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Apple's Darwin Runs XFree4

Mneme writes "Looks like Apple finally has the open source core of MacOS X up and running on Intel boxen. We'll have to wait until the WWDC is over before we'll get our hands on it, but it's still a very pleasing development. Check out a story about the demonstration, or click below to read the message from the Darwin Developer's list.

Here's the message from the Darwin Development mailing list:

Date: Tue, 16 May 2000 01:11:51 -0700 (PDT)
From: Dave Zarzycki
To: darwin-development@public.lists.apple.com
Subject: FYI: Monday's Darwin demos at WWDC
Message-ID:

On Monday, Fred [Sanchez] and I had the pleasure of demonstrating two very interesting Darwin developments.

First, we demonstrated Darwin running on Intel. Now I know that many of you are interested in this development, and I can probably predict many of your questions (where do I get it, how do I install it, where do I get the source, etc). Please exercise patience as we sort out the details. As you might imagine, we're very busy with Apple's WWDC.

Second, we were able to demonstrate X11 (XFree86 4.0 to be exact) running on Darwin's native I/O architecture IOKit. I had a lot of fun doing this port, which was loosely based off of John Carmack's port of XFree86 3.3 to AppKit on MacOS X Server. What I don't think most people realize, is that it only took a few days to do the port. X11 isn't as hard as some of you might think! ;-)

Please exercise patience with the above, we're very busy with WWDC. We'll try and push the necessary information out as soon as I can.

davez

--
Dave Zarzycki
MacOS X & Darwin
Apple Computer, Inc.

155 comments

  1. Re:Someone help me out here by PenguinX · · Score: 3

    As much of a Linux bigot as I am, now a "major" desktop player that conforms to the "major" - binary software developers (such as Adobe, Quark, etc.) will have to begin developing in Unix-like environments. This will mean that a step to PPC or x86 BSD/Linux or gads Solaris is really easy. MacOSX will redesign the ease of use for Unix and as terrifying as it may be to behold -- that is what sells. Because of this there may yet again be cross platform games, and a software store that you walk into and see not only Microsoft this and that but MacOSX games, productivity, and other software Linux games, and BSD games.

    (I know the games are what we want the most ;>)

    MacOSX is standing up to the Wintel duelopoly, and saying "screw you - there is a better solution". Apple has been noted for "shaking up the market" before, and if they can pull it of if they suceed then software companies will be forced to develop for a wide diversity of platforms.

    Sound like a good reason? ;-)

  2. Re:Galileo did recant by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    Actually, what got Galileo in trouble with the church is his application of his heliocentric theory to the Bible. He had ticked off a great many people (think Stallman cubed) including his greatest supporters, the Jesuits. All in all it wasn't the proudest moment of the Catholic Church which is probably one reason why they eventually apologized. The Pope (JP II) actually ordered the issuing of two commemorative stamps as I recall as penance.

    W/regards to the torture statements, this happened in some cases but the relevant rules on such trials forbade it. Galileo was tried in Rome right under the noses of those cardinals who wrote the rules. You can be pretty sure (and most serious scholarship supports this) that they didn't do anything but go strictly by the book on procedural matters (including torture or threats thereof).

    Galileo ended up under house arrest and was limited to one servant but had no limitations on visitors. Not good, not an acceptable imitation of Christ that we are called to do as Christians, but not the bloodthirsty, ignorant savagery that some people make it out to be.

    DB

  3. Re:The Bible was written by God; hence it is inerr by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    The inerrancy of all translations of the Bible is simply not the case as any serious scholar could tell you. Early church set the canon and generally kept things stable until the protestants came along and threw out seven books! Even among protestants, there are many translation differences amongst the various denominations and that doesn't even go to the more unusual issues raised by the Mormons and the Jehovah's Witnesses (I would pay to be called on by both groups simultaneously).

    Ignoring the wounds in Christ's body caused by the disunity of his followers is not fitting for a true christian.

    DB

  4. Re:What is Apple? by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    You can't have your cake and eat it too. You certainly can have Apple quality components (after all these are commodities at this point)but do you get them at a discount to the Apple price?

    What you don't get at any price without Apple is a bunch of flaming anal-retentives concentrating on all the little details to make the hardware/software combo work nicely together so you don't have to worry about it. Now some people put the value of that little fact at $0 and that's OK, that's not Apple's market. But for the other 95% of people it does have a monetary value and Apple's growing marketshare is demonstrating that it more than covers the price difference for like quality x86 hardware.

    DB

  5. What will Linux users gain form this?.. by stikves · · Score: 1

    OK, MacOS X may be better than Linux in some areas. But that will not stop me using Linus's kernel. But the problem is, as a Linux user what may i gain from the delelopment of MacOS X? Somebody metioned games. But Wine and Loki are already doing good progress. I am more concerned with multimedia thing... By the way what happened to the MPEG 4 Coded contest anybody has news?

    1. Re:What will Linux users gain form this?.. by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      WINE and Loki are in some way comparible to having a good media API? Dude have you played Quake 3 on a Linux box? Why do you need to gain something from Darwin, you haven't contributed to its development in the slightest of ways.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  6. Re:Apple Reality Check by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    Do you really think that Steve Jobs will be junking the NetBoot technology that he hyped not too long ago? I don't think so. NetBoot implies a server. It may be the current Mac OS X client on steroids but there will be a Mac OS X server.

    DB

  7. Re:What is Apple? by sredding · · Score: 1

    I don't necessarily agree, but I'll leave it at that.

  8. Re:Apple Reality Check by MacOSNeedsDeath · · Score: 3
    Mac OS X Server uses a Mach 2.5 kernel with NeXT extensions. It is to Mac OS X as BSD 4.4 is to Linux. It is a kindred spirit in some ways, but it is a completely different OS.

    Mac OS X uses a Mach kernel based on the same OSF Mach 3 kernel MkLinux used.

    OS X is not like NT, with a server and a workstation version. OS X Server is OpenStep with a poor faux-Mac interface and nonstandard networking administration tools. OS X will replace Server.

    Apple originally said that hardware would ship with OS X in January 2000, not December 2001 - where did you get that date?

  9. Re:I suppose you think that you're funny right? by Harri · · Score: 1
    Well, I'm sure you're basking in the "kudos" that being such a wag has earned you,

    If you thought it was a wag, you missed the point. You might be entirely correct about Darwin and evolution. I certainly can't say that you aren't, although I personally don't believe it. But if you use arguments like those, you aren't going to convince anyone, because they don't make sense. Which was what I was trying to point out by turning them them on their heads. If you think what I said was blasphemous against your religion (saying bad stuff for no reason), then what you said was blasphemous against science.

    and the righteous self-satisfaction that is Satan's reward for those who blaspheme. But I'm sure you don't believe in the Devil either, after all his greatest success was in convincing people that he doesn't exist, and that they could commit acts of evil without endangering their immortal souls.

    Hum. Personally I like to be nice to people. I don't like to rob banks. I like to think that I do this for a better reason than that I might not get to Heaven. Isn't it better for me to help a poor person because I want to, than for someone to do the same thing because they think it will earn them Cosmic Credit?

    Science is the Devil's tool of choice for corrupting people through such fallacies as "freedom" and "choice". There is no freedom - you must live your life as God has decreed and following in His wise teachings, otherwise you will be drawn downwards into Hell upon your death, there to eternally repent your sins.

    Science never said anything about freedom or choice: that was philosophy. Science says stuff about how fast things fall down, and how to make aeroplanes stay up. Don't knock science until you're prepared to repent of having central heating, piped water, a house with a roof, a car and so forth, none of which would be here without the basic principles of science. Even God's own very beautiful cathedrals are made using scientific principles to keep the roof up where it belongs.

  10. Re:Yet another level by Bongo · · Score: 1
    Really, just because there's terminology and people working on something doesn't mean that there's anything to it

    Quite, and the "proof of the pudding", as they say, is in the eating. When an advanced meditation master is hooked up to a machine that monitors his brain activity, and that monitor shows that he is deeply asleep and fully awake at the same time, then you have scientific evidence that there is something to it.

  11. Re:Apple Reality Check by MacOSNeedsDeath · · Score: 1

    Excuse me, I meant "Apple originally said that hardware would ship with OS X in January 2001, not December 2001"

  12. Re:FUNNY moderate up! by Golias · · Score: 1
    It has nothing to do with "hate", it's idiotic and FUNNY!

    So if the Anonymous Coward had said "I get a kick out of these posts making fun of idiot Jews," you would not find it shockingly offensive? Really? Most reasonable people would, given the bloody history of hostility towards people based on religious beliefs.

    Sorry, but not everybody can take bigotry as lightly as you do.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  13. Re:Sadly for you "geeks", Darwin recanted by cje · · Score: 1

    First of all, the Lady Hope story (deathbed recantation) is a myth; see the link. I'm curious, though, as to why you would "absolutely *love* to bring this up in a BIO class?" Even if it were true, it has absolutely nothing to do with the validity of the theory. I am certain you agree that if Copernicus and Galileo had recanted their theories of heliocentrism on their deathbeds, the Earth would not have magically become the center of the Universe at the time of their death(s).

    Scientific theories rise and fall on the basis of how well they explain current observations and predict future ones. In this regard, biological evolution has an excellent track record. They do not rise and fall on the basis of how well-liked they are or who "believes" in them. After Darwin published On the Origin of Species, a member of British society wrote "Let us hope that what Mr. Darwin writes is not true .. but if it is, let is hope that it does not become well-known." It occurs to me that this attitude sums up a lot of the anti-science activism we see today; if we cannot get evolution banned from classrooms, then we must spread lies and misinformation about it (the Lady Hope deathbed myth being an easy example.)

    Anyway, just some things to think about.

    --
    We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
  14. Re:What is the comparative performance? by karlm · · Score: 1
    Hmm... definately stinks of urban legend.

    Think about what you would do if you were Apple and discovered that your MacOS ran faster when ported to x86. It would seem to me that you would simply slighlty cripple the code. As long as you never resleased the source code, you could make the Motorolla hardware appear faster than the x86 hardware. That way you could sell your x86 version of the OS and make some money. If people liked the OS, thier next hardware purchase would be a Motorolla-Mac in order to run the OS faster. You could actually use the OS to win converts to your hardare, even if the x86 hardare ORIGINALLY ran the OS faster. Of course, this ploy goes out the window with the open-souced Darwin.

    The alternative would be to waste the man-hours already invested in porting the OS by scrapping the project.

    Karl

    I'm a slacker? You're the one who waited until now to just sit arround.

    --
    Copyright Violation:"theft, piracy"::Anti-Trust Violation:"thermonuclear price terrorism"<-Overly dramatic language.
  15. WOW by isolation · · Score: 1

    Oh my god Who would have ever dreamed. X windows running on another version of UNIX. What a day in history

    --
    Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
  16. Re:Can we please stop it with the Mac stories? by cybercuzco · · Score: 2
    Yes, please do stop with all those nasty mac stories, they remind me that my OS doesnt have as nice a front end as I might like. You do of course realize that people have been predicting apples demie almost since it was started. Lisa would be apples doom, the Mac would kill Apple, Apples draining market share would kill it, the lack of a modern OS will destroy apple, the iMac would finish off Apple. So you can understant my skepticism about you crying wolf about their demise. Ill believe Apple is dead when they close their offices at 1 infinite loop.

    --

  17. How about the other way around? by ceswiedler · · Score: 4

    ...can I run the Mac GUI instead of XFree on my Linux box?

    Yeah, yeah, free software and all, long live KDE and Gnome, but Mac does GUIs well. If they sold their GUI alone as a windowmanager, I'd snap it up.

    1. Re:How about the other way around? by Kingpin · · Score: 1


      Uhm, use Enlightenment as your window manager and check out Aqua-DR16 from e.themes.org - works for me and looks real sweet :)

      --
      Unable to read configuration file '/bigassraid/htdig//conf/14229.conf'
      Geocrawler error message.
    2. Re:How about the other way around? by Harvey · · Score: 1

      E ships with keybindings.cfg.gmc that you can swap in for the normal keybindings.cfg and it works like 0.15 did. And helix (or gnome 1.1.x) has a scalable panel.

  18. This could kill MS easily by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If I could use a simple OS like MAC on x86 I would be there. Linux is great, but, I don't see my Mom installing it by herself and using it. She has used MAC though. OS X looks like it is a good strong OS with one of the best GUIs ever. Why use MS at all? Truthfully why would you use Linux?

  19. Re:Neither flame nor troll by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
    Remember Linux for Apple ][ or 8080 - not a lot of use but was done just for the sake of it.

    I know ELKS runs on old x86 hardware and coldfire on a lot of 32bit processors whithout mmu but I believe the ports you mentioned were just a april first joke.....

    Jeroen

    --
    Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
  20. MacOS X will not run on Intel by Anonymous+Coed · · Score: 2
    You're confusing "MacOS X" and "Darwin." Yes, Darwin is a part of MacOS X, but I really don't think Apple will ever release MacOS X (a commercial PowerPC only product including Quicktime, QD3D, etc) for Intel. Darwin is really only the kernel and basic C libraries for MacOS X.

