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Cringely: OS X on Intel

sti writes: "Cringely's column this week argues that Apple should port OS X to the Intel platform. He makes an interesting case for it. I would definitely favour this. I've always had this warm spot in my heart for Apple but rarely had the money to pay for their overpriced hardware."

30 of 694 comments (clear)

  1. Wouldn't be the same by Jebediah21 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OS X on Intel just wouldn't have the same experience. When you buy an Apple machine you know that the OS is well tuned to run on that hardware. You don't have to worry about an odd mix of hardware or bios problems that are responsible for a number of woes on x86.

    I think the only way for OS X to be viable on x86 is with different pricing. Say something like $50 for no support, but $150 with support. That way way nerds like us can play around with a leet OS cheaply, while those who need support would make up for lost hardware profits.

    --

    Everytime you look at porn a devil gets their horns.
    1. Re:Wouldn't be the same by Stenpas · · Score: 5, Insightful
      MacOS X has a very far way to go in optimization.

      You'll see a huge leap in performance after they get aqua accelerated via the graphics hardware. Since the graphics hardware (which these days is insanely fast) will be handling it, the CPU will have more power to use for other things. How much more? I don't know, but judging from the looks of things (anti-aliased, alpha layered, bezier curved, quartz rendered, drop shadowed, etc), I'm sure it will be significant.

      Window buffering isn't turned on by default, so a 800x600 window at millions of colors eats up 1.9 megs of ram. If you're the type of person who likes to have 70 windows open at a time, this adds up very fast. With window buffering, each window will use 8.5-10x less memory. So with those 70 windows, instead of using 133 megs of ram, they use 15 megs. That's a lot of ram that could be going elsewhere, and since you won't be using as much swap or any at all, you get a huge speed increase.

      A big one which can't be dealt with on a technological perspective is our dependancy of the Classic compatibility environment. Some people like having it open at all times for maximum compatibility. Well, even if they don't, having to open that One Small Thing(tm) in Classic is a pain in the ass because it uses an astronomical amount of CPU power and Ram. So the sooner we lose this dependancy, the better.

      And from the looks of it, getting MacOS X synced up to FreeBSD 4.5 might be good. I'm sure we all love "hundreds of fixes, updated many system components, made several substantial performance improvements, and addressed a wide variety of security issues." Enough said.

      After it's all said and done, I'd at least hope that it would be on par with MacOS 9. A little slower, yes, but not drastically.

      So when is all this coming? It would have to be on or around March 24th, 2002. That's when the transition to MacOS X is supposed to be complete. What better way to celebrate than a major upgrade? If we're still bitching about something as general as speed after the transition is all said and done, then either Apple failed with MacOS X, or they need to extend the transition period.

    2. Re:Wouldn't be the same by mellon · · Score: 4, Informative

      Try turning on backing compression and see if it helps you any. To do this, make a copy of /Library/Preferences/com.apple.windowserver.plist in ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.windowserver/plist , and after the first <dict> in the file, add the following:

      <key>BackingCompression</key>
      <dict>
      <key>compressionScanTime</key>
      <real>5.000000000000000e+00</real>
      <key>minCompressableSize</key>
      <integer>8193</integer>
      <key>minCompressionRatio</key>
      <real>1.100000023841858e+00</real>
      </dict>

      I don't know if this makes a difference, but I run 10.1.2 on an iBook 500 with 640M of memory, and the performance is very nice. (BTW, I didn't come up with this hack - it's from a MacOS mailing list, IIRC).

      Also, if you are running Netscape, be aware that it busy loops and consumes a lot of CPU even if it's not displaying any animations. It will sit there and consume 50% of your CPU while you have it hidden. :'(

      Also, if you have Word for MacOS X, be aware that it also busy loops, and consumes a truly impressive amount of CPU. :'(

      If you don't know what this means, the deal is that in a non-pre-emptive O.S., most applications just sit there in the event loop waiting for something to happen, and they expect the system to take control away from them when they call getNextEvent (or whatever it is in MacOS 9) if there's another application with an event running. I suspect that Netscape and Office are both expecting this to happen when they call the carbon version of getNextEvent, but they're calling a non-blocking getNextEvent, so they just sit there going "is there an event?", hearing "no," and then doing the same thing again over and over again. I'm sure this would be really easy to fix, but although I reported the bug on Netscape, at least, the next version that came out was still broken in this way.

