Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
OS X Desktops (Apple) GUI Open Source Operating Systems Linux

Why Run Linux On Macs? 592

jones_supa writes Apple has always had attractive and stylish hardware, but there are always some customers opting to run Linux instead of OS X on their Macs. But why? One might think that a polished commercial desktop offering designed for that specific lineup of computers might have less rough edges than a free open source one. Actually there's plenty of motivations to choose otherwise. A redditor asked about this trend and got some very interesting answers. What are your reasons?
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Why Run Linux On Macs?

Comments Filter:
  • a better question (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kuzb ( 724081 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:28AM (#48844061)

    Why run a mac at all if your goal is to use Linux? PCs are a ton cheaper and in most cases just as good.

    • by C3c6e6 ( 766943 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:40AM (#48844107)

      and in most cases just as good.

      Well, that's where I respectfully disagree! PCs might be cheaper but I have yet to find a PC that is "just as good" as a Mac, hardware-wise. For instance, I find the trackpads on Macs highly superior than those on PCs. Also, display quality is unparalleled, IMHO

      • Hardware-wise, the Apple trackpads are superior to ones designed to work with PCs. However, the Apple trackpads are limited to two fingered use on non-Apple operating systems through the use of crippled drivers and therefore something like a Logitech T650 is far superior when using a non-Apple OS.

        • Re:a better question (Score:5, Informative)

          by Knuckles ( 8964 ) <knuckles@d[ ]ian.org ['ant' in gap]> on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:43AM (#48844373)

          However, the Apple trackpads are limited to two fingered use on non-Apple operating systems through the use of crippled drivers and therefore something like a Logitech T650 is far superior when using a non-Apple OS.

          Wrong. At least on my 2009 MB Pro 3- and 4-finger touch has been working out of the box on Ubuntu for many years.

          To answer the question from TFS, I can only echo what others already wrote. When I purchased this laptop, the MB Pro had by far the nicest product design for my needs, and the PC laptops I found in the same price range did not come close: Full-body aluminium instead of plastic, smooth outer shell instead of little knobs and slits everywhere (important, e.g., when having to remove the laptop from the bag at airport security check), low-key LEDs instead of a blinking christmas tree telling me useless stuff like my wifi working (I know, no need to blink for every packet!!!) but require the use of tape when you want to watch a movie.

      • by Megol ( 3135005 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:23AM (#48844287)

        Right... If one can find a position where the screen glare doesn't ruin it all. I personally can't use an Apple as the glare drives me insane unless seated in a pitch black room - not the best way to do some work...

        In fact that isn't true at all - PCs often have better colors, contrast and/or brightness. Just don't buy the bargain basement level of stuff, select computers with IPS screens.

        • Re:a better question (Score:5, Interesting)

          by TWX ( 665546 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:41AM (#48844365)
          Typing this on a MackBook Pro, I wholeheartedly agree that the shiny reflective screen thing is a huge annoyance. In complex lighting I'm having to adjust the screen angle as I change my seating position from time to time.

          I'm running OSX on this MacBook, but mainly because while I'm a Linux geek first, I work in a Windows/AD shop that formerly was a Netware shop that has had Macintoshes and Linux servers. I can use anything. OSX gives me enough command-line to be functional doing network administration easily and lets me interface to Linux boxes, and with the multitouch touchpad is quite good, the touchpad on my Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga running Windows is *almost* as good, the touchpad on my Alienware 17" running Linux kind of sucks compared all of the others.

          To me it doesn't matter, the software I want to use runs on just about everything, and all of the platforms have their strengths and weaknesses.
    • Why run a mac at all if your goal is to use Linux? PCs are a ton cheaper and in most cases just as good.

      "most cases" != all the time.

      My best guess is you want the advantages of Steve Jobs Walled Garden for hardware, but none of the disadvantages it has for software.

      If you want cheap hardware, you wouldn't use a Mac. But let's say you want a high-end laptop, it's 50-50 whether you can beat Apple's prices without going into no-name companies with questionable build quality, and significantly harder to beat their customer service if something goes wrong.