    Now if you're asking "Why would I want to run Darwin on Intel when there are Linux and the BSD's?" that is a different question. Maybe you are an enthusiast who likes to run a buch of different OS's. Maybe doing so will make it easier to port a Mac app you have source for to *nix systems. (I don't know.) Maybe you just wanna be l33t.

  21. Re:Yet another level by Improv · · Score: 2

    It is not at all improbable that with proper
    training one may control parts of one's body that
    normally is not under active control. This does
    not require any kind of trancendental view of how
    the universe works. If you could show me an
    advanced meditation master levitating, or
    something similarly amazing, then we really would
    have some 'proof of the pudding'

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  22. Re:Yet another level by Bongo · · Score: 1
    If you could show me an advanced meditation master levitating, or something similarly amazing, then we really would have some 'proof of the pudding'

    I'm sorry, but that sort of thing is just too rare, if it does occur.

    This does not require any kind of trancendental view of how the universe works.

    Which universe are you talking about...? The physical "stuff" of matter and energy, or the universe of your conscious experience... which in addition to what your senses report to you, also includes the mental sphere of thoughts and concepts. If you want to talk about "the Universe", you cannot leave out the internal aspects of mind. A transcendental experience doesn't necessarily have to be just about saving on air fares. When J.C. said "Turn the other cheek", it wasn't because he thought it was a good idea. Rather, his own immediate experience was that He was Everywhere, and as such to strike another was to strike himself.

    The Buddha also reported about what life is like when lived, experienced, beyond the concepts of time and space. Just as my everyday experience is that I am an individual separated from the world, the Buddha nature is separateless, timeless, and therefore Eternal.

    And they left behind instructions on how to attain such experience, just as a scientist gives you instructions on how to operate a microscope in order to experience, and therefore confirm for yourself the reality of germs.

  23. Re:What is Apple? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

    Well I suppose a rationale that was TCO analysis would say that net savings is the benefit itself. Though you pay a bit more up front, you save money over the machine's lifetime, the machine has a longer lifetime, and the worker is more productive during that lifetime -- to restate my previous points in reverse order. I don't think you can say, "Owning brand X makes more profits!" so simply. There are reasons for higher revenues (higher productivity) and reasons for lower expenditures (less downtime, fewer required upgrades). Both contribute to the bottom line (profits).

    I guess what I'm trying to say is that lower TCO == higher TNBO. They are inverse ways of looking at the exact same thing.

  24. Re:The Bible was written by God; hence it is inerr by spectreone · · Score: 1

    The bible wasn't written by God, it is the word of God as revealed to humans and written down by humans. And if you can't admit that humans are prone to errors then you need to have your head examined.

  25. Re:I hope you understand .. by Phroggy · · Score: 1
    My apologies if I sound ignorant; I'm not a scientist and have no more than a casual interest in biology. I certainly don't mean to imply that I have all the answers, only that some of those who profess to have the answers are sadly mistaken.

    About as interesting as the fact that the first Americans came to America from Europe and yet there are still Europeans!

    Those Europeans chose, for whatever reasons, to leave Europe and move to the New World. A living thing doesn't choose to mutate into a different species! The concept of evolution is generally that a new species is better suited to its environment than the original species, and the original species is eventually eliminated through natural selection (because the new species is better adapted to survival). Am I missing something?

    If your religion satisfies you and you do not wish to learn the scientific theories that man has put forth, then that is your decision, but you should at least refrain from attempt to speak about those theories in an intelligent manner.

    I'm certainly open to an intelligent discussion on the matter, although this is probably not the most appropriate forum (we're straying a bit off-topic....).

    Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, and Fred Phelps are not accurate resources when it comes to biology.

    Jerry Falwell, PAt Robertson and Fred Phelps are not accurate resources when it comes to religion, either. ;-)

    You may be surprised to find out how far removed your conceptions of "puddles of goo" and "in-between species" are from reality.

    Forgive my use of non-technical terms. Again, I'm not a biologist.

    Perhaps you can tell me, though, what did bats evolve from? Do you have any idea? Perhaps you can consult one of those textbooks you've got lying around; I don't have any handy at the moment.

    --

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  26. Re:iMac best selling PC by thechink · · Score: 1

    As for Windows 98 driving USB sales I have one little thought to pop that bubble - safe mode. It kind of blows when your USB keyboard won't register with your OS when you are trying to recover from a crash.

    Just pop into the BIOS and enable legacy USB keyboard support and the USB keyboard will work everytime. Yes even in Safe mode, DOS, Linux, NT etc.

    Please don't get me wrong I'm not a Mac basher, I just don't like the iMac, even my Mac using friends dislike them. My beef is that I just don't think the iMac is very innovative, from a marketing perspective maybe, but not technologically and that's what really counts not coloured plastic.

  27. Re:Mac OS X on Intel by mr_burns · · Score: 1

    Well, with Mot improving PPC at a breakneck snails pace, x86 porting would put the fear of got into mot and possibly convince them to get thier act together (seeing as how AMD and IBM seem to have no problem doing a great job with mot's technology). I don't think Apple wants to support multiple hardware platforms, it's costly and could fork their SE resources. With Darwin being open, Apple has a pointy stick to use on any of it's vendors who don't play ball. "we don't need technology x, geeks have already gotten our OS to run on technology y, so get your head out of your ass or you'll get no more $ from us." It's leverage for apple, and it helps consumers by widening Apple's R&D efforts.

    --
    "Let him go, Ralph. He knows what he's doing." --Otto Mann (simpsons)
  28. Re:iMac best selling PC by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    Honestly, could you give me an example of a low end consumer PC of any company that is innovative technologically? The high end is where all the new tech gets introduced traditionally.

    DB

  29. Re:Go Darwin! by Genom · · Score: 2

    I thought SATAN was a network security tool...
    ;P

  30. Re:What is Apple? by gig · · Score: 2

    > What? The sound? Video? Motherboard?
    > There are better peripherals out there.
    > What does that leave that "rocks"? That
    > pretty case?

    Off the top of my head, here are some of the hardware features you get with a PowerMac that you don't usually find on a typical PC:

    - 1 MB cache
    - can take up to 2 GB of RAM
    - CPU is smaller, takes less power, and doesn't need a fan
    - because it runs so cool, the (one) fan in the box is very small and quiet
    - two independent FireWire busses (400mbs each)
    - two independent USB busses (1.2mbs each)
    - wireless networking option for $99 extra
    - built-in 10/100 Ethernet
    - both VGA and digital video connectors
    - booting from any drive attached to your system, even FireWire (hold down the Option key while you boot, and you get a screen that shows an icon for each drive so you can choose one)
    - easy-access case exposes the whole mobo with one switch
    - built-in (non-Win) modem
    - three empty PCI slots (as much as you can get a PC with more slots, often you put a NIC, modem and SCSI/FireWire in there right away, while those are already built-in on the PowerMac)
    - nice styling and attention to detail (matching bezel for Zip drive, for example)
    - integration with the OS, so that hot plugging, power management and hardware detection are excellent, and the Apple System Profiler utility can give you a very detailed listing of your hardware
    - handles
    - on/off switch on the keyboard
    - high quality keyboard with a USB hub providing two ports for a mouse and a joystick
    - extraordinarily crappy mouse, good only as a conversation piece

    There's a reason why there are so many happy Mac users: they make good stuff.

  31. Of course, even if he did recant... by P.+Legba · · Score: 1

    ...it wouldn't make his theories wrong. P.

  32. Neither flame nor troll by FascDot+Killed+My+Pr · · Score: 2

    Just curiosity.

    Why would I run MacOS X on intel when I can already run Linux or one of the BSDs? All I can think of is "to make porting to MacOS X on Mac easier".
    --
    Have Exchange users? Want to run Linux? Can't afford OpenMail?

    --
    Linux MAPI Server!
    http://www.openone.com/software/MailOne/
    (Exchange Migration HOWTO coming soon)
    1. Re:Neither flame nor troll by Dandy · · Score: 3

      "Why would I run MacOS X on intel when I can already run Linux or one of the BSDs?" The question could just as easily be, "Why run NetBSD on Intel when I could run Solaris x86 on Intel? Or the GNU Hurd? Or plain old Mach with the standard BSD personality?" Why run any Unix-like OS on your PC instead of any other? The answer is different strokes for different folks. All the various Unix-like OSen are just different enough from each other to make some people prefer one over the others.

      Ok, that probably was not the answer you were looking for, so let me mention some of the technical features that MacOS X sports which you won't find in Linux or *BSD. The biggest difference that I can think of is the I/O and driver model that MacOS X uses. The IOKit is an OO framework for developing and making use of I/O and hardware drivers that was created from scratch by Apple mainly becuase FreeBSD's I/O subsystem didn't support the dynamic "plug-and-play" functionality that Apple wanted. Another big advantage that MacOS X has is its scalability to multi-processor machines. This is entirely due to the use of Mach as the core microkernel. One of Mach's original design goals was to be highly scalable on both closely coupled (a la SMP) and loosely coupled (a la Beowulf) multi-processor systems, and it shows in Mach's extensively multi-threaded and modular nature. There are also supposedly lots of fun things you can do with Mach's message passing/IPC facilities, but I don't know too much about that.

      --
      ----Daniel Pearson of the UMBC LUG
    2. Re:Neither flame nor troll by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Apple does not feel any competition from X Window applications -- their primary high-end market is graphic designers who aren't exactly rushing to to the GUI hodgepodge of Unix systems. Quartz is a solution which Apple hopes will improve their standing in the graphics market, and Aqua is just something flashy that might improve their marketshare.

      In fact, I'm sure Apple is happy that it's now possible to run X apps on their system -- it might solve a couple people's problems (Look - I can run the Gimp!), and sell a few more boxes.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    3. Re:Neither flame nor troll by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      For the same reason you choose to run one particular Linux or BSD flavor/distro. It simply expands your choice. The main difference with most other Linux/BSD's out there is that Darwin is based on top of the Mach microkernel. Whether this is good or bad is up to you to decide.

      Remember: choice is good!

      --

      --
      Donate free food here
    4. Re:Neither flame nor troll by VSc · · Score: 2
      Apple produces superior hardware (how many more of early Apples are still running today comparing to 8x80s? why Apple gets so much more kick out of a MHz?) and people are putting (subjectively) superior OS on the HW just to get more juice out of it + of course, the hack value. Remember Linux for Apple ][ or 8080 - not a lot of use but was done just for the sake of it.

      __________________________________________

      --

      God did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ --1Thes5:9

    5. Re:Neither flame nor troll by Otter · · Score: 2

      Why would I run MacOS X on intel when I can already run Linux or one of the BSDs?

      I think a large part of it is that "you" aren't the target audience for this. The people who benefit from Darwin, at least for now, are the ones already invested in NeXT, coding for it and runing businesses with it.

    6. Re:Neither flame nor troll by toupsie · · Score: 2

      One of the biggest advantages of running MacOS X on the Intel core is the ability to join the slobbering masses of MacOS advocates. Think of the joy of not only being a Linux Zealot but doubling up with being a MacOS Zealot as well! :)

      You are right. It really doesn't make much of a difference for the Intel crowd since MacOS X/Darwin is a *BSD Unix system. How many *BSD distros are their already for Intel? It only really makes a difference if Apple allows Quartz and Aqua and the other components of the full MacOS X distro to migrate.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    7. Re:Neither flame nor troll by PenguinX · · Score: 1

      Apple is hoping that X will become legacy, perhaps that X will eventually integrate w/ quartz & aqua etc. As I'm certian that we all know, X11 desperately needs a new rendering engine - and if I am going to use a different UNIX it will need to have the ability to be everything that Linux or BSD is and isn't.

      Can Apple pull it off? From what I have seen they are making a no-holds-barred valliant attempt to kick some Microsoft ass. I have long time been a Linux bigot -- but we shall soon see.

    8. Re:Neither flame nor troll by sredding · · Score: 1

      Apple produces superior hardware...

      Bullshit. Apple produced superior hardware in the past. Their machines today are no better than Dell or Gateway and their service is worse than it used to be.

      IMHO, if you truly want the highest quality computer built specifically for your needs, you really should do it yourself.

  33. Re:iMac best selling PC by thechink · · Score: 1

    True enough, I just wish the Mac crowd would stop proclaiming the iMac as innovative, it isn't. The word 'innovative' is getting abused quite a bit lately. Just look how MS throws it around.

  34. Re:iMac best selling PC by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    It *is* innovative, just not in the traditional nerd sense. Making people feel better and increasing the universe of computer users through those non-geek innovations of enhancing user experience is an innovative process.

    This impacts geeks indirectly, it's not a non-event. Every geek idea has to fight for a critical mass of users before it becomes commercially viable or at least interesting (imagine how boring slashdot would be with only 5 users 2 of them chanting hot grits). As the universe of computer users expands the number of applications/ideas/technologies that can reach critical mass increases and the entire utility of the internet increases as these computers come online.

