don't need to reinvent that wheel. This is different than PalmOS, because our selection of Palm apps is generally a different sort than the ones at other sites (When we launched the section, Jeff noted that other sites had mainly apps for business users, whereas ours could be more for geeks).
[Why Palm? Unless I'm mistaken, that's still the PDA of choice for *nix folks, since they can actually sync with it]
I am not officially representing OSDN, blah, blah...
Re:As we often say to contributors: (Score:2)
But how about free software for Windows? There isn't yet a good site for that, not that I know of; the 'software download sites for Windows' are pretty lame and focused on binary-only applications. This is a similar business-vs-geeks distinction as you point out for PalmOS (except here it's more Joe User vs geeks).
The amount of free software for Windows is growing, but still tiny compared to the amount of stuff you'll find on download.com.
Re:As we often say to contributors: (Score:2)
Curses; I was about to yell that you still hadn't read the FAQ link I posted, but now I find that gnusoftware.com appears to have vanished. opensource.org has links to some sites, but I'm not sure how good they are. There's also www.ossblacksheep.com, and I believe sourceforge lists any open source project (though they're hardly the same as freshmeat, you can still search for things)
Davecentral is probably more like what you wanted. Unfortunately, it's gone now, and for similar reasons; OSDN didn't have the resources to continue with it [I think that's what the site said a month ago, so it's not like I'm giving out secret information here]. If freshmeat could have handled absorbing it as we did themes.org, maybe we would have.
We still do get oodles of Windows-only submissions, both open and closed source. The problem with only accepting open source Windows apps is that we'd _still_ have a double standard, because we accept closed-source *nix apps.
Finally, I think that part of the reason this new section came into being is because Catie and Patrick use and like OS X. None of us use Windows; Jeff hardly even uses X. I'm not sure we'd be qualified to run a directory of Windows software, and I don't think we're hiring
However, freshmeat isn't hostile to Windows users. We have Trove categories for Windows operating systems, and will happily list software which runs under Windows as long as it also runs under one of our supported operating systems. Browsing by category, you can find lots of software "for Windows", and you can restrict searches too. Keep in mind that we don't directly link to Windows downloadables, and we don't take any action if they disappear from project homepages.
Re:As we often say to contributors: (Score:2)
Let me respond to your posting and try to work out a list of sites. As you say, gnusoftware.org is down and has been for quite some time. The links on opensource.org [opensource.org] aren't a great deal of use but I did find O'Reilly OSDir's Windows section [osdir.com] with 18 apps listed, and BerliOS's Windows category [berlios.de] with 11 projects. OSSBlacksheep [ossblacksheep.com] is just a CD you can buy with some free software for Windows - similar to some mentioned on Slashdot recently.
More useful than these is the old favourite Cygwin [cygwin.com], a Unix-on-Win32 layer with gcc and tools, and its offshoot Mingw [mingw.org] (aka Ming, Mingw32, Minimalist GNU-Win32) which is a native gcc and toolchain, without a Unix emulation layer. You can use Cygwin to port lots of Unix apps, and you can use Mingw to build the Win32 ports of things like perl and Mozilla. Actually I don't think you need both since Cygwin's gcc can build native executables too, but Mingw is slightly 'cleaner' if you have no need for emulated symlinks and other cruft.
Hmm, what else can I think of? Well a lot of the big applications like Emacs and Mozilla have native Win32 ports. Don't forget the old DOS stuff, DJGPP [delorie.com] which is a GNU-based development environment for DOS - everything except fork()!. There used to be a rival called EMX but it seems to have faded away.
You're right that allowing Windows free software on Freshmeat but not Windows proprietary software is something of a double standard; but then so is allowing PalmOS (a wholly proprietary platform and not Unix). I don't think anyone expects Freshmeat to hold to a particular set of principles, it's above all a practical and useful site. So allowing Windows software but only when it is free might be a pragmatic compromise.
Maybe one day, one of the Freshmeat staff will be forced to use a Windows box for a few months, and then I'd expect a Windows section to appear pretty rapidly :-).
VersionTracker is why it took so long. (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe someone ought to look into getting a *nix section started with VersionTracker?
The previous message brought to by TechTracker! (Score:1)
Re:The previous message brought to by TechTracker! (Score:2)
Damn unpaid "holidaay vacations".
X? (Score:5, Funny)
The great Taco isn't using Linux? Oh, what sad times are these when passing ruffians can say "OS-X" at will to old ladies. There is a pestilence upon this land! Nothing is sacred.
Re:X? (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdotters: Linux! Shh!
Taco: Shh! We are now the Knights Who Say 'OS X'.
$699 too much? (Score:2)
BTW, OS X 10.2 runs fine on my older iMac (DV Graphite SE purchased Jan 2000).
And eBay Macs are even cheaper. If you want a machine that runs Jagwire, there really isn't any reason why you can't afford one. Granted, it won't be top of the line, but it will work, and work nicely...
Re:$699 too much? Yes! (Score:2)
I have a classic iMac, but I was willing to pay a premium for a fanless machine in a pretty case for a special application. But for general desktop use, the Dell hardware beats the iMac hardware in every way.