  2. Nuts! Nuts! Nuts! by RobL3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, I'm so tired of the "Overpriced Hardware" statement, but that's a different post. As for porting OS X to intel. let me explain this one more time:

    The hardware is half the magic!!

    The reason OS X and all the Mac OS's before it work so well, is that there is a finite, documented set of hardware that it has to work with. Unlike Linux and Windows OS developers, Mac OS developers don't have to worry about every pre 1990 ISA soundblaster compatable card, periphial, and motherboard.
    Yes, OS X is great, so go support the company who put it together, by buying one of thier computers. You won't be disapointed.

  3. But Why? by countach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cringley himself answers his own stupid question... Who would buy such a beast? Mac users buy Mac hardware, so why bother? That's exactly right Cringley, so the product would be a waste of time. Either the Mac users would save some pennies on Intel hardware and Apple loses, or they wouldn't
    and it would be a waste of time. Most users are simply not going to bother loading another OS with Windows, that's why BeOS failed. Linux is making some headway because (a) it's free as in beer and (b) it's free as in liberty. We don't need another stinkin proprietry OS, one is enough and users know it.

  4. Apples looked at this in the past by The+Mutant · · Score: 5, Informative

    This site talks about a project at Apple some ten years ago to port Mac OS to Intel hardware.

    The article also talks about the work done by ARDI, the firm mentioned in the InfoWorld story.

    Apple assembled a small team and got Mac OS runnning pretty quickly, but it seemed the firm didn't have the willpower to push it to market.

    It probably would be different this time around with the forceful Steve Jobs at the helm.

  5. Actually, the problem is still the apps. by pwagland · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Cringley makes two assertions:
    OS X on Intel is no threat to Apple hardware.
    and
    There simply is no technical problem with porting OS X to alternate hardware.
    Only one of these is correct. Getting OS X onto a new platform is not the tricky bit, not really...look at linux, look at BSD, hell even look at NT (alpha port anyone?).

    No, the biggest problem will be getting all of the application manufacturers to release two versions of the software. And before everyone talks about the 68K->PowerPC as a refutal, don't forget that that was only transitional. Try and find 68K binaries now. You get lucky somtimes, but not normally.

    Now, the problem is simple. If you release on two platforms, you have to support two platforms. That is, two compilers, and their associated bugs. That is, two different endian systems. That is twice the headache in any project managers book.

    1. Re:Actually, the problem is still the apps. by osgeek · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Speaking as a long-time Macintosh software developer, I literally drool at the possibility of selling my apps to an intel-sized audience with a simple recompile. Apple uses gcc, so setting a compile switch to generate the right binary will work without any hassles. BeOS had a similar PowePC to Intel transition, and building either binary couldn't have been easier. Well, okay, you had to install some extra libraries to build, but Apple would sort that out. Oh, and endian issues on the BeOS were rarely a problem (htonl() and its friends work quite nicely).

      Trust me. Standard application developers won't be worried about shipping two binaries if it means doubling (tripling, quadrupling?) the market for their products.

  6. Re:Overpriced? by vosque · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unforuntaely, this (Macintosh being overpriced) is not FUD. And I'm a Mac user.

    The reason Mac hardware is considered overpriced is because the only thing we can compare them to is the prebuilt kits from Compaq, HP, etc..

    There's no DIY aspect to Macs. It's like buying a dishwasher. Which is exactly what Jobs wants in the first place.

    But, when you compare all of the Macintosh industry, to all of the x86 industry, the Macs do fall behind in the price department.

    This is a visceral implementation of the Cheap, Easy, and Fast problem. Apple chose Fast and Easy. And implemented that well.

    Rather than nay-saying anyone who has anything against the pricing of Macs as FUD-broadcasters, I think it is more important to point out how FSCKING SIMPLE AND COOL MacOS is compared to just about anything else in the non-free OS market.