    DB

  35. Re:GNUStep by Macdude · · Score: 1

    Since the Cocoa APIs are NextStep (including Objective C, ProjectBuilder, etc.), porting GNUStep would seem to be a waste of time...

    --
    "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
  36. Go Darwin! by toupsie · · Score: 3

    For all the blasting of Apple, I find it very cool that they are allowing the core of MacOS X to migrate to other platforms. If and when Apple allows Quartz, Aqua and the other various high level components for MacOS X to migrate, then the Joe Average Windows consumers (not you Linux Boxen Elite) might have an OS worth moving too. For as much as I love Linux for serving files, I really would not feel comfortable moving my Windows based employees to this great platform and expect them to hit the ground running as I have when moving them to a Mac.

    Maybe in the future, Linux will hit the Joe Average Masses but I think MacOS X Intel might beat Linus to the punch. 20 Years of UI research at Apple is hard to combat but those Eazel folks might surprise us all.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:Go Darwin! by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Considering the relationship betwen Darwin and MacOS X, the amount of work to get the upper layer working on Intel is probably not that much. Most of the work would probably be centered around the QA testing. Remember, before MacOS X was on the Power-PC platform it was quite happily working on the Intel platform, in the form of OpenStep.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    2. Re:Go Darwin! by russm · · Score: 1

      20 Years of UI research at Apple is hard to combat but those Eazel folks might surprise us all.

      well, given how Andy Hertzfeld is a co-founder of the whole eazel thing, i don't know if they'd be trying to "combat" apple's UI...

    3. Re:Go Darwin! by Rombuu · · Score: 1

      Ah, if we are going by sheer weight of numbers then Windows must have the best UI since the most people use it, by your "logic".

      --

      DrLunch.com The site that tells you what's for lunch!
    4. Re:Go Darwin! by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      >Perhaps they will name their next word processor >"Satan"? How much more anti-Christian can you get? Satan's already taken... Remember that neat cracker program that went around a couple of years ago. And the answer to the second question is: Probably quite a lot more... If you think that space exploration and the genome projects are standing on 'shaky ground'. Look at your own theories... At least we have SOME proofs for our theories... The science community tries to look at the world at build theories of how things work from that. You're looking in the bible and then tries to make your explanation of the world fit the bible... Oh well, almost feeling a bit troll-ish now, but, hey, it's Tuesday!

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    5. Re:Go Darwin! by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Get a clue! I'm not going to bother trumpeting my level of faith over yours but you do our Savior a disservice and drive waverers into the heart of the enemy by your silly post. What the mechanism that God used to put us here is infinitely less important than living our lives in imitation of the selfless love that Christ showed us.

      Go take your Sola Scriptura and really LOOK! at the Bible. You might be surprised to find what isn't in there - including Sola Scriptura.

      Catholic and proud fan of Darwin (the OS)
      DB

    6. Re:Go Darwin! by toupsie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, to bad they pissed it all away with that shitty new interface.

      Well, if you are calling an Alpha version of an interface "shitty" you might be right but I find it ironic that Aqua-like themes have been the top downloads over at themes.org. Its amazing how many Intel/Linux users are choosing a copy of Apple's alpha version of Aqua as their visual interface of the desktop.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  37. Re:iMac best selling PC by thechink · · Score: 1

    just not in the traditional nerd sense

    My point exactly, it's not a technologically innovative machine, hence my comment on it borrowing a lot from the PC, but it maybe from a marketing perspective.

  38. Poppycock. The bible is just like greek mythology by Improv · · Score: 2

    The christian bible is no different from books
    of greek mythology, the Qu'ran, the Bahagavad
    Gita, any of the Sutras, the Upanishads,
    Dianetics, the Torah, etc.
    Old texts full of stories about fanciful notions
    that people have managed to form cults around.
    Many of them make bizarre factual claims about
    angels, centaurs, spirits, avatars, and other
    imaginary beings that *surprise* are no longer
    around now that we have the ability to disprove
    them. In our age of science, we fortunately can
    nip religions/cults that make magical claims that
    pertain to modern times in the bud. Hundreds of
    'psychics', 'magicians', and other mystics have
    been shown to be the frauds that they are. Deal
    with the facts, and toss aside your outmoded
    belief systems, deities, and other such cruft.

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  39. Re:Good thing Apple doesn't have you running it! by RobertAG · · Score: 1

    Steve Jobs... Let's look at his track record. He was kicked out of Apple in the first place because he couldn't manage it. He founded NexT, but couldn't turn it into a viable company. Not even his GOOD NAME could sell his computers. NexT discontinued its hardware line, then sold it's software line to Apple because it couldn't be sold elsewhere. Here we are going on 5 years since the sale AND STILL NO NEW OPERATING SYSTEM. If I spent $600 million and ended up with nothing, I would be screaming bloody murder (or at least FRAUD). I can't believe it took 5 years and many millions of dollars to create OS X Server from NexT/Rhapsody. Something is very wrong here.

    Regarding the Apple Clones. I would rather keep my money in my pocket rather than give it to Apple. The clone manufacturers proved that you can make and sell a Mac for much less money than Apple. With competition, the consumer WINS all the time. By revoking the clone licenses, Apple did all computer users a disservice.

    Apple leads the pack? With what? Pretty colors? If I want pretty colors on my PC, a can of spray paint is MUCH cheaper! Serveral cans can yield many more designs. Why stop there? Why not paste bumper stickers on it? The idea of the modular computer has been around since the TRS-80 model III. No floppy drive? We can debate this forever, but doesn't excluding a floppy just remove an option for the consumer?

    I submit that Apple's comeback is due largely to a good economy in which people don't mind spending a few extra dollars for an expensive gadget, as useful as it is.

    I don't hate the Mac platform; I just question Apple's business choices and motivations.

  40. Re:Compatibility? by alannon · · Score: 2

    No, I don't see them opening up the Quartz sources, but... with all the talk of the world needing a brand new imaging model to replace/extend X11, wouldn't it be great if Apple published the specs for such an API? (Apple specifically chose PDF for the base because there are no licencing issues, as there were for Display Postscript). If they did, it would leave the door open for developers to write compatible implementations, and perhaps situate Apple as the leading force in a new standard.

    Of course, any 'competing' implementations wouldn't actually be competing, because they would run on (likely) different hardware and (certainly) a different OS. Of course, NeXT tried this with OpenStep, didn't they? I've never heard of any other implementations other than GNUStep, and it's still pretty far from prime time. Perhaps Apple would have an easier time since they are higher profile, and many developers see them as 'getting it'.

  41. Spell it out for me by TheDeal · · Score: 1

    So does this mean that we could run OS X on an x86 machine?

    1. Re:Spell it out for me by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      You've got a point there! You're correct the reasoning in my original reply may have been wrong (I suppose like yyou said the rest of the OS will be quite system independent, though I don't know for sure either), but even then the 80x86 port of Darwin doesn't run on just any 80x86 box.

      Apple simply doesn't have the resources to write drivers for every chipset out there (they even don't support all PCI PowerMacs in the PPC build, such as those based on the catalyst motherboard).

      Then again, this is where the OpenSource community is supposed to kick in if they want Darwin running on their box (itches and scratching et al). But even once it is technically possible to compile/run MacOS X on Intel hardware, you'll still have to convince Apple that it would be a good thing for them to release it.

      --

      --
      Donate free food here
    2. Re:Spell it out for me by Ranger+Bob · · Score: 1

      Why not? Darwin is the core of Mac OS X, and if the core is responsible for any hardware dependencies, then it seems to me that the entire OS has the potential to be protable.

      --
      "Widget choice makes me horny." -
    3. Re:Spell it out for me by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      Here you are:

      N O

      It makes it more feasable to do the port, but MacOS X is much more than Darwin.

      --

      --
      Donate free food here
    4. Re:Spell it out for me by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      The ultimate question is whether you can install Mac OS X on a Darwin system. If so, then any Darwin install (including alternate hardware ports) should be able to be upgraded. The higher level systems shouldn't be talking directly to the hardware at all and low level device drivers only need to talk to the already publicly available Darwin layer.

      Then the question would be, if Apple doesn't want to let that happen, how would they stop it?

      You bought the software, could Apple really issue cease and desist orders that would stick if someone figured a way to fool the installer?

      DB

  42. Re: Compatability? by naasking · · Score: 3

    Neither. X was ported over to Darwin because one console is practically useless to do any coding. Right now Darwin has absolutely no graphical interface whatsoever, so usability was limited.

    Now with X up and running, alot more developers may begin to see Darwin as a viable platform for development and porting. That was the goal. To get a fully functional and usable system.


    -----
    "I will be as a fly on the wall... I shall slip amongst them like a great ... invisible ... THING ... !"
  43. Re:Sadly for you "geeks", Darwin recanted by bungalow · · Score: 1
    As for the name "Darwin", I think that it should be fairly well-known, at least among the Evangelical community, that Darwin recanted his "theory" of "evolution" on his deathbed.

    If this is true, then quote your source. I'm not doubting you. I would absolutely *love* to bring this up in a BIO class, but I will not do it "just because an AC on /. said so"

  44. OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by yuriwho · · Score: 3

    It was rumored that Apple made a quiet "deal" with M$FT not to port OSX to Intel in exchange for continued Office support on the Mac. Perhaps Apple is really getting ready to become a software company now in light of the DOJ vs M$FT rulings. I don't think they would loose that much in hardware sales if support and drivers for the Mac hardware were kept superior during full rollout of the x86 versions of the OS. If they start making serious money selling an x86 based OS (or GUI, Aqua + quicktime + finder etc.) they could bring the level of support up.

    It would be a big gamble but one with potentially huge payoffs. I can dream can't I ;-)

    --
    no sig.
    1. Re:OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by ilikedonuts · · Score: 1

      Well the facts of this deal are $150MM investment in Apple preferred for an agreement which included MSFT Office for the Mac support for 5 years the rumor of the deal was that Apple had new material that would potentially support a reopening of the infamous look & feel case the cynical view of the deal was that by keeping Apple alive, MSFT avoided monopoly suit (wow- that really worked) I have a hard time believing that MSFT was forthcoming enough to admit that OS X could displace windows on to the x86 OS future- my personal belief is its a migration strategy for corporations- get them to convert OS 1st and the boxes will follow. As long as you can maintain a superior performance level on PPC (think Altivec aka Velocity Engine), you can migrate people over time with lower upfront cost than the full box upgrade plus, think of all that they learn while they try to get the thing working on x86 crap

    2. Re:OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by Witchblade · · Score: 1
      It would be a big gamble but one with potentially huge payoffs. I can dream can't I ;-)

      I dream of exactly the opposite: more OS ports in the other direction to drive down the cost of PowerPC hardware. I mean, do you guys really think that highly of x86 or just stick with it due to legacy code?

      A better question might, in fact, be if Microsoft had switched to DEC Alpha, as they had planned off and on for several years, would you still have bought a Compaq? ;)

    3. Re:OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by rngadam · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, what you are proposing sounds like what Sun did with Solaris: they have a bastard child Solaris x86 with poor driver support. It doesn't work well and I don't see them making a ton of money off it.

      Obviously, having a bunch of developer porting a product in an environment where every other Mac developer hates x86 guts wouldn't be very productive.

      Finally, would you really buy an inferior product when you have x86 OS that take full advantage of the hardware?

    4. Re:OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by Bongo · · Score: 1
      I remember reading somewhere... in a distant galaxy a long time ago... Steve Jobs being quoted as saying that an OS is

      "a licence to print money"

    5. Re:OSX on Intel and M$ vs DOJ by PotPieMan · · Score: 1

      Where'd you hear that? Mac OS Rumors? (For those who still like Mac OS Rumors: sorry ... I grew tired of reading incorrect speculations with little foundation.) Seriously, look at Apple's current market - why would Apple want to port Mac OS X to x86 with the iMac doing as well as it is?

      As cool as it would be to have Mac OS X on x86, there's already a better solution - it's called PowerPC. It's a bit more expensive than x86 (the reason you can get "free" PCs is because there are so many of them), but that's because people fail to see the potential. The PowerPC roadmap projects way past Intel's (and if Motorola would get off its ass, we would have gigahertz G4s).

      The question of support is a bit more difficult. Apple used to have the best support in the industry, and with billions in the bank, one would think that they could still offer free support. Nevertheless, I think it's good that Apple is focusing on making its hardware and software better (support, hopefully, will come later). Making an OS that runs on x86 - a platform that is already so saturated by Windows - is not in Apple's best interest.

  45. Re:Can we please stop it with the Mac stories? by KmArT · · Score: 1

    Just because a company adapts to a changing software development paradigm doesn't mean they are desparate. If it was anybody but Apple, you'd be lauding them for their forward thinking. SGI is in the same boat, as are a number of other companies. Sure, there are many who are just jumping on the bandwagon but thats the nature of revolutions - the bandwagon starts, people jump on, and who knows where it ends up.

  46. I would prefer an end to flamebaiting/trolling by di'jital · · Score: 2

    I refer you to someone's previous post:

    >At this point in time, the only people buying
    >Macs are luddite print designers and people with
    >a fetish for colored plastic.