Re:WTF? iBooks start at $999! (Score:2)
If carrying an iBook makes you work up a sweat, you are seriously out of shape.
Re:WTF? iBooks start at $999! (Score:2)
I can't get particularly excited about the iBook. With a 600MHz G3, it's rather slow, and at about 5 pounds, it's pretty heavy.
A Sony VAIO SRX99 makes a much better ultra-portable laptop: longer battery life, more memory, much lighter and thinner at 2.76 pounds.
And something like the HP ze4101 gives you a much better general purpose laptop at less money and little extra weight.
An apple a day can be good for you. (Score:4, Funny)
Strange fruit, indeed. (Score:2)
GUI in the front
Bash at the root
Cases and monitors that are sleek and hip
X servers running on PPC chips
Open Source scene of the gallant geeks
The mistrust of anything not free
The reluctance to part with their cash
Suprise to find it doesn't crash
Here is a fruit for the trolls to mock
for the geek to question
for the musician to rock
for the artist to bless
for the freak to caress
Here is a strange and fitter OS
Why? (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
This is redundant, 'hoi' is the Greek plural nominative version of the definite article, in other words 'the'.
You keep *all* of your files in. . . (Score:1)
KFG
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well... actually, yeah. Us OS X users prefer not to sift through a bunch of announcements about the latest Windows whatever, or the newest Linux gewgaw, to get to the stuff we care about.
We're pretty much just like everybody else that way.
This is a godsend. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:This is a godsend. (Score:2)
ISO image (Score:1, Flamebait)
OS X Needs a Cocoa Evolution Project (Score:2, Interesting)
That would be what I most want to see on freshmeat, a Cocoa port of Evolution. Increasingly that looks like OS X's only hope for native Exchange compatibility. MS doesn't seem to be budging on Outlook. If we users ported Evolution, Ximian would surely give us Connector. They can make money selling Exchange connectivity to Mac users.
I would start the project myself if I were competent.
Re:OS X Needs a Cocoa Evolution Project (Score:2)
Re:OS X Needs a Cocoa Evolution Project (Score:2)
I don't think the Mac really needs Evolution right now.
Re:OS X Needs a Cocoa Evolution Project (Score:2, Interesting)
Outlook 2001 is gratis, but it is a MacOS app not an OS X app. As it stands it is the only Classic app we put on our standard OS X hard drive image. This is merely an adequate solution and Mac users are clamoring for a native Exchange client. It is quite possible MS will never provide one. They have shown no indication that they will ever port Outlook. On the contrary, they really push Entourage, which has little Exchange integration.
Re:OS X Needs a Cocoa Evolution Project (Score:2, Interesting)
Having said that, there are a number of other options available:
1. Web access - although you can only view entries you "own"- kills the shared calendar concept.
2. Virtual PC. Pricey. A bit of a hassle to get set up on an NT domain (our admins don't like adding it...).
3. Citrix. Works great (I use the Java client instead of the OS X client) if you've got a Citrix install and an admin who's not a dickhead.
I think a Cocoa Evolution project would be good for OS X and for Evolution: I know it would give OS X considerably more credibility in the workplace.
I think this is a good thing: (Score:2, Insightful)
RSS? (Score:2, Insightful)
Same goes for apple.slashdot. That would be like *double* Christmas.
Preemptive Strike... (Score:2, Funny)
Does that mean this story will get posted three times instead of two?
Welcome from a MacHack'er (Score:2)
VersionTracker could use some competition, so it is great to have the more Unix-focused Freshmeat and MacUpdate on the scene.
Seperate Section. (Score:2)
Why not Windows? (Score:2)
Clearly, the issue isn't that the Operating System isn't Open Source, or OSX wouldn't be acceptable either.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2)
First off, I'll give you credit for a troll . . . (Score:2)
Now I'll take it more seriously anyway.
The business model isn't the only one by which one can measure "success" or "failure."
Clearly the measure of "success" for an open source program is whether or not *I* find it successful. This is the reason that all Linux needs to "succeed" is for one geek sitting in a basement somewhere at three in the morning going, "Oh, wow man."
The rest is all sound and fury, signifying nothing.
KFG
Re:First off, I'll give you credit for a troll . . (Score:2)
In other words, "We can't win, so we'll just say we're playing by different rules."
;-)
Just as one cannot win an auto race. . . (Score:1)
Yes, playing to different sets of rules is perfectly legitimate. People do it all the time.
An outfit like Red Hat or Mandrake can be evaluated by standard business models because they accepted that rule set and are playing that game.
Red Hat and Mandrake != Linux.
If I may speak metaphorically ( and I may, because there really isn't anything you can do about it) the business model of success is similar to that of Chess.
Linux is a bit more like Go, where not only the rules but the very concept of "winning" is somewhat different.
KFG
Re:First off, I'll give you credit for a troll . . (Score:2)
If you don't believe what you're saying, then ha ha, very funny, go away now. If you do believe what you're saying, then kindly take your nihilism elsewhere. The things that you say mean absolutely nothing do, in fact, mean something, because people attach value to them.