  7. Makes Apple a threat by murphro · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Cringely points out possible benefits to Apple if they enter the OS market on Intel (and has several good points). But what about the certain negatives? Apple now is a mild threat to MS's power. But if they 'infringed' on turf that was MS's, they would certainly be targeted by the giant. Is it really in Apple's best interests to rouse that big of bully? I don't think so.

    Cringely mentions Netscape in his article (how by competition, MS made IE better). Look what happened in that case. Would Apple want to risk the same fate? To sacrifice themselves so that Windoz might be a little nicer to use.

    Come on.

  8. Crap by gargle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thrust of Cringely's argument, which he devotes most of his article to, is this: Apple should port OS X to Intel because "it is exactly the competitor Microsoft needs." But what really matters to Apple is: Will porting OS X to Intel make Apple more or less profitable?

    Cringely resolves this complex matter in the space of a paragraph length assertion "The upside for Apple is enormous. Suddenly, their software budget is leveraged across a much larger number of units, making the company more profitable and able to spend even more on making the software better."

    Really, Cringely? I think we need more than a handwaving assertion to back this up. e.g. What effect will porting OS X to Intel have on Apple Hardware sales? What will MS's response will be - will it withdraw its Office and IE products for OS X? etc.

    1. Re:Crap by gwernol · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Cringely resolves this complex matter in the space of a paragraph length assertion "The upside for Apple is enormous. Suddenly, their software budget is leveraged across a much larger number of units, making the company more profitable and able to spend even more on making the software better."

      Actually I think he's right about profitability. Apple typically makes a much greater profit per unit of software than per unit of hardware. There have been years when Apple's entire profit margin has been from its software division(s).

      The problem that Cringley misses is that Apple has to think not only of its profits but also of its revenues. If it lost the hardware business it would immediately drop its revenues from $8 billion to around $500 million. Even if its profits went up at the same time (which they might), they would get crucified on Wall Street for this. No sane company would ever pursue a strategy that involved such a dramatic cut in its revenue stream.

      So even though Cringely is right about profitability he ignores the revenue impact so his overall argument is flawed.

      --
      Sailing over the event horizon
  9. X runs under MacOSX by teridon · · Score: 4, Informative
    all the good apps these days are written for X. I don't believe X is even supported under OSX.

    bzzzt. X runs just fine under OSX. Check out the XonX project .

    . It is under darwin but that is a seperate distro and not is the bundled OSX that comes default with all macs

    What? Darwin is the same, with or without OSX "on top".

    The only Unix things I can run in OSX is stuff like sed, awk, etc.

    Dude, what have you been smoking? You've never even *seen* OSX, have you?

    --
    I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
  10. Well, it would kill Mac Hardware. by Big+Sean+O · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Love it or loathe it, Mac Hardware has consistently been the most interesting consumer products in computing. To wit:

    • the Original all-in-one Mac.
    • the iMac
    • the new iMac
    • the clamshell iBook
    • the TiBook
    • Heck, let's throw in the Newton while we're at it. It didn't win any size awards, but it was a main influence on Palm.

    Last time Apple licensed their OS and made beige boxes like everyone else they almost went out of business.

    As far as anyone complaining that Apple hardware is too expensive, go on eBay and buy any slot-loading iMac, max out it's ram, and install OS X. It runs OS X great, and you can get these darn things for, oh about $300 dollars. If they're anything like my Macs, they will last 6 years without a blip.

    --
    My father is a blogger.
  11. Why Apple has, and why Apple won't by gwernol · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Apple has already ported Mac OS X to Intel. And I don't just mean the Darwin open source foundation. The entire operating system including Cocoa, Carbon, Quartz and Aqua runs and runs well on Intel CPUs. At one point there was also an Alpha port but that was discontinued well before Mac OS X went beta.