    Mac sales are actually increasing in 'Luddite' areas such as first time buyer *CUSTOMERS*, the 'normal joes'. You may not think such people deserve a computer, but at least Apple is catering for them with something they want - in a *CUSTOMER* focused appliance with all the traits they will ever need or want.

    If the zealots love it too then all the better. Every platform needs zealots. Come on, your statement that all closed source platforms will die sounds more like the words of a Linux zealot than of someone who has an open point of view.

    App support has previously been Apple's key weakness. With a multiplatform OS, the range of apps is bound to increase, since the user base is bound to expand beyond those who just upgrade their existing Mac box, even if only slightly at first.

    Now the OS will go on any machine, but for some customers will be best on the 'premium' Mac boxes that I assume will be sexier looking and sold/specced with a *CUSTOMER* focus and good support.

    So there is no reason why the Mac cannot survive, or thrive. I think in the end it will, because Apple is at last getting the marketing right. Marketing = listening to CUSTOMERS and giving them what they want.

    In an area where hardware and software is getting more and more homogenized anyway, that's todays killer app... not Quark Xpress. (I always preferred Pagemaker anyway)

    Moof!

  47. Re:Sadly for you "geeks", Darwin recanted by Harri · · Score: 1
    While I realize that it is perhaps not "News for Nerds", which seems to be defined as "Anything that goes with the /. crew's Christian prejudices", I definitely think that this is "Stuff that matters".

    Those of you who follow these "Jesus" and "God" stories should be aware of the scientifically shaky ground on which they rest. Science has no need for messiahs or "Gods" when it was DNA that did it all along. Likewise, the notion that there are some sort of "commandments" that must be "obeyed" is absurd: Humans evolved out of dust, so will some prominent "theologist" please explain to me where God comes in? Sorry, but nowhere in my text book does it state that "God created the world".

    As for the name "Jesus", I think that it should be fairly well-known, at least among the scientific community, that Jesus recanted his "theory" of "religion" on his cross. Hopefully, the worms enjoyed eating him up. But probably not. If you think that Jesus or "religion" can save your Eternal Soul, please continue in your Christian ways. But if you are capable of understanding reason and common sense, you'll know that True Knowledge comes through the Understanding of Science, and cease your idle deity-worshipping. This whole Jesus business makes me uneasy. Perhaps they will name their next word processor "God"? How much more anti-atheist can you get?

  48. Mac OS X on Intel by Frac · · Score: 3
    Two articles of interest (read them first):
    Motorola, IBM - cold warriors
    Darwin on x86 - Apple's Intel interest

    Given that it's the Register for God's sake, we should take the news with a lot of salt. But their analysis seems well-founded, so Apple flirting with the idea of getting Mac OS X running on the x86 architecture doesn't seem too impossible. Getting Darwin to run on x86 is certainly a big step, and who knows - maybe Apple will get go the SGI-way of building highly-customized x86 machines if the IBM-Motorola partnership falls apart.

    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

    1. Re:Mac OS X on Intel by GeZ117 · · Score: 1

      To sum up both articles of the Register, the PowerPC Alliance is having dissenssion, so Apple has developed ports to x86 platforms in case the PowerPC goes down. Darwin on x86 is an emergency exit for Apple, but won't concretized in a true full-fledged Mac OS X as long as PPC aren't doomed.

      --
      sigmentation fault
  49. no, no, no you're missing it by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    There is something out there that is not strictly technological, but also not marketing which I'm labelling the user experience. What's the value of a system where everybody uses the same clipboard, where all generic keyboard equivalents match, where all the little things fit in just so... This is obviously going to change from person to person but the artistic enhancements that separate Macs out from the PC crowd aren't marketing, they are physical aspects of the machine or they are methods of software interactivity that PCs just don't get.

    There is something else out there, perhaps it's user experience, perhaps it's craftsmanship, I don't know how to come up with the right word but I *do* know that the innovation of the iMac is neither marketing or technology.

    DB

    1. Re:no, no, no you're missing it by thechink · · Score: 1

      You know what, it's just a computer. One that I particularly don't find interesting. The iMac was a deliberate marketing attempt by Apple to regain market share by aiming it at newbies (not that there's anything wrong with that). To call it anything else is ridiculous. If you still think I'm missing it, so be it, I don't think there's anything to catch.

      This has been fun, DB, this my last post to this thread, so take care.

  50. Re:FUNNY moderate up! by Golias · · Score: 1
    I think you miss the point. The point is that it's the message that's being ridiculed, not the messenger.

    Okay, this is turning into a very pedantic argument, so I'm not going to drag it out much further, except to say this...

    That post said nothing at all to "ridicule" creationism or any other unusual beliefs. Instead, it was nothing but a bigoted comment directed at a group of people. Read it again.

    If you were sitting in a bar, and made a comment about how fun it is to pick on "idiot blacks" or "idiot Jews" or even "idiot gays", you'd better know how to fight, because comments like that would probably start one.

    Hmmm, my third comment on the same way-off-topic thread... looks like I have been trolled.

    Oh well.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  51. Blind Faith in Science by johnrpenner · · Score: 1


    creationists may resort to unsubstantiated theories, but science too has
    its religious zealots. it happens when people don't just use the
    scientific method as a tool for understanding things, but declare that it
    is the only valid method for understanding things.

    science is really good at explaining: a moves becasue force b acts on a,
    and this happens because that happens, and this interaction occurs because
    of this or that phenomenon. but science is only left with explaining an
    endless chain of cause and effect, but never gets to the root of the
    problem.

    i can give you an endless discussion on the physiological processes
    involved in getting the neurotransmitters to fire in the synapses of the
    brain, and the electro-chemical reactions which travel through the nervous
    system, and the contraction and expansion of muscle tissues according to
    chemical laws...

    BUT to simply explain by this why an arm moved in the way it did instead
    of another says absolutely nothing about the INTENTION or WILL behind the
    fellow who brought all those physiological processes into motion by the
    fact that he wanted to throw a stick for his dog to fetch. science
    explains HOW things work very well, but it is blind in one eye, because it
    knows nothing about CAUSES.

    for causes, we have to first start with our own selves. how does it come
    to be that i am self-consciously aware? the fact of our own conscious
    existence precedes any theory that science can make up about the
    phenomenon, and therefore this aspect can never be done away with or
    ignored. science doesn't like to dabble in these questions, but they won't
    just go away -- not so long as you and i, and all these humans continue to
    exist as sentient beings, the question as to how this came at all to be in
    the first place will persist longer than any science concocted within the
    frame of our conscious existence.

    "Our conception of nature is clearly striving toward the goal of
    explaining the life of the organism according to the same laws by which
    the phenomena of inanimate nature must also be explained. General laws of
    mechanics, physics, chemistry are sought for in the bodies of animals and
    plants. The same sort of laws that control a machine must also be
    operative in the organism-only in immeasurably more complicated and
    scarcely com-prehensible form. Nothing is to be added to these laws in
    order to render possible an explanation of the phenomenon we call life....
    The mechanistic conception of the phenomena of life steadily gains ground.
    But it will never satisfy one who has the capacity to cast a deeper glance
    into nature's processes. Contemporary researchers in nature are too
    cowardly in their thinking. Where the wisdom of their mechanistic
    explanations fails, they say the thing is to us inexplicable... A bold
    thinking lifts itself to a higher manner of perception. It seeks to
    explain by higher laws that which is not of a mechanical character. All
    our natural-scientific thinking remains behind our natural scientific
    experience. At present the natural-scientific form of thinking is much
    praised. In regard to this, it is said that we live in a
    natural-scientific age. But at bottom this natural" scientific age is the
    poorest that history has to show. Its characteristic is to hang fast to
    the mere facts and the mechanistic forms of explanation. Life will never
    be grasped by this form of thinking because such a grasp requires a higher
    manner of conceiving than that which belongs to the explanation of a
    machine." (Rudolf Heidenhain, November 6, I897)

  52. Re:off-topic... there go my karma points... by Golias · · Score: 1
    Er... you misread my post. I said that they were not quite the same. Check again.

    Also, the Reformation martyrs seldom had "different" texts (or churches to burn, for that matter).

    Prior to the invention of the printing press, texts were too expensive for normal folks to get their hands on, and most would-be reformers had to teach everything verbally, which meant that their message did not spread very far before they were martyred. (The word "martyr" comes from Justin Martyr, who's ashes were scattered to the wind after he was slowly killed for his rabble-rousing against the Roman Church.)

    Martin Luthor had the advantage of pushing for reform in a post-Gutenberg world. He wrote everything down and proliferated his writings all over Europe... so even if they killed him, they would never manage to supress his ideas.

    Come to think of it, we are kind of following in Luthor's footsteps when we mirror cphack. :)

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  53. Re:an article giving the Star Trek project history by MsGeek · · Score: 1

    Oh man...what I wouldn't give to be able to do this...

    I mean, they ran it on a bloody 486!!! Imagine what this System 7 port would be like on a Celeron or something!

    It prolly didn't work well...but ah, what might have been had Apple stuck with it!

    MK-H

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  54. Re:What is Apple? by RobertAG · · Score: 1

    But have they actually improved the hardware relative to a PC's given performance vs. cost? In other words, would I spend an extra $500-$700 for a cute little tangerine box on my desktop? My answer is NO. The hardware platform may be a good one (even the best), but I'm not going to pay a huge price for a marginal increase in hardware quality.

    Regarding the operating system, there are other things a true multitasking system can do rather than keep concurrent applications open. Microsoft (and I KNOW this is a bad example) keeps lots of background tasks in the systray that scan the hard drive, re-index files, defrag the disk and notify you of low disk space. Most of this I find useless, but what if you had background tasks that surfed the net for you for movie tickets or graphics, or that downloaded your latest bank statement, or paid bills? What if you could move your PC to the basement next to the water heater and string network cable and windows terminals to various rooms for your family to use?

    More powerful machines in the future are probably more likely to run more intelligent and sophisticated background applications than multiple simultaneous desktop applications. Call it bloatware, but in a competitive computer market, differentiation and performance mean survival.

    Apple's survival lies in better software. Hardware can be mass produced overseas. Software is more easily shaped to hardware. THAT should be the direction Apple should be going.

  55. Difference between Natural Selec by johnnyb · · Score: 1
    If you think evolution is stupid, what do you think natural selection does? Since
    you made a point of differentiating them, I assume you had a reason.


    Natural selection is simply a drift of the gene pool within its current bounds, or maybe with a few genetic mutations, nothing major. Evolution drastically increases this to include the addition and removal of entire chromosomes. Basically, anyone (human or otherwise) who has been born with an extra pair of chromosomes cannot have children. There have certainly been no documented cases of such a thing happening with even a possible survival enhancement under any circumstances. Minor genetic shifts _cannot_ account for the theory of evolution. In fact, most of the noted physical changes in Animals throughout history are actually better explained by diet and environment than by genetics, except for small shifts in the quantity of a gene in a gene pool (not in the genes themselves). Basically, the idea of slow evolution has been discredited because of fossil evidence, and the evidence which supports a "fast" evolution theory is better supported by diet and environment than genetics.

  56. Re:Whoa, that's an IDEA.... by shandrew · · Score: 1
    Imagine Apple selling a proprietary GUI to run on top of Linux. Distributors could pay Apple to have it be part of their distribution.

    This wouldn't work. You cannot wedge a GUI on to a system which is not designed for that GUI. You could offer a window manager that looked like a Mac (hey, mlvwm!), but a window manager does not a GUI make.

  57. Re:What is Apple? by sredding · · Score: 1

    What is a typical PC?

    The only capability/feature that Apple has is that small cool CPU. The rest is easily attainable with a PC.

    The motherboard is the key. If you're comparing Apple to some low end machine built on a cheapo motherboard, then sure, Apple wins. IMHO, a good mobo has at least 6 PCI/ISA slots and an AGP. With that as a start, Apple "quality" is easily attained.

    FWIW, I used to really be behind Mac. I still have two of them but, I think my money is better spent if I build my own (PC) machine(s).

  58. WWDC? by Ranger+Rick · · Score: 1
    Sadly, the first thing I thought of was "What Would Darwin Code?"

    :)

    :wq!

    --

    WWJD? JWRTFM!!!

  59. OSX demo'd to high end PC makers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    it is a persistent rumor that apple has demo'd a full working version of MAC OSX to a select group of high end PC makers. They even have quicktime spots in the boot sequence to allow for licensing information. Since Rhapsody, OSX has worked on INTEL and i would not be surprised if sooner or later the full OSX is released for only high end PCs which conform to specific hardware specs - ie. OEM only kinda deal. Apple has to cover itself in case the future of the PPC is in jeopardy...by porting darwin to intel, apple gets a jump start on driver development and getting the nitty gritty stuff out of the way.... just a thought...

  60. Re:What is the comparative performance? by narf · · Score: 1

    According to the book I read (I think it was Apple by good 'ol Gil), the intel port was dropped because it was at the same time Apple was moving to PowerPC, and management didn't think they could successfully push two independent hardware platforms.