      This is particularly true if you're interested in some tech

    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:05AM (#48844191) Homepage

      More like there's a ton of markets that Apple choose not to compete in and if you want to force a square peg into a round hole it gets real expensive. Like not offering a machine with drive bays, if you want more than one drive you should buy some wildly expensive Thunderbolt 2 enclosure. Or offering any cheap solutions, no cheap HDDs, no cheap screens, it's all high end or not at all. But their laptops are pretty much the same as everybody else's, the form factor hasn't allowed them to turn it into an art project. If I was in the market for a $1000+ laptop I'd consider a MacBook no matter what OS I was going to run on it. Not least because I could change my mind, even though dual booting (or even triple booting) is a hassle.

    • Re:a better question (Score:5, Informative)

      by quenda ( 644621 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:08AM (#48844215)

      The best question is "Why buy a Mac to run Linux", and the answer is conspicuous consumption. To show that you can.

      If you already have the Mac, OS-X vs Linux is usually just a matter of personal preference. They both do the job.

      • Re:a better question (Score:4, Informative)

        by lolocaust ( 871165 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @10:05AM (#48844479) Journal

        If you already have the Mac, OS-X vs Linux is usually just a matter of personal preference.

        Exactly. I bought my Mac back in 2011 because nothing came close to the battery life and those specs at that price while being slim enough to be able to fit in my bag every day. Now, Yosemite really does look like an awful OS upgrade, visuals aside, there are some seriously bad bugs, the new spotlight (desktop search) sends every query to Apple (no idea why) and Microsoft (for Bing) and the fact that most of the new features require a recent iPhone. I'm clinging on to OSX Mavericks for now, but I will move to Linux if the battery life is decent.

        • No stop this. You can fix that aberrant behavior with a simple preference switch. Which I did immediately, but my wife LIKES the fact she can search for 'everything' in one place. No accounting for taste.

          The visuals - a wash and always subjective. The bugs are there and won't be fixed until 10.5.

          Then, OS X 10.5-10.7 will be great and 11 (or whatever the hell they are planning on calling) it will arrive, be full of bugs and questionable UI changes. And the Wheel of Time....

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by chihowa ( 366380 )

            If the trendy new flat grey-on-grey visuals annoy you, try the "Increase contrast" option in the Accessibility System Preference. It doesn't restore the visual scheme to what it was (which had its own problems), but it's different enough that it may appeal to you. My eyes are fine, but I'm not a big fan of the war on contrast.

    • Re:a better question (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:12AM (#48844231)
      Lighter, thinner, longer time (battery), nicer... Boot on Linux for some work, boot on Mac for the rest.
    • That was my first thought as well. Why buy one when you can get a nice pc for 1/3 the price. My second thought was oops, I bought a Mac, maybe I can find something to do with it.
    • by Curtman ( 556920 ) *
      The only reason I'm not using Linux on my Mac right now is poor HiDPI support. Strangely hidpi is working properly in Linux for almost every application except Chrome, which works in OS X and Windows just fine.

      I got the Retina (15-inch Late 2013), and love the hardware. I've got a small Windows partition that gets booted once in a blue moon (Last time was to run "Odin" to unlock my wife's S5). Buying a Mac gives me the ability to run Linux, OS X, and Windows. Before I got this I purchased a HP laptop
    • Re:a better question (Score:4, Interesting)

      by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:28AM (#48844303) Homepage

      because people pay apple more money, so they can afford better designers and can get better components. [longer post explains more, see http://slashdot.org/~lkcl%5D [slashdot.org]

      lenovo *used* to do this when they were IBM. IBM *used* to buy the more expensive components then run them at lower clockrates, which *used* to result in much more reliable products. the thermal stresses (even during normal operation) placed on ceramic packaging causes them to develop micro hairline cracks; high temperatures also cause migration of solder as well as the heavy metals within the silicon ICs themselves.