    Apple won't release a general Intel port of OS X. It makes no sense for them to do so. Apple makes the vast majority of its revenue through hardware sales, somewhere around 90-95%. If they released Mac OS X for Intel their hardware sales would fall dramatically. Because the unit cost of an operating system is much less than the cost of a hardware box (say $100 compared with $2000) Apple's revenues would fall precipitously.

    No company can gp to Wall Street and say: I'm going to chop my annual revenues down from $8 billion to $500 million. Can you imagine what would happen to the Apple stock price if they announced this? It simply can't be done.

    So why do Apple keep the Intel port of OS X alive? After all it costs real money to keep all that software running cross-platform.

    There are two reasons. First as a hedge against Motorola or IBM screwing Apple on the PowerPC processor. In the last few years the clock rate (and other key performance measures) of the PowerPC line has fallen a long way behind Intel. If IBM/Moto can't get competitive again, then Apple wants the option of putting Intel CPUs into Macs. This would not mean you could buy an off-the-shelf Gateway/Dell/whatever and run OS X on it. You can bet Apple would make sure it only ran on a "real" Mac to preserve their hardware revenues.

    The second reason they keep the port up is because it helps them produce better code. Having to write code that runs on more than one CPU family is a good engineering discipline. The different architectures stress different parts of the code and you will often see bugs on one platform that are hidden on the other.

    So Apple already have OS X on Intel, but don't expect to see it in the marketplace anytime soon.

    --
    Sailing over the event horizon
    1. Re:Why Apple has, and why Apple won't by gwernol · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Where'd you learn this?

      Four years as a senior software engineer on Apple's OS teams.

      The last non-PPC port of OS X was Rhapsody DR2, to my knowledge, which lacked Aqua, Quartz, and Carbon. (It was, at that point, still essentially OPENSTEP 5 with a Platinum interface and QuickTime Media Layer injected, which at the time included QuickDraw GX and QuickDraw 3D.) It ran only on Intel and PowerPC.

      What you say is true but incomplete. Mac OS X on Intel has been kept up until at least beta. After that I don't have first-hand knowledge, but I'd guess they still build it, as most of the work was done then. Aqua, Quartz and Carbon were included. Classic was not.

      After that release, Jobs announced that Rhapsody was DBA (Dead Before Arrival) and announced his new Mac OS X scheme, which included the fact that the new operating system would not run on Intel. Mac OS X DP1 and later did not run on Intel hardware. And at no point did I hear anything about Alpha, and find it highly unlikely if for no other reason than due to the Darwin sources that were initially released.

      Well I've seen Mac OS X beta running on Intel and I've seen the source code that supports it too, so it is real. The Alpha port went away much earlier, back in the Rhapsody days.

      As you may remember, when Darwin was first released, many people wanted it to run on Intel, and this ended up being a massive job that still isn't finished. It wasn't that anything had been removed; it's that it simply hadn't been maintained at all since the old Mach 2.5 version, so the foundation, while there, was simply horrendously out of date. Had Apple continued Intel ports, and especially if they had done an Alpha port, it seems as though that code would have been included as well.

      Imagine the situation where Apple did not want the outside world to know that they were continuing to maintain an Intel port. They would have released a version of the Darwin source that had the Intel parts switched out. Internally Apple has a different Darwin source tree than the one that has been released to the community.

      Recently, in fact, as Darwin's been gotten to limp along on a few varieties of Intel motherboards (and "limp" is definitely the right word here), Apple's been helping a bit with the Intel port, but, again, they're having as much trouble as anyone. No "Here's a secret250,000-line patch to make it work." Just problem solving line by line, conflict by conflict. Given all that, I've always regarded the "OS X is secretely running on Intel" rumor as just that. A rumor.

      Well it isn't. I've seen it, used it, worked on it. It doesn't really matter if you think I'm wrong, I have been in a privileged position that you haven't, sorry.
      --
      Sailing over the event horizon
    2. Re:Why Apple has, and why Apple won't by gwernol · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sorry for doubting, but you didn't mention you used to work at Apple on the OS X Intel port. :)

      Just to clarify, I didn't work directly on the Intel port but the software I was working on was ported and so I had to keep it maintained and tested on Intel.