  61. Re:This doesn't answer the question I asked by Halo1 · · Score: 1

    See Dandy's answer to your original post, he's saying exactly what I meant.

    --

    --
    Donate free food here
  62. iMac best selling PC last two years - Apple profit by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    While Apple has obviously given up trying to dethrone Windows (a good move, the constant taste-test like advertising did little to build brand), and as a result has become profitable again.

    The iMac is the best selling computer now, two years running.

    Steve Jobs changed the face of computing - he (re)introduced design and styling as an aspect of the purchase. Wintel cloners took twelve months to catch up to this, as well as other Mac innovations like widespread use of USB (which if you remember was originally derided).

  63. "OS X" is no longer false advertising. by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Now that Mac OS 10 can run XFree, calling it "OS X" is no longer misleading. Forgive me if I sound a bit weird, but to me "Mac OS X Server" suggests X11 ported to Mac OS.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:"OS X" is no longer false advertising. by Golias · · Score: 1
      According to Apple, the "X" in "MacOS X" is pronounced "ten".

      It's a roman numeral for their version number, not a reference to X11.

      You were not mislead, just confused. I can't say I blame you, though.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  64. Re:What is Apple? by Ranger+Rick · · Score: 2
    Apple has done nothing to substantially improve the Mac platform where it really counts. The defining quality that makes a Mac a Mac is the Operating System.

    Funny, I've always thought just the opposite. Mac hardware rocks, but I just wish they'd get rid of the OS. :)

    I've had the opportunity to play with OS X just a little bit, and I was quite impressed. Never got to really *push* it, but it seemed snappy and it was nice to see *NIX on Mac hardware while retaining the ability to run all the old MacOS software.

    :wq!

    --

    WWJD? JWRTFM!!!

  65. Re:Apple Reality Check by shandrew · · Score: 1
    MacOS X has been shipping for well over a year. MacOS XServer is available at your local Apple Vendor or direct from Apple. What everyone is talking about is the MacOS X Workstation implementation.

    As far as I know, there is no "MacOS X Workstation"; The product currently known as Mac OS X server will be junked when Mac OS X is released. There's no two OS strategy, aside from maintaining OS 9 for legacy machines and applications.

  66. Re:This doesn't answer the question I asked by Golias · · Score: 1
    I agree that your question is valid, and not "flamebait", as one moderator has branded it.

    One reason why you might be interested in MacOS X is if you were one of the handful of fans of the old NeXT cube. The NeXT environment was very popular with a lot of geeks, particularilly developers. The new Apple GUI borrows a lot of concepts from that design.

    It is difficult to give you a solid reason for chosing it over, say, Gnome-on-RedHat, because we end up getting into a lot of religious debate if we go down that road.

    Bottom line is, some people will dig it and use it, some will hate it and flame it, some will tinker with it, and some will ignore it. Same as anything else.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  67. How... by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

    the hell can people say Mac/PPC is a dying platform? The G4e is almost ready for production which means >500mhz and two vector units along with some other goodies like a smaller die size and lower power consumption (G4 Powerbooks baby). I think the real reason Mac decided to release Darwin's source was that they were using lots of stuff from the BSD 4.4 kernel and MkLinux, having some parts open while others are closed would be rather stupid. Open code also means a huge number of programmers can get ahold of it and fix problems or us it to write really tight application code that takes full advantage of the kernel's features. If any platform is in danger of dying I think it would be x86. Intel is abandoning it entirely and AMD is extending it up to 64-bits. AMD is sticking with it because they don't yet have the cash to go and make their own architecture (they have the know-how but not the mula unfortunately). Now that storage is on the cheap CISC architecture is just kicking because people are used to it. To make up for efficiency x86 chips need much higher clocks to keep up with high power RISC chips, now people want mucho processing power.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  68. Re:Whoa, that's an IDEA.... by pohl · · Score: 1

    Actually, it wouldn't be that hard. Just build the Cocoa (nee YellowBox (nee OpenStep (nee NeXTStep))) libraries and the Quartz display server for linux. Porting couln't be that bad, especially if you pushed the acceleration into some library that everybody (including X11) could benefit from, like XAA or GGI. There shouldn't be any "wedging" required.

    --

    The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

  69. Re:What is Apple? by Golias · · Score: 1
    extraordinarily crappy mouse, good only as a conversation piece

    I think I've said this before, but it is worth repeating:

    I agree that the Apple "hocky puck" mouse sucks. Nevertheless, it's a remarkably cheap USB mouse that works.

    Since it is a given that I am going to use my personal favorite mouse anyway, I would really hate it if they included a very expensive mouse that I didn't want.

    This way, lightweight users get the "free" mouse that they insist when they buy the computer, and I am not forced to pay an extra $50 for a mouse I don't like. Everybody wins.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  70. Re:Good thing Apple doesn't have you running it! by Golias · · Score: 1
    Got a bad feeling I'm being trolled here... but what the heck.

    Let's look at his track record. Yes, lets. He became a multi-millionaire by teaming up with Woz to introduce the first complete consumer PC to the world (the Apple II). Then he ran with an idea from PARC that Xerox didn't know how to use and created the first consumer GUI (Macintosh), and gave us personal computers that could do easy peer-to-peer networking long before Ethernet became a standard (AppleTalk).

    After getting booted from Apple as a result of losing a power struggle, he went on to create a company that broke new ground in object-oriented programming (NeXT), and run one of Hollywood's most successful digital animation shops (Pixar).

    While he was off making even more millions, the wise executives that fired him ran Apple into the ground. Apple went from being the Number 1 desktop computer maker in the world to a pathetic sub-5% market share.

    When he came back, he took a design concept that was going nowhere (the CHIRP-based "thin client"), and had it rebuilt into the best-selling consumer system in the world (the iMac), and returned the "doomed" and "beleagured" Apple Computer company to profitability, against all expectations.

    Not a bad track record, if you ask me.

    Apple leads the pack? With what? Pretty colors?

    USB implementation. Firewire. Cheap wireless networking. Desktop publishing. Streaming video. Next question, please.

    ...doesn't excluding a floppy just remove an option for the consumer?

    No. It gives an option to the consumer. If you want a floppy, you can connect one via USB or internally. If you don't want to spend money on legacy hardware, you don't need to buy it. Even on my PC's and LINUX boxes, I only use floppies for emergency system restoration. Macs (and new PC's) can boot from CD, so a 1.4 MB disk is pretty much worthless.

    I submit that Apple's comeback is due largely to a good economy

    Bzzt. Thanks for playing. Apple may have recovered during the "Clinton" boom, but they went into the dumper during the "Reagan" boom. Obviously there are other factors at work here, like quality, marketing, and yes, even pretty colors.

    Macs may not be the way to go for most of us on this forum. Most geeks are better off using LINUX PC's for most tasks... but stop flaming over religious issues.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  71. Re:Poppycock. The bible is just like greek mytholo by Bongo · · Score: 1
    The christian bible is no different from books of greek mythology... In our age of science, we can nip religions/cults that make magical claims ... 'psychics', 'magicians', and other mystics have been shown to be the frauds that they are. Deal with the facts, and toss aside your outmoded belief systems, deities, and other such cruft.

    You are exactly half right, and half wrong.

    Before we had the benefit of the scientific method, we believed all sorts of rubbish about hanging dead chickens outside people's doors. Whole cultures just swallowed these beliefs without checking that any of it was real. The scientific method hadn't been born, and all of that magical-mythical babble was just Pre-Rational. Today we are at the Rational level, or at least nearly :-) , where we look for objective ways of measuring and verifying our theories. Thus we put men on the moon, proving the objective reality of our knowledge.

    But the story, or rather, the World doesn't stop there. Because just as the Rational perspective went way beyond the Pre-Rational, there is also a Trans-Rational level that goes beyond the Rational. This Trans-Rational domain is also a level of knowledge, and it cannot be grasped by Rationality.

    So before you dismiss the scriptures for their mythical content, you should be aware of their esoteric content, which you will not understand using Rationality. In other words, you have to know how to read it, and for that you need Trans-Rational (not Pre-Rational !) awakening.

    It's what Ken Wilber has called the "Pre-Trans" error... and we see it typically in bookshops with so-called "Mind-Body" sections, which lump together crystals and tarot cards with Krishnamurti and the Dalai Lama!

    Regarding the "facts", I suggest you check out The Marriage of Sense and Soul: Integrating Science and Religion. The author mekes it very readable, and he's the world's foremost scholar on the subject.

  72. Re:What is the comparative performance? by jht · · Score: 4
    I can recall a story from long ago and far away that once upon a time apple had an earlier version of one of their OS recompiled and running on and intel platform.

    they dropped the project because it ran a bit faster than their own official Apple hardware, and they didn't want to shoot themselves in the hardware department.

    There was a project to port MacOS to Intel, called "Star Trek" internally if I recall. And from what I remember of it, they had amazing initial success getting the OS up and working, and most of the functionality implemented. "Most" is key here. It was pretty fast (though PowerPC itself had a big performance lead at the time, Apple's supporting architecture was dog-slow), but there were still a good amount of key features not implemented yet at the demo point. Apple's good at getting an OS project most of the way there - it's the last 25% or so that kills them.

    Ultimately, Apple decided to stick with PowerPC, and they have since based their hardware on faster stuff that's comparable to the state of the art in PC hardware (100 MHz bus, AGP, ATA-66, etc). So an Intel port for the "classic" MacOS (which is what Star Trek was) wouldn't be relevant and a waste of time and resources. That said, OS X on Intel would be a different story, and if Apple ultimately supported OS X native and Carbonized MacOS (through emulation - a recompile would be a killer) apps on an OS X Intel port, it would probably be a Good Thing. But they need to concentrate on their own platform before they give serious thought to a port. The fact that Darwin (the core of OS X) runs on Intel helps show that it's not too far from their minds.

    - -Josh Turiel
    --
    -- Josh Turiel
    "2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
  73. Whoa, that's an IDEA.... by invenustus · · Score: 2

    If they sold their GUI alone as a windowmanager, I'd snap it up.
    The more I think about it, the more I realize there's a lot money to be made in that proposition. Imagine Apple selling a proprietary GUI to run on top of Linux. Distributors could pay Apple to have it be part of their distribution. With a little advertising, it could conceivably be the most popular distro ever.
    BTW, I'm not saying I would LIKE this situation. I recognize that it would set back the cause of free software. It's just food for thought.

    --
    grep -ri 'should work' /usr/src/linux | wc -l
  74. Re: your sig by Ranger+Rick · · Score: 1
    Everything is possible. !Everything is wise. !Everything is easy !Everything yields the desired results. Nothing is certain.

    Everything is deprecated. Please use Everything2.

    :wq!

    --

    WWJD? JWRTFM!!!

  75. Re:What is the comparative performance? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

    "Star Trek" was mostly running on Apple's 68K emulator -- just like the early versions of Apple's PPC MacOS.

    I don't know if they seriously considered marketing MacOS on Intel -- I think it was just a technology demonstration of the emulator, before mangement had decided on the PowerPC as their future CPU.
    --

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  76. wow by xcjohn · · Score: 1

    I am normally one to bash Apple and the Mac platform, but i must say, this kicks ass, i think this is one of the final things that had to be done to win over many many skeptics/*nix users. Good job guys

    --
    ~~~ They call me Little John, but don't let the name fool you...in real life I'm very big.
  77. Re:What is the comparative performance? by GoRK · · Score: 2

    Star Trek was the System 7 on x86, but it never made it to anyone outside of Apple really.

    In its infancy, MacOS/X was called Rhapsody and was mostly OpenSTEP code with a MacOS flavor and some virtual machine work done. What most people don't remember is that it ran on X86 (And indeed NeXTstep/OpenSTEP run on X86 fine) I know because they sent me a beta of it.

    It also sucked compared to the PPC version. In both speed and functionality. It was a project destined for the grave from the beginning which I found very sad when running it. Maybe my hopes are going up a little bit since it seems to still be around a bit.

    ~GoRK

  78. Keep on Smokin' them Rocks... by feck · · Score: 1

    ... the aneurism will come if you just keeep hittin'! breath deep now!

  79. HEE! i love when you freaks post!! by feck · · Score: 1

    woohoo! let the bashing begin!!

  80. Re:off-topic... there go my karma points... by Golias · · Score: 1
    Okay, I am a Christian, but I can't let this slide... The oldest manuscripts we have match perfectly the most recent editions.

    This was a false statement. It's not open to debate, anyone can check for themselves. A simple side-by-side comparison of, say, the Dead Sea scrolls, to other old manuscripts will show slight differences in some passages.

