Slashdot Mirror


New Competition For CodeWeavers: Aclerex

Shisha writes "Linux Planet is running a story about a new Wine offspring. Basically the Canadian company Transgaming decided, that their version of Wine, WineX, is good not only for running games, but for other Windows programs too. So why not try to sell it? For marketing reasons they're selling it to corporations under the AclereX name. Their website has a datasheet with more details about what they are actually offering. Unlike CodeWeavers, they don't seem to be targeting individuals at all, they'd rather sell to corporations. So no downloads available, sorry. Still it could speed up Wine developement, which is always good. Wine Weekly News discusses some of the reactions of the original Wine authors."

6 of 218 comments (clear)

  1. huh, isn't transgaming still not giving back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Last I heard, they still hadn't kept their promise to give back to wine stuff they did...

  2. Re:I don't understand. by HermanAB · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are many reasons to use wine. In a business case for instance, a company may have all applications for Linux, except for one or two tax or payrol related thing. In cases like that, wine is a good tool to facilitate migration to Linux.

    --
    Oh well, what the hell...
  3. Re:I don't understand. by AvantLegion · · Score: 4, Insightful
    >> Doesn't encouraging WINE use prevent or at least slow the development of native versions of applications for Unix/Linux?

    No. Tiny market share prevents/slows development of native versions of applications for Unix/Linux.

  4. Re:I don't understand. by nmos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Doesn't it keep people from quickly adopting a different and open application that runs natively?

    Lets say we have 2 users, A & B and both would like to move to an Open Source operating system such as Linux however:

    A: Has 1 Win app that they MUST be able to run for one reason or another and is able to run it perfectly under Wine so they they switch to Linux and open source for everything but that 1 app. When it comes time to acquire new hardware or apps. they are asking hardware and software venders for Linux support and are investigating open source applications.

    B: Has 1 Win app that they MUST be able to run for one reason or another and is NOT able to run under Wine so they they keep using Windows. When it comes time to acquire new hardware or apps. they are asking hardware and software venders for Windows support and are ignoring open source applications because they have no experience with them.

    Which one of these users do you think is adding to the demand for OSS software in general and Linux in particular?

  5. You're plugging a closed source product... by Svartalf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Much of what Transgaming is selling is proprietary. Perhaps legitimately so (like the copy protection support...)- but it is still closed source all the same. In some areas, they're ahead of WINE, in others, they're behind.

    Keep these things in mind when you think about all of this, though...

    They were going to only go after the stuff that wasn't getting active ports and actually encourage native porting work. They turned around and came up with that bastardized "port" of The Sims and Kohan- which had issues out of the box in both cases. The Sims WAS going to be a native app and Kohan WAS a native app that had lost the porting company (Timegate got the rights to the Loki port, but they didn't want to wait and find out it's fate- they went with Transgaming.).

    They were going to only work at making Linux gaming possible. Now, they're making game "ports" for Windows and MacOS of console games, but NO Linux versions of the same.

    Would YOU trust this bunch?

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  6. Re:Speed up Wine development? Are you sure? by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 4, Insightful
    pressure people releasing their software under a free license

    Then it sounds like the Wine project was not 100% comfortable with the BSD license in the first place.

    If you license BSD, you should accept that people may take your code and close it. That's what the truly free software is about.