      Obviously that would change things a bit, to say the least. My one question, though, if you happen to know the answer, is why Apple hasn't bothered to give the Darwin community the source now, since they would still like it tremendously and it would be very helpful. I'm asking as a question of logistics, not truth.

      Mainly because people would draw exactly the right conclusion if Apple did release it: that Apple is preparing to move away from PowerPC to Intel. That would cause a lot of problems for Apple with its investors, with Motorola/IBM (which isn't exactly a stable relationship at the best of times), with its current customers and with Microsoft. As has been noted elsewhere, if Apple did go head-to-head with Microsoft in the Intel-based OS market it would put Office for OS X at serious risk.

      So I don't think its a matter of logistics. In fact because Apple has to maintain two Darwin code bases (internal and external) to logistics of not releasing the Intel version are somewhat costly.

      --
      Sailing over the event horizon
  12. We wish. by G-funk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's simple. Let's say apple release OSX on intel. Forget their hardware sales, forget support problems. This would be the future:

    1) Office is no longer available on any apple lines, neither is Explorer.
    2) Office XP++ doesn't write in any format office X can read.
    3) Office was never available for OSX on intel.
    4) Microsoft tells Dell, HP, etc that if they want to offer OSX then windows wil cost $$$$ more per copy.

    which leaves apple going steadily bankrupt, and the masses with no options if they want user-friendly but don't want Bill....

    I'd love it, I'd be first in line to buy it, but it ain't gonna happen

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  13. It's the Apps, stupid by Whizziwig · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Where is Cringley getting useful applications for OSx86? One of the things that has kept the mac platform alive is very stable & mature ports of MS Office. MS will *not* port office to a direct windows competitor.

    Sure, it's BSD, so OSS apps can be compiled for it, but people don't want abiword or kword, they want MS Word. There's no way apple is going to bundle pre-compiled OSS software, and even if they did, it's not what people are looking for. If anything, without apps, this would be a niche desktop OS.

    Unless Cringley expects a perfect win32 emulator to appear, or perhaps he supports a classic mode for windows [this is feasible, grab the netraverse guys and port win4lin to bsd in a rootless mode], this won't work.

  14. Counterpundit by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Cringely's done his punditing, and I'll counterpundit in return. I'll take the safe bet that Apple will do no such thing any time soon. No big deal; most people here seem to think that. I haven't seen anyone mention the reason why I think it's so, though.

    Technical hurdles and business considerations aside, cast your memories back to 1997 when Jobs shocked the world by teaming up with Gates. Remember that $150 million in non-voting Apple stock purchased by Microsoft, and patent cross-licensing deal? Anyone? Here's the Apple Press Release in case you forgot. Apple was in bad shape, and Microsoft was up for monopolistic practices. Jobs agreed to make IE the default browser for the Mac, and Gates agreed to give Office better treatment on the Mac platform.

    According to my vivid imagination, Jobs had a word in Gates' ear, saying words to the effect that Gates could crush Apple like a bug if he cared to, but then he'd have no real competitor to point at in defense of monopoly charges. Why not just let Apple have its little niche, whispers Jobs to Gates, and we'll agree not to get cocky and muscle in on your turf? The IE and Office deals merely consummated the marriage, as it were. Jobs is happy because Apple gets to survive, and Gates is happy because he has a harmless competitor that he can act all panikcy about.

    This is pure speculation on my part, of course, but if there's much truth in it, you can expect Apple to be totally uninterested in the OSX for PC idea. I'm thinking that both Jobs and Gates would still prefer a no-compete situation.

    --
    proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
  15. Re:Its going to be hard by GMontag451 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Everyone is saying that supporting all the hardware is going to be a real chore, but I disagree. I think the Darwin people will be able to take care of that. Darwin has already been ported to x86, and I think it supports a rather large set of hardware. All the hardware support, except for maybe video card specific graphics acceleration, would be done at that level anyway. Another option would be for Apple to sanction a line of existing or yet to be made x86 hardware that is MacOS compatible.

