QEMU Accelerator Achieves Near-Native Performance
An anonymous reader writes "QEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator which achieves a good emulation speed by using dynamic translation. Its sporting a new module called the 'Accelerator' which can achieve near native speeds, and currently runs on Linux 2.4.x and 2.6.x kernels. This means you could theoretically run Windows (or another OS) on a Linux machine at near native speeds without buying a commercial emulator. The catch is that although QEMU is released under various open source licenses, the Accelerator uses a free (as in beer) license because the module is a 'closed source proprietary product.' Fabrice Bellard does mention that he would consider open sourcing the Accelerator under certain conditions."
perhaps god is trying to tell you something.
This directly breaks the spirit of open source development. I understand he might want some money, but as long as I don't see a FreeBSD port he can take his proprietary code and stick it up his ass. If he had asked for help coding the stuff I would have joined.
Glass, t0tal pwnag3
hope this will be treated with caution until it can be ascertained to be fully legitimate.
Oh yes, because the world does this with all proprietary offerings, like, er, say, Windows and Office and, well, most software one might care to mention.
This is good software. It doesn't need idiot scaremongers like you detracting from it.
iqu >:|