    • Re:a better question (Score:5, Interesting)

      by pakar ( 813627 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:46AM (#48844381)

      I run Xubuntu on a Macbook pro laptop because it was cheaper for the wanted hardware.. The requirements i had where:
      - Good keyboard (i like it anyway)
      - Good screen (1080 pixels high is just bad..)
      - Good battery time. (getting 7-8 hours without problem)
      - No dual gfx card.. Intel only...
      - Good CPU.
      - Size/Weight of laptop including AC adapter.. (since i do travel a bit)
      When searching around i found a couple of laptops.. but none fit the requirements i had.. Either it had a good cpu and keyboard, but not a good screen or battery time. Or it was good screen/keyboard/battery-time but a slow CPU..

      So in the end i found 2 options... Either one that was a bit heavy and price at around 2500EUR or the current macbook that i got for 2000EUR..

      It is not perfetct hardware, but it does give back for the buck.. There are several negative things with it like lack of docking, non-replacable battery etc, but none of those are too important for me..

    • Re:a better question (Score:5, Informative)

      by thecombatwombat ( 571826 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:00PM (#48846015)

      I've found two reasons for this in the more than a decade since I got my first PowerBook. There's two things: there's always a few hardware features that come at a premium, and the mac stuff has some hardware niceties that I like regardless of what OS I'm running.

      Everything comes and goes in cycles, feature parity is always shifting around.

      For example, when I got my first G4, comparable PC laptops didn't have:

      - bluetooth
      - firewire
      - target disk mode
      - a widescreen IPS display
      - gigabit ethernet

      without getting really expensive.

      When I got my first intel mac it was:

      - dual link DVI
      - a backlit keyboard
      - a builtin camera

      On my current macboor pro, which I bought about two years ago it was:

      - thunderbolt and the ability to drive an insane number of displays
      - that screen, when the first retina came out, that screen was unmatched

      Laptops that had all these features have always come in at similar costs. There's sort of an 80/20 rule in play, and Apple just doesn't bother too much with things below the 80, but this seems to change a little more every year.

      Also, I really love how my current MBP plugs into my display. One cable for power, USB, and display. The thunderbolt displays are basically a solid docking station.

      If you dig the hardware and want some premium features (usually really current IO options) the cost makes sense to me.

  • Vanity vs Logic (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bgibby9 ( 614547 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:31AM (#48844071) Homepage
    Vanity < Logic after all :)
  • by Ivan Stepaniuk ( 1569563 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:40AM (#48844109)

    My company buys apple hardware for everybody and I have been working on GNU/Linux for 15 years. I use the operating system where I'm most productive, which is GNU/Linux. Also, nowadays OSX seems to be more prone to problems that were reserved for windows users in the past, like unexplicable slugginesh, tons of crap loading at startup, etc. No thanks.

  • systemd (Score:5, Funny)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:43AM (#48844119) Journal

    Why run linux on mac hardware? To get systemd, of course.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      No, you don't get how systemd works.

      You run systemd to get linux on macbook, like Soviet Russia even.

      Systemd don't depend on nobody but systemd.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by real gumby ( 11516 )

      I presume by the end of this year we'll have systemd running on bare iron, handing off to emacs, which then allows you to run instances of Linux in different buffers.

      (Why yes I am a lifelong emacs user which means I am allowed to make fun of it)

  • That's the choice when you buy a laptop: You can buy cheap and get rubbish or buy expensive and get quality. (But my mother always said: We are poor, we cannot afford cheap things. ).

    Now for most users there is the big difference between running Windows or running MacOS X. That obviously makes a big difference. But we are talking here about people who are going to run Linux anyway. That means an important question is Linux compatibility, which I didn't see discussed at all.

    The important things to answ
  • No offense, ninnle linux, but mklinux is pretty good. It's linux on top of the mach microkernel. (Think of it as a "fuck you" to gnu/hurd, though that's not why it exists :-). Since it's sponsored by Apple, it works better on Apple hardware than the stock linux kernel. Maybe now that Linux is using OS X and Sublime Text for linux development, we'll get better Macintosh support in the mainline kernel? Anyhow, mklinux is pretty cool.
    • I though MKLinux wasn't being developed anymore?
    • Latest release: 2002 !
    • No offense, ninnle linux, but mklinux is pretty good. It's linux on top of the mach microkernel. (Think of it as a "fuck you" to gnu/hurd, though that's not why it exists :-). Since it's sponsored by Apple, it works better on Apple hardware than the stock linux kernel. Maybe now that Linux is using OS X and Sublime Text for linux development, we'll get better Macintosh support in the mainline kernel? Anyhow, mklinux is pretty cool.