    The real problem porting would be Quartz. From what I understand, Quartz is rather heavily optimized for AltiVec. They might be able to help the x86 version along with better video card acceleration, but they would probably have to settle for slower speeds there anyway. The other problem would be Classic. If Apple even bothered porting Classic to x86, it would run incredibly slow because it would have to emulate a PowerPC as well as a 68K chip.

    However, a port to x86 would bring up some very interesting possibilities, such as a WINE type system for running Windows binaries, rather than a Virtual PC type full emulation. Or perhaps an end to this stigma MacOS has in the eyes of game developers.

  16. Cringley missed something. by _typo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What we need isn't Mac OS X for Intel. What we need are cheap PPC machines, with dull beige designs.

    That way dual-booting might actually be a nice thing. On one side you have linux, on the other you have OSX, a beautiful and powerfull OS, not some Microsoft piece of crap. Plus we get nice hardware. Altivec anyone?

    --

    Pedro Côrte-Real.

  17. How many CALs for OS X on Windows? by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Macs typically cost more than a Windows PC, but only up-front. With Macs, you can employ a pay-once, use forever school of thought. Not the case the other way around.

    Anybody who doubts me should consider the costs of:

    - Seperate Microsoft CALs for everything under the sun.
    - Down-time caused by virii, worms, and other compromise.
    - Bandwidth costs associated with said worms. (Anybody still paying a Code Red debt? Anybody go out of business because of it?)
    - Down-time due to hardware failure caused by use of cheap/shoddy/no-name components.
    - Hour wasted re-installing OS 2-3 times annually (3-5 times annually in an office/heavy use scenario)
    - Time wasted installing/finding/troubleshooting device drivers when installing hardware.

    I'm not saying there won't ever be a hardware problem or support issue to arise on a Mac, because there will be, but I'm saying there are a number of hidden costs in Windows PCs.

    When you factor in those hidden costs, and factor in the lowest bang for your buck prices at Apple in history, Macs become much more attractive for regular business users, not just web-designers, programmers, and graphic artists. Are you telling me that whatever Unix apps your company runs couldn't get ported to OS X or accessed as a web-application?

    Data-processing workers or secretarys could even live with sub-$1000 iMac systems. Beef them up with OS X and 512 meg of RAM and you've got more than ample resources to run Office v.X and email, which is about 99% of my mom's job (and since most people know as much about computers as my mom, that's a good measureing stick.)

    --
    Who did what now?
  18. Three things wrong by jpellino · · Score: 5, Interesting

    1. Supporting MacOS on god-knows-what hardware configs is a nightmare that would cripple it's reputation. When WIN doesn't work, users don't call the box maker, they curse the OS maker. Something about WIN made all of you stop using it - some of that was lack of HW toleration - did you go buy a new box? Nope - you switched OSs.

    2. Overpriced hardware is a myth bordering now on The Big Lie - go to Dell, Gateway, Compaq, HP and match any level of the new G4 iMac - then count yer change.

    3. Bob, it WOULD cannibalize hardware sales - Apple's largest edge is the OS/box integration, the Mac faithful would still buy the mac boxes, but your average new user would - and does - buy the rattiest box they can find - blind to the reality of the $599 specials. And good luck getting it to run reliably on some box that, as is typical, doesn't even know the names of the cards slapped in it.

    Sticking to HW/SW is not so bad - Apple knows that typical system turnover is about three years - would they rather rachet up to making box money or start tomorrow with a herculean effort at supporting all the hardware in the world to make license money? Think you can open a storefront and sell licenses? Or would you rather have a store that can sell someone a solution and make box money?

    Anyone know what portion of their business MS makes on licensing the OS alone? Remember, MS makes a lot of software - odds are Apple would not - this number needs to be known before convincing anyone that ramping up the software biz would be their saviour.

    I have an iBook2 with OSX because since day one, I open it up, it does everything I ask of it as a plain old person, teacher, writer, webmaster, admin, tourist, scientist, etc. I have yet to crash OSX after 11 months, anything I plug into it fits and works. It is an order of magnitude above any previous HW/SW I've seen or owned. I could run windows on it tomorrow.