Either way, that's about enough out of you.
Re:Ad hominem (Score:2)
Come on, now. Critiquing the source is not always an unfair attack. If a man stood at a lectern in a full Ku Klux Klan outfit and gave a lecture on the evils of affirmative action, would you not take just a moment to consider the source?
A user who posts under the name "Trolling4Dollars" is asking, positively begging, not to be taken seriously. I merely gave him want he was looking for.
Since then, he's gotten quite attached to me. In the sense that leeches get attached, I mean. Check out his journal.
On a completely unrelated topic, I checked out your Losing Nemo site, and I found myself a little confused. What have you got against Disney, exactly? I'd really like to understand your point of view on that subject.
Re:re Disney: see my journal (Score:2)
Yes, but for those who know where the name "Twirlip of the Mists" comes from, it makes perfect sense. There's a difference between a name that discredits oneself and a name that acts as a shibboleth.
I've covered the anti-Disney issue in my journal so as not to draw a -1 Offtopic by continuing to discuss it here. Please reply there.
Will do. I should have thought to check that first. Thanks much.
apple-suits.freshmeat.org (Score:1)
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:3, Informative)
PC components have the same problems. I bought a sound card (Philips Seismic Edge 702) and three weeks later, with the release of Windows XP discovered that Philips doesn't support it for XP and in fact created a whole new model with the same name (Seismic Edge 704) with only the number indicating a difference. I've got three or four inexpensive-to-moderately-expensive webcams kicking around in various storage areas because the drivers just failed to be updated. Be glad you got as long as you have out of the Wacom tablet.
I did see a 12x9" tablet at CompUSA from Aiptek a few weeks ago, OS9 compatible, and $99 after rebate. Damn good featureset, too. They claim OSX drivers are coming.
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Close. The iMac was the first modern Mac to ship without ADB in 1998. The last modern Mac to include ADB was the first generation G3 (Blue & White), which was discontinued in September of 1999.
To a degree, I can feel this guy's pain-- I'm pissed about Logitech, who refuse to produce OS X drivers for USB webcams that are barely a year old. How different can the guts of all their cameras possibly be, that they can't/won't create a bare-bones driver for the older models?
Of course, I don't think that ONE of the ~15 webcams they currently offer actually has an OS X driver yet, so hoping for drivers from them for their older stuff is a silly pipe dream.
~Philly
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Try here [sourceforge.net].
D.
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Not quite [apple.com].
It's not an available connector, but the OS supports it.
Still, this is a very confusing topic. Now, apparently, despite documentation to the contrary [216.239.51.100] (see page 45) the ADB Manager isn't supported at all [apple.com], just ADB Events for keyboard and mouse. However, you can apparently communicate with ADB devices [apple.com] using Darwin techniques.
However, in my converstations with Wacom, the real issue seems to be that Apple refuses to support them in their development of an ADB driver.
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:3, Insightful)
Ironically, BSD supports localtalk. Not Apple.
And before the inevitable, "Stop whining you bitch and write your own driver" replies, let me just say fuck off. I'm not a coder. I don't have time to pimp your mom and learn C+- or pearl or whatever. Apple should have written the driver.
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Why on gods green earth are you still using localtalk? Localtalk was meant as a cheap way to network over the Apple serial ports.
If your printer can't do ethernet or USB, why don't you get an Apple serial->USB dongle, and connect the printer to your computer.
want to share it? use USB Printer Sharing, built into OS X.
they are still ways to do everything you want to do, you juist have to get up to the new millenium
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
Re:Tied in to Mac (Score:2)
on the other hand, I scrubbed the HD of an LCIII about two years ago, installed a minimal 7.6, added the dread bridge, shutdown, disconnected the monitor & kb, plugged a 4/600ps printer into the printer port, flipped the power switch back on - and it's done its simple little job of making the 4/600 available to the network (including to a linux laptop) perfectly ever since. complete with occasional power on / power off cycling due to power outages or accidental 'but i needed somewhere to plug the vaccum cleaner' exercises.
I wouldn't try doing this in a production / 'it *must* work or it's your job' environment, but as a way to keep using a perfectly functional printer in a post-localtalk home setting, it's been fine.
Drivers not by Apple (Score:2)
Since Mac OS X now uses CUPS there may be printer description files for the Oki printer, perhaps implemented on Linux. I'm not familiar at all with CUPS but I have heard that some have had success getting their unsupported printers to work under CUPS.
Re:All I got to say is... (Score:2)
Uh...wait. So you're telling me that we were supposed to be bathing this whole time?! Oh my god! Why didn't anyone tell me this earlier?
Re:All I got to say is... (Score:2)
How come they're only available in medium and large? Are all the smalls and extra smalls sold out or something?
Hello? Uh, hello?
Re:Totally, dude (Score:1)
Feeling or displaying strong affection or attachment to something/one.
totally:
In a total manner; wholly; entirely.
Totally devoted:
Total and entire affection; attachment to something/one.