    While it is remarkable that the scriptures remained as intact as they have, it is more a credit to the rabbinical practices of rote memorization than evidence of a miracle.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  81. Re:Sadly for you "geeks", Darwin recanted by johnnyb · · Score: 1

    There is an evangelist of Darwin's day (I forgot who) who said that Darwin recanted on his death bed. However, Darwin's sister (I think) vehemently denied it, and there's no evidence that shows that the evangelist even talked to Darwin in the period before his death. Therefore, I am very skeptical of the evangelist's claim. As stupid as I think the concept of evolution is(_evolution_, not natural selection, mind you), I think that the evangelist in question, whomever he may be, was probably lying. Moderators, please forgive me for being offtopic.

  82. Re:Compatibility? by pyrotic · · Score: 1

    Aqua doesn't run under X11. They rely on a window manager that uses Adobe PostScript (so I can't imagine it GPL'd).

    My guess is that with Darwin Apple are looking a) to get everything linux/GNU onto Mac and b) get apple/next technologies like quicktime server and netinfo more accepted by other unices.

  83. Re:Compatibility? by Draoi · · Score: 3

    ... is Aqua something that actually runs on X11
    Aqua runs on what Apple is calling Quartz. This is based on Adobe's PDF format. So, nope, not X11, and I'm guessing Apple won't be in a big hurry to open Quartz sources anytime soon ...

    Pete C

    --
    Alison

    "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein

  84. Root exploit by dcs · · Score: 1

    Now, if the X Free people would just fix the root exploit on 4.0 so I could run it on FreeBSD...

    --
    (8-DCS)
  85. GNUStep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So, now we have the X11 underpinnings, how long until we get a port of GNUStep? As GNUStep nears fruition, we would have a more and more OPENSTEP-like system. It may be an even better OPENSTEP than OPENSTEP itself. We will have a world-class GUI and development system, all on everyone's favorite free operating systems. It's just that GNUStep with a Darwin base will be the closest to the original NEXTSTEP and OPENSTEP.

    Once that's complete, could the GNUStep project expand to encompass Mac OS X enhancements? It would be quite an undertaking, I think, but still quite possible.

    Mac OS X looks promising, but I'm still partial to NEXTSTEP 3.3, I guess...

    --Ryan

  86. One final thing... by Racher · · Score: 2

    I KNOW this a troll, but I'll bite >>It's time to face it people. The Mac is dying, and it won't be around for much longer. Uhm, No. 14 straight profitable quarters. 14 straight quarters of unit sales and gross margins growing qtr over qtr. The iMac continues to sell well. iBook is a smash hit, as is the G4. >>Up until recently it survived barely through the virtue of a single program - Quark Xpress - and Photoshop and Illustrator and Dreamweaver and Flash and Final Cut and Avid and lots of other stuff. btw, where is your postscript support again? >>but those days are over and the Mac, and Apple with them, are destined to become a thing of the past along with all other closed source architectures. Pretty smart of them to open it up then, isn't it. They now use standard RAM, got rid of the ROM, use PCI bus, standard through and through. On the sw side, they are opening up as much as they can. Guess you have not used any Macs recently. >>Why else would Apple of all companies be turning to open source? It can only mean that they are desparate enough to forego their usual money-grabbing licensing tactics, and that they want the whole "cool" image that has made Linux so popular with the corporate types. Either bitch at them for being closed OR bitch at them for going open. You can not have it both ways. >>They reckon that if they can become popular with the zealots, then they can push the lifespan of their product another five or more years beyond what it otherwise would have been. Actually, they want to be popular with non-zealots. Tehy want the newbies and the casual windows users. We in the Mac camp have our own zealots, and some us are trying to shut them up too. BTW, you sound just liks a linux zealot. Pity. People should ave more of a life than to get attached to a hunk of plastic and silicon. >>After all just look at the Amiga - an outdated computer that would have died completely 10 years ago under normal circumstances, but there is still a hardcore of zealots still trying to convince people (and themselves) that it is still a viable platform. And what is the basis for this comparison. Amigas kicked ass, got mismanaged and thrown around from corp to corp, pillaged for the tech and left for dead. Tho, I guess it is a good thing others like "dead" projects. Remember, Unix was declared dead years ago. Wrongly no doubt. As Twain said, "the rumors of my demise are greatly exaggerated." >>This story shows that the core development team of their new OS realises that the Mac will die - they want to have an x86 version ready so that they will still be able to find work after the Mac inevitably dies. Not with iMacs selling this well. They will release Darwin, because they HAVE TOO. They will release Aqua and Quartz when you pry it out of their cold dead hands. Not that this will happen in your lifetime. Go back under the bridge. Tom Dutton (username = B-B) Too lazy to log in right now.

  87. Re:What is Apple? by Ranger+Rick · · Score: 1
    it still offers many nice features

    I guess I should have been more specific. The MacOS GUI is pretty nice, the internals are mostly as much swiss cheese as Windows is by now.

    I'm just glad to see them move to a more stable base and updating their APIs. I've thought about getting a mac on and off, but it always went back to "I'll only ever end up using Linux on it", and if I were to do that, why pay more for the mac hardware? Now I can have a decent platform to have UNIX *and* MacOS compatibility if I need it.

    Ahhhh... :)

    :wq!

    --

    WWJD? JWRTFM!!!

  88. Science is very limited by johnnyb · · Score: 1

    Science is very limited it what it can do. First of all, science is only applicable for testable circumstances. Most of life does not fall into this category. Almost every circumstance I encounter every day is not something I can test to determine the best or correct solution, and sometimes, it would not even be possible. In addition, science can _never_ tell you what you should do. It can only tell how things work. In order to find out what you should do, you'll have to find something besides science. Science can tell you that if you cut off my head, I will die, but it will give no insight as to whether or not that would be a good or bad thing. I remember reading in Carl Sagan's "The Demon-Haunted World" that the difference between a physicist and a metaphysicist is not a matter of intelligence, but rather that the metaphysicist has no lab to determine if he is really correct or not. He cannot experiment to determine if his results are correct. The same is true for those who study pre-historic times. There is mounds of evidence, but no labs to test theories. Evolution (not natural selection, evolution) is not as provable as the rest of science, simply because we have not had the time to test the theory. In a few million years, we will hopefully have gathered enough data to make that determination, but until then, pre-historians are still working without a lab.

  89. Re:Can we get a bit of clarification? by Snocone · · Score: 2

    Darwin: Mach kernel + *BSD + Apple's driver model.
    Aqua: PDF-based graphic engine relying on Darwin services, basis for the two main OS X APIs-
    Carbon: Macintosh Toolbox APIs that suck less.
    Cocoa: {NeXT|NEXT|Next|Open|OPEN}{Step|STEP} 6.0
    (5.0 was Rhapsody, aka "Mac OS X Server 1.0")

    Mac OS X Consumer 1.0: Distro of all of the above plus a basic application/utility suite, all prettified up to pass the grandma test (note how S. Jobs was crowing yesterday about the 28% of Apple sales that are to people buying their first computer). It is currently unknown what access to the BSD command line will be available -- in DP3 Terminal.app was only installed for the administrator by default, haven't installed DP4 just quite yet.

    Mac OS X Server 2.0: Presumably will be Consumer 1 plus BSD applications and services, many probably with Cocoa GUIs on top. This is the one for geeks, not Consumer, which those who whine about no CLI in Consumer are stupid for forgetting.

  90. Apple Reality Check by maggard · · Score: 5
    OK, lots of Slashdotters are really out of touch with the Apple & the Mac market. Here's a few points to keep folks on the reality track:
    • Apple is a hardware company. MacOS is simply another way of selling their boxes.
    • Apple is not interested in becoming a OS vendor. They have a closed platform to develop for and know their limitations: the wild-'n'wooly world of Intel x86 boxes is not a profitable place for them. They've stated repeatedly and has the numbers to back it up: they're not going to become an OS vendor. They're more likely to start selling hairdryers (or the fabled iBrator) then shrink-wrapped MacOS-X-for-Intel-x86 at Wal-Mart.
    • The chance of Apple opening up Quartz, Carbon, Cocoa, QuickTime, or Aqua to Open Source or GPL is something approaching nil. These are the technologies Apple has paid a pretty penny to develop and their customers pay a premium to use. If you were an Apple stock-holder would you want them to do so?
    • Apple never had "clones" (Apple's proprietary "Toolbox" embedded in a ROM stopped that.) They did have a "licensing program" with which they attempted to reach markets that Apple itself couldn't. They killed the program when the licensees started to savage Apple's core markets. Apple was loosing money on both the licenses and on the lost sales - not a smart move for a company and one they eventually stopped. Oh - and Power Computing? it was about to collapse anyway as it's financials proved out.
    • Apple is again over 5% of the market and growing quickly. That doesn't mean they're about to challenge MS's OS dominance but they're going strong and expanding their market. That's not bad for a company that was written off a few years ago.
    • Darwin is not the same as MacOS X - it's simply the Next-derived Mach kernel and support services. Yes, it's the base layer, but it's not the goodies. Getting it to run in Intel x86 is no great feat - NextStep was ported to 5 CPU's already including Intel x86 (PowerPC, Sparc, Alpha, MIPS.) All Apple's done is maintained that Intel x86 portability for the kernel. The big question would be if Apple could do the same for the other layers such as the Quartz rendering layer or the Aqua interface. Without those you've just got a very nice, very mature formerly-commercial Mach implementation - hot but not MacOS X.
    • MacOS X has been shipping for well over a year. MacOS XServer is available at your local Apple Vendor or direct from Apple. What everyone is talking about is the MacOS X Workstation implementation. While everyone's been staring at that hand though Apple's been busy learning and tweaking with the Server version so when it finally ships the rest they'll have it nailed.
    • Porting to Darwin won't be any more difficult then porting to any other BSD. With X now in place it'll be that much easier to use an interface. The big question will be how easy it'll be to make those same apps work through the Quartz/Aqua layers and become "native". If it's as straightforward as it now appears then Apple may have a tremendous position sitting at the crossroads of the market.
    • Don't ignore the contributions Apple can make to the market as a whole. They've already pioneered the use of XML for putting a uniform graphical interface on the notoriously idiosyncratic *nix config files.^1 They also provide a great transition market for ISV's heading towards the *nix market but wanting to go through a more traditional platform. This could well be the *nix for "the rest of them" (the non-geek population.)
    • As to behind schedule - well the beta is indeed going to be a few months behind schedule. How does this affect the rest of the timeline? Well, Apple hasn't changed their "will ship pre-installed in December 2001" commitment. Furthermore with Apple's Unified Motherboard Architecture finally in place (gone are the days of 50 models a year all with unique slots and ROMs and bus variations!) this looks like a legitimate possibility.
    • Finally, remember Apple has been a massive developer of cool ahead-of-their-time technologies. Apparently Jobs has been going through the warehouse and pulling some of these off of the shelf now that they've a strong OS and a massively powerful CPU to ride upon. Expect to see some surprises coming out from Apple - Jobs is ever the showman and no slouch when it comes to hot tech.

    -- Michael

    1. Yes, some invariably CS Sophomore will pop up saying *they* thought of whatever, in this case XML-based forms for providing a uniform interface to the various config files years ago and mebbe they even have a few lines of code somewhere - well it didn't really happen then and Apple has now made it so. That alone is "A Good Thing".

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
    1. Re:Apple Reality Check by connorbd · · Score: 1

      (For convenience -- and since I'm a longtime Mac man who followed this whole scene pretty closely -- I will refer to OS X Server as Rhapsody.)

      It's still a fair comparison -- OS X Server/Rhapsody is sort of a transitional form, maybe a Homo ergaster version of the Homo sapiens MacOS X final.

      With Apple flying as high as it has been for the last year and a half or so, it's easy to forget the dark days of 1996-7, when the Spindler regime botched the Sun merger, the Amelio regime made like an ER doc that stabilized the patient and left without continuing the treatment, and Jobs pulled off a palace coup to bring the company back from near-death. The OS strategy that came out of the Next acquisition came on the coattails of the Copland disaster, and had to change a few times for a few reasons. Rhapsody in its original form was essentially rejected by the Mac community, as Java had little credibility and nobody wanted to bother learning Objective-C; this was why Carbon had to be created. Therefore, the Rhapsody that shipped as MacOS X Server was different from the Rhapsody that was originally planned.

      And it's flat-out unfair to say that OS X is that far from Rhapsody. Mach is Mach; your statement is equivalent to saying that Linux 1.x isn't really Linux because it has a different version number. What you are looking at are two different incarnations of the same Mac-flavored Unix; OS X has a drastically different interface from Rhapsody, and the driver architecture has been massively rewritten (probably the reason the Intel port is nontrivial, btw), but they're two different flavors of the same product.

      Now you want to gut the BSD layer and reimplement a complete Posix-compatible operating system from scratch, then you've got a case.

      Rather, look at Rhapsody as a milestone: trust us, you'll get what you wanted, here's the important stuff right up front.

      /Brian

    2. Re:Apple Reality Check by maggard · · Score: 3
      Eeeps - mistake.

      Make the ship date for Mac OSX Consumer pre-installed January 2001 (not 11 months later.)

      Actually, a bit more on ship dates. I'd like to note that Next was usually quite good about getting things out on schedule and back under Jobs Apple's ship-dates and product-avialability have improved dramatically.