    But I won't, and not because of religion. because of integration.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  19. Re:The Conclusion by TellarHK · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually, the way he most likely intended that wasn't as namecalling, but as a way to point out that one of the big differences between Apple and Microsoft is that Apple products have personality. There's just something about an Apple computer that makes you care about it a lot more from the moment you get it into your home.

    In November, I got an Apple G3 iBook. I love that machine. It does what I want it to, it does it smoothly, and with OSX it does it in a way that looks kinda cool. However, OSX isn't the fastest speed demon out there on a G3 processor, and I definitely need more RAM. But I haven't really regretted my purchase yet.

    On the other hand, I recently settled a nightmare of support with Best Buy in returning an IBM laptop. I hated that thing. It was a total waste of my money. In exchange for it, I brought home a Sony VAIO with a Pentium 4 1.6. I can't respect this machine as hard as I try. I've actually had dreams about returning it and getting something else. Not daydreams, full-on-REM-stage dreams. It was a downer when I got up that morning and realized it'd been over two weeks and I couldn't take it back anyhow.

    And this is a Sony, probably the closest thing to a "designer" line in the PC market.

    Apple machines have a soul, it's there. But it's next to impossible to find a PC with a Microsoft OS that has one. I've even got two 50Mhz Sparc machines that I keep running for no real reason here at home, but the perfectly good 1Ghz Athlon that the Sony supplanted is powered down, dejected. My machine for several years, if you count it from the oldest component. Yet I find it hard to bother messing with it anymore. My iBook on the other hand... Yeah. I like it a lot. Still.

  20. Not Overpriced Hardware, it's STILL Microsoft's! by BadlandZ · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I dissagree. The hardware isn't HALF the magic, it's ALL the magic. OS X is nice and all, but it's not going to make me buy ANY system, ever. I'm not worried as long as NetBSD, FreeBSD or Linux runs on the hardware, I'll take it if it's QUALITY.

    Look at the iBook. Small, light, preforms decent. Try to find a brand name x86 for the same money with similar equiptment. Same for the iMac.

    Yes, you can say that you can _build your own_ for less with x86. x86 to Apple is already comparing apples to oranges, so to further try to compare a home built to off the shelf brand name is not a fair comparison.

    SO, what's the REAL problem with APPLE?

    When you can get an iMac for $799, an iBook for $1199, and then have to pay $550 for MS Office X who wants to buy it? When you can get at least the basic MS Office bundled with almost all x86 brand name hardware for almost nothing!

    Don't bother arguing the Open Source office suites to me, I know. That doesn't change the fact that public perception is in the believe that you NEED MS Office to make a computer useful.

  21. 90s Apple Intel Port : The Star Trek Project by RobertFisher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It always amazes me how forgetful geeks are of their geek "history". Even events that happened scarcely a decade ago fade into the background, much less thirty or more years ago.

    It's time for a short lesson in Ancient Apple History, kiddies.

    It turns out Apple had seriously considered porting the MacOS to Intel hardware in a joint venture with Novell beginning in 1992, as part of the secret, so-called "Star Trek" project (although Intel's Andy Grove knew of and supported it.) It's all covered in detail in Jim Carleton's book "Apple" (yes, sometimes you have to actually read real books, people!), on pg. 166-180, and elsewhere.


    The goal was to put the Mac's "finder," which provides the distinctive look and fell of the Macintosh on the screen, onto an Intel-based computer...(Gifford) Calenda designated a former System 7 manager, Chris DeRossi, to head up Apple's side of the project. In a meeting with their colleagues from Novell, someone suggested the endeavor be called "Star Trek". "The idea beaing 'Boldly go where no Macintosh has gone before,' Rolander recalls.


    Note that this is all well before the release of Windows 95. One can only wonder what the outcome of a full-out battle of the Mac OS with Windows 95 on Intel boxes would have been, because the project was killed in 1993, shortly after a working prototype was developed. The ostensible reason given by Carleton was that the cost of development was too high : Apple had finite resources, and didn't commit a large enough software budget to handle both the release of MacOS for Power PC hardware and Intel simultaneously.