      I see what you're trying to do here....

  • .. and completely happy. Works like a charm with long battery endurance and a rugged aluminum body. mm.
    • Okay, but how is that better than running OSX and firing up a VM when you need Linux?

      Aren't you missing all the optimizations that Apple has supposedly put into OSX over the years?

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:59AM (#48844173)
    You know that hackers are always attacking mainstream OS. Use an obscure one and everyone leaves you alone.
  • by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:01AM (#48844177)

    A recent employer issued me a new 15" MacBook Pro. I really liked the weight, battery life, screen quality, and the feel of the keyboard. But the non-PC keyboard layout drove me nuts. I.e., the absence of stand-alone keys like home, end, page-up, alt, etc.

    If I was using only native Mac apps, I would have been okay enough. But I was accessing Linux GUI apps within a VM, and linux console apps via SSH. It was a real challenge to get decent Mac-to-PC key bindings. I also had real finger-memory issues as I'd switch between driving Mac and Linux programs from the same keyboard.

    If I could get a laptop that's just like a MacBook Pro, except it had a PC keyboard layout and a 17" screen, I'd be all over it for my Linux work. But barring that, I'll choose a non-Apple laptop.

  • by the_humeister ( 922869 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:03AM (#48844181)

    Power Mac G4: Debian 8 runs like a champ. The latest Mac OS won't even install.

  • 1) It's beautiful hardware. 2) I don't want to run an OS that the NSA can simply summon the passwords of.

  • by scotts13 ( 1371443 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:07AM (#48844205)

    ...or have other specialized needs. Apple hardware has an unparalleled build quality; no one disputes that. The only question on that front is whether you find it worthwhile to pay for that quality. My Apple Laptop is dual-boot; Windows at work and OSX at home. Both work perfectly. My home system previously also had a Linux boot volume; that worked well too. However, for MY purposes, it did nothing that other Unix variant, OSX, did not - and it was trickier to install and maintain.

    So the answer is, specific needs (like my absolute IE9 requirement at work) or just like to play with the OS.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:22AM (#48844285) Homepage

    whilst i find the practices of apple absolutely deplorable - forcing people to sign up for an ID in order to use hardware products that they have paid for, taking so much information that even *banks* won't work with them - bizarrely the amount of money that people pay them is sufficient for apple to spend considerable resources on high-quality components and design.

    i have bought a stack of laptops in the past (and always installed Debian on them - see http://lkcl.net/reports/ [lkcl.net]) and have found them to be okay, but always within 2 to 3 years they are showing their age or in some cases completely falling apart. the 2nd Acer TravelMate C112 i bought i actually wore a hole through the left shift key with my fingernail after 2 years of use. hard drives died, screen backlights failed, an HP laptop had such bad design on the power socket that it shorted out one day and almost caught fire. i had to scramble for a good few seconds to pull the battery out, smoke pouring out of the machine as the PMICs glowed.

    about 6 years ago my partner had the opportunity to buy both an 18in and a 24in iMac at discounted prices. i immediately installed Debian on it: it took 4 days because grub2-efi was highly undocumented and experimental at the time. so i had a huge 1920x1200 24in screen (which over the next few years actually damaged my eyes because i was too close: my eyesight is now "prism" - i've documented this here on slashdot in the past), a lovely dual-core XEON, 2gb of RAM and it was *quiet*. there is a huge heatsink in the back, and the design uses passive cooling (vertical air convection).

    awesome... except not very portable. and no spying or registration of confidential data with some arbitrary company that you *KNOW* is providing your details to the NSA, otherwise there's this conversation which begins "y'know it's *real* hard to get that export license for your products, if you know what i mean, mr CEO".