      -- Michael

      ps - For the l00sers who constantly post to every story saying "Please explain this to me" or "What does XYZ mean" fer Cthulus-sake this is news for GEEKS on the freaking WEB! Just how damn hard is it to actually look up something on your own? It's not like your ass has to ever even leave it's comfy chair... If you're lost with things like Carbon, Cocoa, Darwin, etc. then why not just go to the obvious place like apple.com or at least to a search engine before bleating out your ignorance.

      Sorry, but every time an interesting story comes out 30% of the postings are from folks who couldn't be bothered to actully read the reference material before compulsively posting and another 30% are from folks too lazy to make at least an attempt to look up something for themselves (hint: your butt is at the end of your thumb!)

      --
      I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  91. Re:Can we get a bit of clarification? by Snocone · · Score: 1

    Bah, I read Quartz for Aqua.

    "Aqua" is the translucent swirly interface that you write programs for in the UI of your choice. It's more a skin than an actual technology of its own.

  92. Compatibility? by molog · · Score: 3
    Was this done to bring over Unix apps to Darwin/MacOS X, or is Aqua something that actually runs on X11? Well it definitely looks like Darwin can be considered a full fledged BSD system now but what is Apple really trying to do?
    Molog

    So Linus, what are we doing tonight?

    --
    So Linus, what are we going to do tonight?
    The same thing we do every night Tux. Try to take over the world!
    1. Re:Compatibility? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      This allows normal Unix GUI applications to be ported to Darwin/OS X. It does nothing to help port NeXT/OS X applications to other Unixes.

      For the latter, look up the GNUStep project, which is trying to reimplement the NeXT/Apple APIs.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  93. Provided all things go well... by Hitokage_Nishino · · Score: 1

    I really see Apple the king of home computing in 10 years. Microsoft will eventually wither and die because of it's refusal to cater for the customer and to stop catering for itself. In 10 years, families will be running decendants of Mac OS X on their PCs; furthermore, nearly all the corporations and geeks like us will be running some form of UNIX, hopefully Linux. ;)
    In reality, UNIX wins both ways, because OS X is based on BSD. Apple is bound to win in the novice user market, as with OS X, they have combined a rock solid OS core with an incredibly well done UI. Here's to Apple and Linux ruling the computing world in 10 years.

  94. Amen Brother! by feck · · Score: 1

    you're right! so much for amerika.. we should all LEAVE and make our own durned nation somewhere else! then we can sacrifice all the firstborn and sheep and such god needs to stay healthy and strong. OOH! we'll also get to treat our wives and daughters like the 'weaker vessels' they are! WOO! hopefully there'll be some yummy NATIVES there to oppress and enslave in the name of the LORD(tm) just like in the old days before alla this humanist logic and stuff. c'mon everyone! lets pack!

  95. Mod UP__ FUNNY! by feck · · Score: 1

    heeheehaahaaHOOOOOOOOO!!!! i think i shit myself man! you are FUNNY!!! this HAS to be a hoax! hooohoooHA!!!

  96. BTW... by Hitokage_Nishino · · Score: 1

    Stop with this religious debate, as it really has no place in an all-things-geek community and as the name darwin is really immaterial in this usage. So what if Apple was making a reference to evolution, they probably were just making a point how this is how Mac OS will be changing. As proper geeks, you guys should know that 'evolve' means to gradually change in any context, it just has a special connotation in biology.

  97. Re:You can lead a Slashbot to knowledge . . . by Golias · · Score: 1
    Your comments are very well put. Just a few nit-picks:

    There was no such thing as Christianity at the time... it developed as a religion about 60 - 70 years AD. Christ had a rather large group of followers during his ministry (26-29 AD or so, depending on who you ask). Most of his followers (not all) were Jewish, so Christianity was thought of as a sect of Judaism for the most of the first Century, but it was around.

    the new Testament and the synoptic gospels were written around 100 - 200 AD

    This is a point of hot debate. Many scholars place them at about 60-90 AD.

    There are a number of other gospels...

    The gnostic gospels were considered and rejected by mainstream Christians long before the Catholic Church assembled the Bible. To give them too much consideration would be like a historian 2000 years from now reading crackpot books of today (like "New World Order" by whats-his-name from the 700 Club) and accepting them as historical documents. Far from keeping "quiet", the Church has always actively rejected books like the "St. Thomas" for the deliberately corrupt work that it is. The gnostic gospels are to Christianity as Microsoft Java is to Sun... designed to embrace, extend, and engulf.

    The history of religoion is facinating... to bad the "religious" have never learned any of it.

    Don't paint all religious people with such a broad brush. It makes you sound like you are just as closed-minded as the troll you were arguing with.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  98. Re:FUNNY moderate up! by Golias · · Score: 1
    I get a kick out of these posts making fun of idiot...

    Follow this with any other religious or ethnic group, and the moral vacancy of your statement should become obvious, even to you. Shades of Germany in the 1930's, if you ask me.

    I'm no southern fundamentalist, but it sickens me that they are the one group that everybody thinks it is okay to hate.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  99. Re:What is Apple? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

    The selling point of a Mac is TCO (Total Cost of Ownership). When you buy a Mac you get...

    • A simpler UI. You spend less time learning to use it, because it's consistent and intuitive. Time saved == money saved.
    • Longer lifetime. There are still lots of people using 1992-era Macs, with MacOS. How many use Intel boxes of similar age with DOS or Windows? More time used == money saved.
    • Macs have fewer fatal crashes. I have yet to need a MacOS reinstall, and I've never needed to replace burned-out hardware. Yet this happens in the PC world all-too-frequently. Less downtime == money saved.
    • Etc...

    The bean-counters may balk at buying Macs, but it pays off in the long run.

  100. Yet another level by Improv · · Score: 1

    But the story, or rather the world doesn't stop
    there. Just as the Trans-rational goes beyond
    the rational, the trans-trans-rational goes
    beyond the trans-rational. It is also a level of
    knowledge and it cannot be grasped by irrationality.

    Really, just because there's terminology and
    people working on something doesn't mean that
    there's anything to it. A "pre-trans" error
    would be accepting the "pre-trans" framework
    at all.

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  101. Apple's Strategy by ahg · · Score: 1

    SUMMARY
    The Apple Server market is already largely based on the x86. Darwin returns the market to Apple on x86 Hardware with all the advantages of OSS working for them too.

    Apple's high end market is impervious to the hardware prices. The graphics market which makes up most of Apple's high end is very dedicated to the mac and they will pay though the nose for performance. The PPC velocity engine provides unparalled performance in that area and will not be easily dropped.

    Apple's low end depends on ease of use and as more iMac sales become second mac purchases no one will be happy if their old PPC based software won't run.


    MORE DETAILS & THOUGHTS

    Apple's Server Failure
    Apple has not had a cost effective server solution for years. Their overpriced higher end hardware and $999 pricetag for AppleShare software lost them their market to AFS services on NT and Linux.

    SOLUTION: Open Source their new BSD based OS, gain all the advantages of OSS, and compete head to head with Redhat and friends. Darwin running on commodity hardware gives them a revenue stream by selling their "distro" with an Aquasized look & feel and support fees. They also retain some control over the product by being the dominant distributor.

    They now have their own top notch distro that will be kept up to date at little cost to them. - Who do you think is going to end up doing most of Darwin's IPv6 conversion work? Most likely, the FreeBSD guys.

    Apple's Desktop: Best of Both
    It won't be long until XFree4 is forked & hacked to run transparently over Quartz/Aqua with an aquasized look. The best of both world's being-
    1a) Any X based software (commercial or OSS) can be ported with relative ease and sold to the MacOS market.
    1b) MacOS app developers that may have considered dropping support for the Mac with the cost required to port to Quartz should be more willing to do an X port which will allow them to market the same product with not much work to FreeBSD and Linux users.
    2a)The existing base of Mac apps will still run in the Classic emulation "box".
    2b)Companies like Adobe whos core user base still includes the Macintosh will of course be introducing native Cocoa/Quartz versions of thier apps.

    Bets Hedged
    MS OFFICE: Apple knows that MS, now ruled to be a monopoly, no longer needs them in the market. MS seems less and less likely with every day passing (note the Mac IE team has been switched to WebTV) to be continuing support for MacOS Office. Apple seems to have been keenly aware of this with their continued development and pushing of their own office suite AppleWorks. Also, by offering X support in MacOSX they can reap the benefits from OSS Offfice apps under development. -- In short they are hoping that Linux's success will make MS Office less critical to their own platform.

    THE PPC PROCESSOR: I don't think we're going to see any switch to the x86 any time soon. It would require a reltively slow emulation layer for classic mac apps to work. AND a port of Apple's Carbon APIs to the x86 too. -- In the short term all Mac apps on OSX will be Carbon based. -- Carbon is to MacOSX as WINE/Winelib is to Linux.
    The PPC processor's vector unit provides speed boosts to Photoshop filters (once optimized) that can not begin to be considered on a MHz comparison between processors. With SMP coming along and other improvemtns filtering up to the desktop from the OSS server base even prolonged development cycles for the PPC will make it worth while for thier core audience to stay with PPC.

    Think about it - Some Photoshop operations are still faster on a 450 MHZ PPC than a 700 MHz P3! With that kind of performance despite the disparity in MHz - it's worth their while to hang tight and wait for PPC problems to be solved.

    COST: The high cost of Apple's high end hasn't slowed sales lately. Dedicated mac users who need speed will pay through the nose for it.

    --

    --Aaron Greenberg

  102. Re:What is Apple? by RobertAG · · Score: 1

    That's a really good point. The TCO may in fact be lower. But is the TNBO (Total Net Benefit of Ownership) better, the same or worse?

    I have a problem with the TCO concept:

    1. TCO only measures cost. It doesn't measure benefit. In any analysis, one must net the costs with the benefits to arrive at point where an informed decision can be made: ie A G3 Mac costs $3000, a similiar WinTel box costs $1500. What's better? Well, what are the benefits of ownership? Let's say the G3 enables you to increase profits by $20000 whereas the WinTel box enables you to increase profits by $5000. NOW the choice is clear. You want the G3. Your net benefit is $17000 versus $3500. The higher cost G3 yields a higher profit. Any analysis of this type has to include benefits as well as costs. If you can't calculate either, then any numbers you come out with are meaningless.

    2. This type of analysis includes opportunity costs. Opportunity costs are what you give up to do something else. "If I buy new workstations now, I can't do system upgrades on the servers." That's an example. When a new computer is installed, part of the TCO numbers include the cost of the technicians' time, even though they may be paid to be there anyway. Opportunity costs are therefore a matter of personal opinion.

    An analysis of the net cost/benefit give a more accurate number by which to measure the application of different systems. A focus on costs only without an analysis of benefits may result in a low cost operation, but maximum profit may never be attained.

  103. Xfree86 URL by pyrotic · · Score: 2

    This url has source. If you haven't already you'll have to register for a password with Apple.

  104. Re:What is the comparative performance? by superdan2k · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes. You speak of Apple's little project codenamed "Star Trek" -- it was a port of MacOS 7 that ran on Intel boxes.

    From what I've been told, it really *did* happen. I'd love to "come across" a copy to experiment with sometime...

    --
    blog |
  105. Make use of legacy hardware? by Croaker · · Score: 5



    How about this... say Apple is making a play for the server market (go ahead, say it!). Let's suppose an IS administrator is sold on the Apple OS X server platform but... he has a server room full of x86 legacy hardware. Ripping out all of those machines and replacing them with new Mac hardware, while great for Apple, would put the cost of moving over to the Mac platform out of reach.

    Along comes Darwin, which for many server-level tasks looks like OS X. The Apple folks can sell the IS folks on upgrading their exisitng x86 hardware to Darwin, making it interoperate with the new OS X servers, and down the line the customer will very likely replace the x86 hardware with more capable and more compatible Macs.
    </wildassguess>

  106. Can we get a bit of clarification? by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1

    OK, so what is the difference between Darwin and OS X? Is it like Redhat Linux in that Darwin is really just the command prompt / kernel and Redhat is that and all the other utilities and other odds and ends? And how does Aqua relate to all of this? Is is like the windows manager for OS X? Will someone please summarize the differences between parts so the issues will make a bit more sense to the non-programming non-kernel hacking readers out there. I'm having trouble keeping the whole thing straight :) Chris

  107. Good thing Apple doesn't have you running it! by sgant · · Score: 2

    If you were running the company it would have been shut down by now...instead of rising out of it's ashes like it did and do such a 180 degree turn around.

    Apple is doing better today than it EVER did. They have total focus on what they're doing and so far they've done no wrong with Jobs at the helm again.

    Killing off the clones was the best thing they could have done, as all the little clone companies out there were just stealing business away from Apple itself, instead of helping them.

    They're also out there leading the pack again instead of trying to play catch up. You may think the iMac and the iBook are simply gimmics...if that's the case then why are they such a resounding sucess? You can hem and haw all you want but the facts speak for themselves: the iMac is a sucess! Love it or hate it, it's still a sucess! Say it's just eye candy or that it not having a floppy drive all you want: it's STILL a sucess!