    Carleton goes on to criticize Apple for its short-mindedness in squandering a prime chance to compete for market share. However, the larger debate within Apple has always been whether to pursue the "high-right" strategy of selling small numbers of highly profitable boxes and hardware, or the "low-left" strategy of selling larger numbers of low profit boxes and hardware. The same debate occurred when Apple licensed its hardware in the late 1990s. The discussion ultimately comes down to this basic point.

    While I won't go into the merits of both sides of the argument (Carleton does in some detail), I will note that people don't run computers for the operating system : they run it for the applications. For the largest fraction of consumers, the single largest software application is Microsoft's Office. Microsoft now develops and sells Office for MacOS because it is a nice niche market, and doesn't directly compete with it's bread-and-butter Wintel market.

    However, would Microsoft develop Office for an Intel-based MacOS directly in competition with Windows? I would bet not. Think about what that means for an Intel-based MacOS.

    Best,

    Bob

    --
    Science, like Nature, must also be tamed, with a view turned towards its preservation.
  22. Re:Overpriced? by Segfault+11 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As for cost, the price of a high end Mac doesn't seem so unreasonable compared to similarly configured high end dual Xeon (and even Athlon MP) workstations. It may even come out favorably for Apple. The Apple entry level isn't so high, either. The cost argument has just been the most popular anti-Apple FUD lately.

    As for ease of use, I'm still not buying the idea that Macs are easier to use. There are ancient studies and a lot of unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence, but not much proof of anything. I think it's pretty much a wash, and probably a dead issue.

    As for speed, the G4 leaves me unimpressed. Altivec optimized binaries _do_ scream, but for >95% of the code you run, they don't seem any faster (MHz for MHz) than Intel's Pentium 2/3 generation. Binaries optimized for the P4's extended instructions, and account for the branch predictor that is woefully inadequate for its deep pipeline are also very fast, but in the PC world, this is considered a Bad Thing(R).

    Of course, that brings me to one of the more interesting concepts: there is a perverse relationship between the Macintosh and PC worlds. Hardware/software/design deemed good by one camp is considered bad for the other. All-in-one systems have never been popular PC designs, and so on.

    --

    I registered my hate for Jon Katz

  23. Re:Quantitative comparison of price by Verminator · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just did the same BTO at Dell.com... there seems to be a slight discrepancy here.

    I believe that Riskable made the same mistake I did initially... which was selecting a 15" CRT, rather than a 15" LCD.

    With the LCD, Dell's offering rounds out at $1289.00.

    I could locate no option to add FireWire.

    Now which is the bargain computer? Hmmm...

    --
    "The more corrupt the state, the more it legislates." - Tacitus
  24. Re:Quantitative comparison of price by MO! · · Score: 4, Informative
    You're still can't compare the two that way. You have to see the entire picture - not just the little details. The best analogy is what Apple itself uses - automobiles:


    Compare two cars: Ford Mustang vs. Jaguar XK Series (I'm not going into great detail on the specific options/prices)


    Both have 4 wheels

    Both have a stearing wheel

    Both have bucket seats

    Both have CD Stereo

    Both can drive you around town


    Price of the Mustang is dramatically less than the Jaguar - is the Jag overpriced? I would say not, the two cars are of completely different classes, and as such, cannot compare.


    What you pay more for in a Mac is the complete engineering and design. Some say ease of use, as well, but that is too subjective to quantify. The simple fact is I can attach/detach my USB camera, photo printer, scanner, MP3 player, mouse, etc. to/from my Mac without any bazaar configuration issues to deal with. A Dell, or any other x86 box, will have quite a different behaviour to the this practice. If you're using Windows, prepare for a blue-screen or two. If your using Linux/*BSD hope you have the correct kernel/module compiled and your USB subsystem doesn't panic when connecting/disconnecting devices rapidly (I have had panics in both Linux & FreeBSD due to a USB based KVM switch to share a single USB keyboard & mouse if I switch ports too quickly). This is what you pay for - a system that works consistently, without putting the user through hell just to get work done.

    --
    I AM, therefore I THINK!