Video Reactions to Apple's Intel Switch
Drew Mylrea writes "Here is a video of the reaction to the switch from Mac users at WWDC (small version). Has a somewhat revealing interview with Apple VP Phil Schiller regarding PC users putting OS X on generic PCs, and sums up the overall reaction to the news.(Requires QT 7.)"
Courtesy of App-- err, marijuana.
Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
Oh wait, this changes nothing.
Why not put up a torrent, save your server and your bandwidth?
Are you secure enough in your masculinity to run 'man touch'?
The video was well done, but really lacking actual information. Textbook example of a video blog. Video Reactions? I was expecting to see some interviews with _DEVELOPERS_ so we could get some insight about the thoughts of people that matter.
Are you secure enough in your masculinity to run 'man touch'?
That movie is a joke, it's not actual news reporting. How this made /. is beyond me. Anyone else notice it's from macteens?
Universtiy connection. Your tax dollars at work.
I am defenseless. Use your button. Mod me down with all of your hatred.
http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/preview/
Its avalible in beta to windows
..is how this guy's server is still maxing out my bandwidth while downloading the video, and yet we're more than two posts into the thread. Bravo!
I was hoping it was a bunch of apple fans going WHAT THE FUCK. No such luck. Just some lame video with a mac geek.
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
It looks like the videos require 7.0 codec. It was a clue from VideoLAN Client's crash message. I upgraded QuickTime Alternative to v1.50 beta 1. It worked. :)
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Statements like this are ridiculous. What, your Mac suddenly stopped working after WWDC? You can't browse the web or read e-mail anymore?
In the mid 90's I had owned a NeXT cube for four years when they announced that they weren't going to build hardware anymore, and that they were porting OpenStep to Intel, HP-PA, and Suns. The impact on me? I got a nice consulting job helping a company set up a bunch of new HP-PA OpenStep machines. When I added an Intel box to my home office network, I used NFS to share the fat binaries from my cube to the new machine, and everything "just worked". As a matter of fact, my old cube still works.
To me the spirit of Mac is in the design for usability of both the hardware and the OS. It has nothing to do with what CPU is under the hood. I'm amazed at how many people have their knickers in a knot over this.
is that it got me to upgrade to QT 7.
Dude,
I know you feel like Steve just killed your puppy, and I had the same reaction myself... in 1993.
I loaded up NeXTSTEP on a 486 machine, after getting pissed off over having to actually set a couple of jumper blocks on my SCSI card and motherboard, and fired it up. Once I got the mouse accelleration matched to the way I'd had it on my NeXT slab, and started using the thing, I realized that it was just like my NeXT machine.. But different somehow.. What was it? Oh, yeah! It was FASTER!
Really, if you're not writing assembly code, the flavor of the CPU in your Mac won't affect you any more than whether you have an ATI or NVidia graphics chip.
A Mac with an Intel CPU is still a Mac.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
As a matter of fact, my old cube still works.
;-)
So do my slabs. I still fire one up when I need to use Lotus Improv
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
The video quality was very good, most likely due to QT7. But the content was somewhat lacking. I assume the "sums up the overall reaction to the news" part of the summary was referring to the one guy he talked to?
I was expecting to see some shots of the audience as Steve made the announcement, to see the looks on everyone's faces (or maybe it was there, but too quick for me to notice).
Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together.
The video was a response to the lack of content at the WWDC in general. There wasn't much as far as press went, which was why we started with the whole courtesy of Apple thing. I /.ed it because of Phil's response (it seemed fairly obvious that Apple had braced for the fact that there were going to be people running X on their PC's). Hope that clears some things up.
As for the audience's reaction, I would actually say everyone was already braced for the news, when it hit everyone was ready to hear the plan. What was stunning was the lack of information during the keynote as to what the systems architecture would be like (not even spilling the guts on the OF / BIOS).
To answer questions about music:
1st song: Thomas Newman, Lemony Snicket - Drive Away
2nd song: Tan Dun, Hero - Gone with Leaves
Drew
what does not kill you makes you stronger.... or so says conan :-P
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
I liked Obi-wan's reaction, myself...
"You were the chosen one!! It was said you would destroy the Wintel, not join them!
You were supposed to bring balance to the Mac, not leave it in darkness! You were my brother Steve! I loved you! But I could not save you."
It was pretty harsh when Obi-wan cut off Steve's legs and left him on the lava, though.
Did you post that before watching the video?
Well, Mathematica isn't really a Cocoa app. It's a massive engine that runs on a *lot* of platforms, and Wolfram has been careful to keep it portable.
For most Cocoa apps, the port does come down to "Check the box, Build it" and you're done. There was quite a list of ported apps in the compatibility lab by the end of Monday, already.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."