Linux Journal Likes Mac OS X
sobchak writes "In an article from the latest issue of Linux Journal, Doc Searls and Brent Simmons review Mac OS X. It's a fair and balanced analysis, but is a definite thumbs up for Mac OS X from (yet another) respected Linux source. They stop just short of calling the new OS 'developer nirvana,' but did say, 'Last week we put Mac OS X on a Titanium laptop. It blew our minds.'"
It's nice to see, for a change, an article that doesn't pit Linux and OSX against each other, but instead focuses on how they can be complementary and what benefits there are for both camps. The article seemed very even-handed to me. It seemed to say "Linux is cool, OSX is cool, and the cross-pollination of advances in each is even cooler". Bravo.
There is a thin line between genius and insanity. I have erased that line. -- Oscar Levant
Since the server is currently curled up in the corner, whimpering and mewling, I can't cut-and-paste and must paraphrase from memory. But as I remember it, the best one-liner from this article went something like this:
;-) )
"When it comes to OS X and Linux, it seems that the market logic is AND, not OR."
(You may now begin the tired and meaningless flames about the difference between AND, OR, and XOR. No one will read them.
Since, to my knowledge, there is no Linux distribution with out of the box support for Sound, Airport, and the Radeon video card, how exactly did the install "blow their minds"? Perhaps they were blown away by the amount of tweaking they'd have to do to get everything working AFTER the install.
So far, I've tried 2 different distributions on my iBook2. Neither is able to make the internal airport card work via DHCP. There's a lot of promise for Linux on PPC hardware, but honestly, it's not ready yet unless you like tweaking. (Compared to, for example, RedHat on a Dell laptop, where everything "just works").
I am thinking about joining Apple Developer Connection for access to Carbon/Cocoa tech notes. Any feedback from other users?
As a former Amiga user, I can say that the single thing holding the Mac down is its hardware...not that the hardware is bad (far from it), but it's the closed architecture.
It's true that a closed architecture can have a signifigant advantage (I won't go over that argument), but the Mac is close enough to the PC in its price range and target audience that the comparison to PeeCee hardware is valid.
If a potential Mac user doesn't fit into a mold of what Apple has designed a system for, then that user will not find "value" in the Mac.
As well, hardware manufacturers (in general) have always treated non-PC hardware as an afterthought. I know there have been some advances here as well, but the fact still remains that support is generally less than stellar for anything not wintel.
There is also the problem of percieved cost with Mac vs. PC. Alot of ppl look at a cheap Mac and say, but this PC is so much cheaper. Apple has attempted to fix that with the iMac, but I don't see it happening...
Don't get me wrong, the Mac has a great OS, and I personally belive that the 68k and PPC processors are superior to x86 based processors, but this is the problem that Apple & the Mac community as a whole should be addressing.
This really should be on the front page of Slashdot.
Anyhow, it's nice to see anyone outside of Mac users discussing Apple products without a sneer (let alone the uber-geek *NIX crowd!). "Refreshing" doesn't even begin to cover how it strikes me.
Does anyone know how to make a "smug" face in ASCII?
You like your Macintosh better than me, don't you Dave? Dave? Can you hear me Dave?
[Aqua] includes variably translucent windows and other stuff Microsoft can copy later
omnia tua castra sunt nobis
I have OS X on my titanium. I agree with the reviewer
that is awesome.
You have the beautiful Mac interface plus the terminal
window to have fun on a normal UNIX.
Best of both worlds. I can use it and my gf can use it too.
The only glitch so far is there is no Java plugin
for OS X. So playing those Java games is difficult.
Apple/sun needs to solve this issue soon to allow the masses to use a Mac without any problem.
Maybe the product version of Opera might solve this.
- [localhost:~] rjt% uptime
) but also the impressive marriage of software and hardware. Apple's careful crafting admired by many in Aqua is evident in the sleek design of the Titanium's case -- even the packaging.8:00PM up 5 days, 23:20, 3 users, load averages: 0.76, 0.57, 0.54
Moreover, when I plugged in my older Sony DV8 video camera (having iMovie open) immediately iMovie reported "Camera Connected" and I was slurpping video instantly. Yes, I've done that on a PC -- October 1999 I spent the better part of a day making my Sony accessible over the fireware card I bought at Fry's. It was a nightmare of drivers and procedural steps to connect the wires and run the program. It never worked the first time and sometimes it wouldn't work. Having a machine crafted as an elegant and working unit is new to me.