    so, when i moved to holland i had to leave the 24in iMac behind - apart from anything, 2gb of RAM was just not enough. i leave firefox open for 4-7 days (basically until it crashes), opening over 150 sometimes even as many as 250 tabs in a single window. it gets to about 4gb of RAM and starts to become a problem: that's when i kill it. on the iMac, it was consuming most of the resident RAM. i compile programs: 2gb of RAM is barely enough for the linker phase of applications like webkit (which requires 1.6gb of RESIDENT memory in order to complete within a reasonable amount of time). i run VMs with OSes for study.

    so i was used to the 1900x1200 screen now, where i could get *five* xterms across a single window. i run fvwm2 with a 6x4 virtual screen, and run over 30 xterms in different places, 3 different web browsers; as i am now developing hardware i run CAD programs in one fvwm2 virtual screen, PDFs in the ones next to it, i run Blender in one virtual screen, OpenSCAD in another, firefox in another, chromium in yet another, then i have to view and manage client machines so i use rdesktop to connect to those (move over to a free virtual window area to do it) - the list goes on and on.

    so i figured, "hmmm laptop... but with good screen. must have lots of RAM too, minimum 8gb, must have decent processor". i then began investigating, and found the Lenovo Ideapad. great! let's buy it! .... except their web site crashed. so i then - reluctantly - began investigating iMac laptops. 2560x1600 LCD, 8gb of RAM, dual-core dual-threaded processor: $USD 1500 and *in the UK*, with a U.S. keyboard so nobody was buying it. researched it, saw the success reports of people installing debian on it, knew it could be done: sold, instantly.

    so now i am extremely happy with this machine - not with apple themselves - but with the hardware that i have. it's light, it's fast, it's a sturdy aluminum case, the fan only comes on if i swish large OpenSCAD models around in 3D (or if firefox gets overbloated as usual).

    the only downsi

  • I ran Linux on my first MacBook Pro, but eventually I gave up. OS X just ran better on the hardware. Linux would sometimes fail to suspend on lid close and if this happened with the machine in a bag it would get super hot. The touch pad never felt right on Linux. I think the battery life was worse. It just wasn't worth it in the end, since OS X has most of the Unixy features I want.
  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:32AM (#48844331)

    Apple still has one thing going for it: Predictable hardware. Even after 15 years or so of OS X, the range of devces is fairly overseeable. If a crew gets Linux to run on a mac, they've like also gotten the drivers and all the extras to run halfway properly.

    But that's about the only reason to get a mac to run linux. Besides, I'd pick up this device these days [puri.sm]. Awesome project - deserves every support they can get [crowdsupply.com].

    Bottom line:
    You buy a mac for the awesome hard- and software integration and their sleek product design. Using a mac without its OS isn't that smart, IMHO.

  • by MacTO ( 1161105 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @09:54AM (#48844431)

    OS X does a good job on my 2012 MacBook Pro, yet I have noticed that it becomes very unresponsive at times. It appears to be due to memory management issues, and switching to Linux is a far less expensive upgrade route than bumping up the memory. The other consideration is my ability to maintain the system. While OS X does make certain things easier, Linux is easier to maintain over the long-term.

  • by MMC Monster ( 602931 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @10:13AM (#48844505)

    (I'm not an Apple fanboy, I think. Of the 8 computers in my house, only two are Apple hardware, and one of them is > 5 years old.) The rest are either Acer or System76.

    A lot of people buy Apple hardware because it's a known quality and (relatively) easy to get fixed. You (probably) know you're going to pay a little extra, but you know the build quality is generally consistently good and if there are hardware issues you can take it into an Apple Store and get it fixed fairly quickly.

    It's fine for people that buy PC hardware all the time to say that a particular brand or model is good price and excellent quality. Most people don't want to do that much research for a laptop or desktop. And many have burnt themselves with buying something expensive and had it go bad in a couple years or need to be troubleshooted over the phone or mailed back due to some obscure issue. Better to drag it to the local Apple Store for many.

  • by erp_consultant ( 2614861 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @10:43AM (#48844627)

    I've got a 2009 era MacBook Pro. Originally it ran Snow Leopard but since then I have upgraded OS's as they came out and now I'm on Yosemite. One thing I have noticed is that memory requirements have steadily gone up. At the moment I'm running an email client, Skype, Chrome and a password manager and it's using over 6GB of RAM. The same thing on Windows 8 uses less than 4GB of RAM. On Linux it's about 2.5GB of RAM.

