Slashdot Mirror


A Linux User At MacWorld

usermilk writes "Linux Journal just posted a pretty cool article, A Penguin Angle on the Ox: Day One at Macworld. It features a Linux user's perspective on MacWorld, OS X, Darwin, and how all these things play together. Most interestingly, he comments on the large number of open-source-Unix bigwigs who are now on Apple's payroll. There's also a pretty concise description of the difference between Apple building off of BSD compared to Microsoft trying to also reap the benefits of open source." Doc Searls' perspective makes a great companion to the report from the floor (and part II) that chrisd posted.

2 of 202 comments (clear)

  1. Software stability in the public opinion? by Enzo90910 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple's been bragging for some months now about their being the first company to put "the power and stability" of Unix in the hands of the average user and it seems that's what they did. What I'm wondering now is if this kind of stability put in the homes of millions of people will not change everybody's standard of stability. Five years ago, the standards of stability were Win95 and Mac OS 8 (I'm trying to speak for the general public there,OK? No flame, please). Neither was very stable (although I still remember 95 as being a true nightmare, whereas OS 8 was acceptable, as long as you didn't try anything fancy, such as developing on it), but since nobody had a better example, people were happy with it. Now we've got millions of mac users let loose among their friends and saying their computer (almost) never has to reboot! This could change the acceptable standards of stability, not only for Operating Systems, but also for the whole software industry.

    Most people thought computers had to crash, because that's what they always did. If some start to be STABLE, where is the world going?

    --
    I don't have much to add.
  2. Speaking of Macs and Linux... by jchristopher · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Has anyone tried running Linux on the iBook? If so, what resolution can you get on an external monitor?

    Currently, under Mac OSX the output is limited to 1024x768 (even though the video card supports much more.) Yuck.

    If you can only get 1024x768 under Linux, that would indicate that it's actually a hardware limitation.

    If you can get more, however, that might indicate that there is hope for a BSD/Linux driver to be used as the basis for a new OSX driver that would unlock the capability of the hardware that Apple took away.