I don't doubt Apple could have OS X run on Intel-based hardware -- afterall NeXTSTEP, the base of OSX in many ways, ran on x86 hardware eventually. I just don't think the experience would be as enjoyable.
-- @rjamestaylor on Ello
The only glitch so far is there is no Java plugin
What in the world are you talking about? OS X has great java support right out of the box. One of the first things I did after installing OS X was to try to compile some of my Java2 stuff. It worked w/out a glitch. I also use jEdit and ArgoUML frequently. Java support in OS X is the best I have seen on any platform.
t'nera semordnilap
Even Unix keyboards get stuck keys....
The Linux Journal dateline for Doc and Brent's online article is April 1, 2002. Heh, heh. Knew you were messin' with us!
(That damn broken ADB keyboard on my TiBook/OS_X couldn't stop me from compiling Open Source apps, other *nix source, Java 1.3 apps/applets/servlets, building MySQL DBs, JSPs, running a research Web site, streaming QuickTime, and building a datamining system. Could someone what I'm doing wrong?)
I've seen this exact same message posted at least once before here on Slashdot some time ago. Is someone just pressing the "Flame Apple" button in their reprogrammed Slashdot browser or something?
Grrrrr,
Jared
I always seem to find myself going back to linux. I love Apple's suite of developer tools that come with each mac they sell. However I find Project Builder to be sluggish. Reponsiveness of Aqua is also sluggish.
Alot of individuals claim that X11 is slow as molasses, i don't think they've ever used OSX (this is not a flame). When I'm debugging some code, i'm usually cycling through various windows and desktops and things happen quick. When I try to cycle through windows in OSX, Aqua takes can't compete with the performance I get with Linux (and X11).
I've also observed that applications in OSX use more cpu cycles then similiar applications (and even ports) on different platforms. Apple seriously needs to work on Darwin And Aqua, especially since Linux 2.6 looks like it will shape up to the pre-emptive king of all kernels.
I too joined the ADC as a student member. For your $99 you get a 10% to 20% once in a life time hardware discount (I got a 20% discount on my iBook in the UK), and all the developer goodness that they ship out. It's worth every penny if you're a developer and plan on getting a Mac soon.
get an old apple adb kbd, they have the control key in your spastic position and the caps lock where it shouldn't be.
slackware is for homos.
ADB was short for Apple Desktop Bus. what you people might refer to as PS/2 maybe (i really dont know)? ADB died when the macs added USB and lost their serial ports and floppy drives. anyway my point being if you say a new (usb stock) Mac has an ADB keyboard, you would get some confused looks from Mac users.
anyway to the point of your problem about events..... sorry, can't help.
The most interesting thing about the article is the way these unix hackers are swooning over the Mac usability, the very thing that many such folk have mocked for years. You plug something in. It just works. You unplug it. It still works. You change it all about. It still works.
If only the entire open source movement could have this sort of eye-opening experience, Microsoft would be running scared.
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I have a Blue and White G3, running at 333 Mhz. I love it. On the two hard drives on this machine I have OS X, SuSE 7.3, Mandrake (cooker), and Darwin installed on it.
The rundown:
OS X is lovely, but slow slow slow. Even upgraded to 10.1.2 it is still just too damn slow to use. Aside from that, I love the interface and the tools.
Darwin is just too close to BSD. I like to have good configuration tools (aside from vi). Very little documentation, and too much of a learning curve for someone who has more important things to do than configure and administer a BSD box. I admit that I haven't played with it much.
Mandrake is a bit rough around the edges (it is the cooker version, after all). It had the best install of any Linux distribution that I've ever used. I just love the bootloader that it installed. It is a two stage wonder program that lets me pick any operating system that I want.
SuSE 7.3 is a joy to work with. It is responsive, has great configuration tools, has almost every application that I could want, and is just fun to use. I had two problems with it. I can't adjust gamma with XFree 4.x (which is an XFree problem), and it can't run the built in firewire (well it can, but only in raw mode which doesn't do me any good). I solved the firewire problem by buying a cheapo pci firewire card, and it is up and running.
If I had a state of the art Mac I would run OS X in a heartbeat. On my G3, I prefer SuSE 7.3.
The middle mind speaks!
color me educated......
i didnt realize the laptops still used ADB these days...... that's pretty crazy.... the only laptop i have is an old powerbook 540c (that would be a pre-powerPC chip).
When Linus Torvalds writes `Frankly, I think it's a piece of crap', he is infact refering to the mach kernel, and not os x it self. Sure, he might think that os x is crap, but he does not say so in his book. Linus Torvalds is an avid propenent of micro kernels in general, so this comes as no shock.