    The MacBook is pegged at 8GB of RAM - I can't add any more than that. So just a very basic load, like above, and I'm almost maxed out on RAM on OSX. That is unacceptable to me - almost unusable.

    Ubuntu or Mint on the MacBook runs flawlessly. Faster, smoother, way less system load. Multi finger gestures work perfectly out of the box. The Mac trackpad, incidentally, is a major reason to run Linux on a Mac rather than a commodity PC. PC trackpads suck. Running Linux gives you infinite configurability, whereas on the Mac it is limited in that regard.

    So for me on an older Mac, Linux (or even Windows 8) is a better option. The hardware still performs flawlessly (have to hand it to Apple there) and a new OS just breathes new life into it.

  • by HalAtWork ( 926717 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @12:12PM (#48845129)
    I prefer Linux and the software ecosystem, and want a laptop with good specs, battery life, features, and build quality. So I got a Mac and run Linux. I tried OS X but don't like the interface. They kept switching up the file manager on each OS revision, hiding folders I wanted to see, and it was hard to get apps I like working properly on the OS such as Inkscape. It is just not ideal for what I want to do.
  • Because of service (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bananaquackmoo ( 1204116 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @12:34PM (#48845279)
    Here's the deal. I am not a fan of Apple. If I weren't recommending a laptop to someone I would never recommend an Apple product. BUT! When it comes to laptops, Apple is really the only option. Why? Because you can walk down to the apple store and someone will fix any hardware problems for you. You can't get that with any PC maker. Heck, the best rated PC maker for customer support took a month to repair something for me, and that's after it took me weeks to get them to even look at it. If you think your laptop hardware is ever going to break or die within the timeframe of a warranty (hint: they almost always do), then Apple is really the only option.
  • by davids-world.com ( 551216 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @01:24PM (#48845543) Homepage
    Sorry, but I couldn't find interesting answers in that Reddit thread. It's mostly that people choose to run OSX over Linux, and why.

    The few GNU/Linux users do it for idealistic reasons, or because they're developers, or because they like the latest OS on very old cheap hardware and don't mind to deal with whatever this entails.

    The more interesting question is really if freedom exists when you never make use of it. (Do you actually hack the kernel or fix somebody's proprietary binary-only drivers as a GNU/Linux user?)

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @02:15PM (#48845825)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • My reason (Score:4, Interesting)

    by grahamlee ( 522375 ) <grahamNO@SPAMiamleeg.com> on Sunday January 18, 2015 @02:39PM (#48845907) Homepage Journal
    I switched from Debian to OS X in 2004, then from OS X to Ubuntu in 2014. The story of the switch back is told in full here [sicpers.info]. That meant that the cheapest route for me was to install a distro on my MacBook, because I already owned it :). And it really is good hardware, so I'm happy with the amount I paid for a high-quality laptop that fulfils my needs. The interesting part of the switch for me is the question "why not use OS X"? There are all sorts of bugs in OS X and its applications, just as there are in Linux, GNU and their applications. The difference is that I'm allowed to fix the bugs in GNU, and other people can take advantage of those fixes. So I've been learning about GTK+ and Vala, as well as getting back up to speed with GNUstep, so that when I find a bug I can contribute a fix back. Plenty of other posters have discussed that there are cheaper GNU/Linux-compatible laptop choices, and indeed had I not already owned a MacBook I probably would've considered some of those. But "cheapest" is a non-goal for me, or at least far down the chain below reliable wifi, good battery, solid construction and (to the extent that this is at all an option on any laptop) decent keys.
  • by Curunir_wolf ( 588405 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @02:43PM (#48845933) Homepage Journal

    So I can experience the joys of systemd and everything that comes with it, of course! You can't run all that software perfection from God's own coders on BSD.

  • by nut ( 19435 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:23PM (#48846133)

    So I can dual boot two actually useful operating systems.

    Mac OS X for video editing, Linux for development - and nearly everything else, really.

"Nuclear war can ruin your whole compile." -- Karl Lehenbauer

Working...