    --

    "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
  108. Purpose by superlame · · Score: 1

    My question is, if we aren't running MacOS, then why is Darwin better than Linux or one of the BSDs?

    --
    -- Superlame http://catpro.dragonfire.net/joshua/
    1. Re:Purpose by be-fan · · Score: 2

      It doesn't matter if it is or not, because Darwin isn't really supposed to be an OS in it's own right. Some people (namely Carmack) had an affinity for OSX and decided to contribute to its base OS. Aside from that, Darwin has some cool features, namely the kits.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  109. Wrong about quality... by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

    I use PC's at home and at work, but am really more of a UNIX person in my heart (using Linux at home and work where and when I can).

    But, I would argue strongly that Apple still offers a better quality and easier to use product (at the consumer level) than just about anything in the PC world.

    For example, you can't beat the dead simplicity of the iMac with almost no cabling to fiddle with and a design that makes it semi-portable for dragging about the house. If you want to drag the thing out to your porch for a few hours, it's not too hard with the iMac and a pain in the rear if you have a PC (yes, I know you could use a laptop - but that's a lot of money for such a luxury).

    In the G4, they have a very nice machine that is also really easy to expand - why can't PC's be that well laid out and simple to open!

    I agree with another poster that it's really the software that's holding them back - OS X sounds like a great system, and I think I'll look into trying out the beta at home when it comes out.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  110. recycling expensive NT servers by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    That rack of expensive NT hardware can be recycled, and people can still get support from a big company. WebObjects's PDO infrastructure is itself redundant (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Servers, if you will), but some people will only run software on boxes that are fully redundant, and Apple doesn't make any. Enter OSX for Intel.

    As soon as WebObjects deployment is available for Darwin (already runs on NT,HPUX,Solaris,OSXServer) the cost of reliable entry falls under $1K and should help their position. That should get some PHB's interested.

    If Apple then bundles OSX with their PowerMacs and sells it for a fair chunk of change for Intel (Darwin still being free) it also makes PowerMacs tastier.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  111. Re:You can lead a Slashbot to knowledge . . . by spectreone · · Score: 1

    Ingnorant fools like you who automatically assume that science and religion can't work together really iritate me. Who's to say that evolution wasn't god's (or one of his many other names, as i believe most religions are essentially the same with different names for things) way of creating humanity and everything else on this planet. The bible is a story written by humans, and therefore subject to error. The seven days of creation doesn't need to be taken literaly. The seven days in the bible could reference to thousands or millions of years, since God is described as omniprescient, and therefore exists outside of time. Now I admit, that I'm not the most religious person in the world, but I get very tired of the whole Religion vs. Science argument and wish that you people would just let it go, both sides, they don't have to be mutually exclusive. And I also see no problem with teaching evolution in school, as it is the scientific side of the creationist theory without the religion. And as for you're rant about "training kids to have sex" in school, that's a bunch of b.s. But I won't get into that now.

  112. Re:What is the comparative performance? by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    Well you're thinking of the Star Trek project (going where no Mac has been before) as others have mentioned.

    Of course there's also talk that the Windows port of QuickTime involved porting over a lot of Mac Toolbox code as well....

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  113. What is the comparative performance? by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    This may be an Urban Legend (TM)

    I can recall a story from long ago and far away that once upon a time apple had an earlier version of one of their OS recompiled and running on and intel platform.

    they dropped the project because it ran a bit faster than their own official Apple hardware, and they didn't want to shoot themselves in the hardware department.

    so this raises the question of what is the current performance compared between hardware platforms, and is this even relevant anymore.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:What is the comparative performance? by hawkfish · · Score: 1

      if Apple ultimately supported OS X native and Carbonized MacOS (through emulation - a recompile would be a killer) apps on an OS X Intel port, it would probably be a Good Thing

      (WFIW, I write Mac software and I just finished Carbonizing a fairly large commercial application package.)

      Given the modular architecture of Metrowerks' tools, I think this is a bit pessimistic. I expect that in about a year that this sort of development will be pretty simple, possibly even automatic. At the moment, one can usually generate targets for 68K, CFM68K, PPC and Carbon from each other with only a few days of work. In fact, as long as you don't use the Mac toolbox (!), you can generate x86 .exes as well.

      The biggest problem I can see porting a Carbon app to a different set of hardware is the endian issue. Data files will have to be converted, which could be a hassle, but even there, most data consists of resources in known formats and could be converted pretty easily. A pain, but I would be surprised if it turned out to be killer. In general, anyone who writes code depending on the byte layout of integers in memory needs to be hurt badly, but even if there was some sort of awful performance need, this would be quite rare and (presumably) heavily documented and easy to change.

      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
  114. Re:Can we please stop it with the Mac stories? by aitala · · Score: 1

    Boy, you are really clueless...

    --
    Eric Aitala
    www.f1m.com
  115. Re:Who the hell cares? by be-fan · · Score: 2

    Who says that a story posted on Slashdot has to have something to do with the furthering of Linux? Darwin looks pretty cool as an OS in its on right and has zilch to do with Linux. If anything, it's helping BSD gain wider acceptance. It's Darwin's spotlight, not Linux's.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  116. an article giving the Star Trek project history by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    Thanks to the information posted by respondents, I was able to find an Email newsletter archive that had an interest synopsis of the Apple Star Trek Project. It is found in TransWarp #14, dated about 1997.

    Here it is in full, as they took it from the Mercury News

    APPLE'S STAR TREK PROJECT

    Previous Apple coverage

    Published: Nov. 1, 1997
    BY JODI MARDESICH
    Mercury News Staff Writer

    What do you think? Cool technology or simply a flight of fancy? Would the 'Star Trek' project have changed Apple's fortunes? Five years ago, a stealth group of engineers from Apple Computer Inc. and Novell Inc. took on a challenge many thought impossible: to make the Macintosh operating system run on Intel Corp. processors.

    They raced toward a prototype deadline of Halloween 1992. They made it, but in mid-1993, the project -- dubbed Star Trek -- was killed by political infighting. Today, having lost five crucial years, struggling Apple is again thought to be moving toward Intel processors.

    Thursday evening, the group reunited to reminisce and to contemplate what might have been. If Apple had upstaged Microsoft's Windows 95 with a Mac OS for Intel computers, would Microsoft software now control nearly 90 percent of all PCs?

    All the Trekkies have left to show of the project is an old hard disk drive with the still-operable code; a postmortem video; an outdated business plan; a technical manual; and the traditional project T-shirt, with its Star Trek ``communicator'' emblem on the front and, on the back, a depiction of a crazed guy gouging his eyes out with a pencil.

    And they have their memories.

    They began in the summer of 1992, when a group of four from Novell and 14 from Apple quietly moved into a building facing Intel Corp.'s Santa Clara headquarters. Each was supplied an office, a Mac, and a PC donated by Intel. To this day, few outsiders have known of the group's existence.

    For the engineers, the lure was a technically challenging project. For Mark Gonzales, a Harvard MBA freshly back from a rejuvenating sabbatical, it was a risky but potentially revolutionary project. ``We weren't sure if it was a good idea to run on Intel,'' said Fred Huxham, who left Apple in 1995. ``Mark had these grand plans. He thought people would at some point buy a new OS, and it could be Star Trek.''

    For Fred Monroe, working on the project was a heady experience. At 22, just out of college, he got to travel to Japan and to show the software to future Apple CEO Michael Spindler and a top NEC Corp. executive. Because he was so young, he felt he had something to prove.

    ``We worked like dogs. It was some of the most fun I've had working,'' said Monroe, co-founder with Huxham of FredLabs Inc., a software company in San Francisco.

    Because they made their Halloween deadline -- having completed a prototype in just three months -- they got bonuses of $15,000 to $25,000 and were sent, on Apple's dime, to Cancun.

    In December 1992, a few team members showed Apple's board their top-secret project and got an immediate OK to continue.

    Novell executives, hoping for a weapon to blunt Microsoft's growing dominance in the computer industry, were stunned at the progress. Darrell Miller, a former Novell vice president, kept exclaiming, ``I can't believe it,'' Huxham said. ``He was going nuts.''

    In the end, it wasn't technical difficulties that derailed the project. It was internal politics, especially the loss of key backers.

    Star Trek's biggest supporters were Roger Heinen, an Apple vice president hired away by Microsoft in the middle of the project, and John Sculley, Apple's CEO, who was forced out not long after. At the time, Apple was switching its software from the Motorola 68000 processor to the PowerPC, and executives were concerned that bifurcating their efforts could sink both projects.

    There were a few other roadblocks: Apple tried to persuade computer makers to include the operating system on their PCs, but found resistance. Gonzales, the project manager, and a few others took the software on the road.

    They stopped at Dell Computer in Texas, where they showed Star Trek to founder Michael Dell. Dell was impressed, but told Gonzales bluntly that unless it was free, Dell wouldn't be able to use the promising operating system because Dell was paying Microsoft for its Windows OS for each computer his company shipped, regardless of whether the computer shipped with Windows.

    They also would have had to convince applications software developers to rework their applications so they could run on the new system. Huxham maintains this task wouldn't have been too time-consuming.

    ``There were definitely some tricky problems left, still,'' Huxham said. ``I still believe we could have finished and it would have been interesting, if nothing else.''

    If they had kept to their schedule, the developers figure they could have beaten Windows 95 to the market by a year.

    After the dinner Thursday, Huxham hooked up his Intel 486-based computer to an Apple monitor and turned it on. While going through the boot-up process, the system kept hitting snags. One particularly ominous error message flashed: ``Missing Operating System.''

    ``I thought that's what we did,'' one of the Trekkies said in dismay.

    After several attempts, Huxham's magic worked: The computer played the familiar chord that signals the Mac starting. The smiling Mac graced the PC's screen.

    A mouse click later, these words appeared: ``Star Trek: Boldly Going Where No Mac Has Gone Before.'' Or since.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  117. Re:off-topic... there go my karma points... by oobfrist · · Score: 1

    OK..
    The reason the texts are all the same is that during several periods in history if you had a different text they, killed you and burned your church. So pretty soon all the texts were the same.

    Also I'm very excited about the possibility of Mac/Linux hybrid releases.

  118. Re:iMac best selling PC last two years - Apple pro by thechink · · Score: 1

    The iMac is the best selling computer now, two years running.

    The iMac maybe the best selling computer model, but the Intel-compatible side has literally hundreds (thousands?) of models and still outsell Apple almost 20 to 1.

    Steve Jobs changed the face of computing - he (re)introduced design and styling as an aspect of the purchase. Wintel cloners took twelve months to catch up to this, as well as other Mac innovations like widespread use of USB (which if you remember was originally derided).

    USB was invented by Intel, MS and Compaq and appeared on PCs at least a year before the iMac appeared. Granted it took the iMac to kickstart the USB peripheral market (Windows 98 may have had something to do with it too) but that was largely because that was one the few ways to expand the iMac. PCs had many other ways to expand and add peripherals, USB wasn't that important. And don't forget all the other PC inspired technology in the iMac (IDE drives, PCI bus, etc). It wouldn't exist if it weren't for technologies originally created for the PC. As for design innovations you can keep the coloured plastic. It's ugly and I wish PC manufacturers would leave alone.

  119. Re:iMac best selling PC by dbrutus · · Score: 1

    On marketshare, the numbers are clear it is just under 20-1 in favor of windows. Then again, last year, it was over 20-1 in favor of windows. The reality is that Apple is gaining in marketshare, in large part due to the iMac/iBook.

    Now let me see if I understand your beef. You don't like the current crop of Macs because they are too similar to PCs? So you were buying NuBus slotted, ADB I/O, SCSI on the MB Macs before the changes? I didn't think so. The cost of peripherals was sky high.

    As for Windows 98 driving USB sales I have one little thought to pop that bubble - safe mode.
    It kind of blows when your USB keyboard won't register with your OS when you are trying to recover from a crash.

    DB

  120. Re:What is Apple? by sredding · · Score: 1

    Funny, I've always thought just the opposite. Mac hardware rocks...

    What? The sound? Video? Motherboard? There are better peripherals out there. What does that leave that "rocks"? That pretty case?

  121. Re:Sadly for you "geeks", Darwin recanted by Phroggy · · Score: 1
    That's right, we all just evolved out of a puddle of goo that just decided one day that it would mutate into a complex forms of life.

    Oh wait, how did that collection of proteins come to life, exactly? Hmmm....

    Isn't it interesting that many of the lower forms of life that we supposedly evolved from are still alive and well to this day? And a lot of the in-between species have yet to be discovered, but simply "must have existed"? Good thing they were able to mutate and evolve into a new species before natural selection killed them off.

    urgggh, straying off-topic; sorry. It just bugs me when people get personally offended if you say Evolution isn't a perfect theory, yet they claim not to be religious. Tell me, what's your definition of religion? The origin of the universe falls outside the realm of empirical science, therefore the idea of the Big Bang must be held solely on faith. Am I offending anyone yet? Good! Flame away.

    --

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;