Google Gets Serious About Open Source Mac Projects
mjasay sends us a link to a CNet story, which begins:
"In the '20 percent time' that Google employees have to work on projects of personal interest, it turns out that an increasing number are spending time writing open-source projects for their Macs. Google has long had a fondness for the Mac, with upwards of 6,000 of its 20,000 current employees opting to use the Mac over Windows. It is in the 20 percent employee development time, however, where this statistic becomes interesting. At Google, development time translates into products. The more Mac-friendly employees, the more Mac-related development. The more Mac-related development, the more Google-sponsored Mac-based open-source code. As Google's Mac Developer Playground demonstrates, some of this code is quite interesting."
And Google is really evil, really .. :)
davecb5620@gmail.com
To me open source on a non opensource OS (apple has a patchey history with opening bits of OS) has always seemed a little contridictory and defeating the purpose of running a free or opensource system.
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers!
Seriously though, developers = applications. And more Mac developers means less Windows developers.
"Google has long had a fondness for the Mac, with upwards of 6,000 of its 20,000 current employees opting to use the Mac over Windows."
So you can only use these 2 operating systems @ google? I was expecting a bit more accuracy from the article...
What? Wait, 2 years? Come on now.
When you write a story about open source and Google on Mac, you don't miss QuickSilver.app which is a record breaking download which turned to open source and Alcor, the developer is a Google employee.
See the numbers just at its versiontracker page
http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/22549
Also here is its source along with various Alcor programs:
http://code.google.com/p/blacktree-alchemy/
There is no chance you miss a 200.000 downloaded (just a single site!), used by newbie to advanced developer profile utility. Unless you have never used Mac regularly and sit there and write a story about Google and Mac code of course. Another thing to include in that story is the fiasco of Google Desktop search which seriously made everyone paranoid with its method of install, method of running and the idea of shipping that Windows wonder to an OS which invented dynamic/extended search in its core.
Not true for "open source" OS X software. Developers on this platform are generally opposed to cross platform application development and Apple works hard to ensure that applications written to OS X will not easily be ported to other platforms.
If you disagree, can you name a single significant open source desktop application that originated on the Mac and is now cross platform (supporting Windows, Mac and Linux at least)?
This is why I consider the Mac OSS community to be a bunch of leeches. They've ported most open source unix applications to OS X but to date have given nothing useful back. The attitude seems to be that its fine for them to use stuff from BSD or Linux, but if you want to run their software, you should just buy a Mac. And that makes them a lot more like Microsoft than the person who asked the original question.
Can someone please tag this as "google comes out of the closet"?
Share the code that will hurt your worst opponent most! Pull the rug under him! :D
Steve Jobs and all the other corrupters of the free market should be in jail.
Sadly, greedy and selfish people run the roost, so, of course, there is no justice.
200,000 is the total of all downloads of all versions. The idea of VersionTracker is that it pushes new versions out to existing users; it is more relevant to look at the per version downloads (ca 14,000 for the latest version).
Namgge
Quicksilver is one of the first applications which easily updated itself from the beginning, without any hassle. If we had Blacktree numbers, it would turn out to be even more amazing.
The 200.000 downloads are coming from mostly people heard Quicksilver from a friend and used VT to download it and people who are Versiontracker Pro service users which auto updates via VT pro application.
Closed source, more expensive (than Windows and open-source operating systems) and more vendor lock-in.
It might make a decent desktop system but it's one of the most closed and expensive systems you can use. I don't really see the appeal to Google.
The appeal is the quality of the user interface and developer community as opposed to both of those on Linux.
Superior interface, mature developers vs Whatever bad interface you want to use, we got 10 of them and childish political programmers who think what software license one uses is the civil rights battle of our time.
Oh and users. As in Macs have more non-programmer users than Linux does.
When you look at it that way its not much of a contest.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
If Google is so big on the Mac, where is the Mac version of Picasa? It's been rumored for months. iPhoto's interface is poor by comparison.
Give me a damn google calendar sync. The free one (gcaldaemon) broke under Leopard and hasn't been updated. There are a few but the one I looked at sent the data to their servers and then used that to sync.
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
If google are going to start using Macs throughout their company I might start using Live.com
Only joking!
Hmmm, modding fail. Looks like the apple haters mod down as hard as the apple fanboys.
FTFY. HAND.
My 0.02 cents
Excel and Photoshop come to mind first... but there are numerous others as well....
As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
or does not have any RAW conversion software for any major digital SLR camera manufacturers?
Thanks but no thanks. With Mac OS X I get the best of both worlds (terminal, UNIX tools, VIM, gcc) but also Photoshop, Final Cut Pro, and Nikon Capture, and all my Epson printers work with no driver installations in Leopard.
As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
>with upwards of 6,000 of its 20,000 current
>employees opting to use the Mac over Windows.
Actually, Google developers have *Linux* boxes by default, so many of these people are opting for Mac over *Linux*.
Currently, there are way more development tools available for the mac than Linux. Things like textmate, araxis merge, DTrace, etc. Thus a lot of people, inside google and out, use mac workstations to develop software that gets deployed to linux servers.
In about 5 - 10 years apple will have 90% of the operating system market and will be up the same shit creek M$ is now and all the smug fanboys will have to find some other OS to chase. These things have their cycles.
"During My Service In The United States Congress, I Took The Initiative In Creating The Internet." -Al Gore
Post!
Photoshop isn't a need for the average desktop user. Manipulating RAW certainly isn't either!
However, Photoshop works on wine & Linux has plenty of tools to do RAW conversion for many popular cameras. See rawtools, for example.
You limit to significant open source programs that have to originate on Mac OS X.
That's right, let's compare vs. Linux (1991) vs. OS X (2001).
And, since you said, 'significant', this makes it a bit harder, as to be significant, something generally has to be around for awhile, reducing OS X's ability to produce something.
And guys like you crack me up, as, a bunch of significant open source programs did not originate on Linux - the Gnu tools, gcc, perl, Apache, X11, python, samba, java, and I'm sure the list goes on.
I couldn't find out where mysql started. But that's three letters out of LAMP that didn't originate on Linux. Linux could not have originated ON Linux by definition, and I'd have a hard time counting it anyway, since it owes heavily to Unix in design and implementation. (Note: this is not a knock on Linus, or Linux, just if you're getting picky, w/o Minux or UNIX linux would not exist.)
Apple has made contributions back to open source, the easy example here is KHTML which even ended up changing it's name to WebKit.
Apple has originated open source projects as well. Take a look at iCal Server, which is an open source, cross platform Calendar server written in python.
launchd is open source, and I vaugley recall that it inspired some changes in Linux booting.
Others have noted several user supplied open source projects.
It's hardly a one way street Open Source -> Apple.
When I had 10.4, I used to rely on quicksilver. Now that spotlight works so well on 10.5, I really have no need for quicksilver anymore. However, I don't really use it to its full extent so I'm sure there are plenty of people who find it useful on 10.5
Shut the fuck up you worthless cum guzzling sack of fuck. I hope you bleed to death while getting fucked with a spiked dildo.
Asshole.
Also, you're doing it wrong.
There is gSync, which works flawlessly for me and doesn't use a 3rd party server.
You might complain that it's not free or open source. That's true; however, it does work quietly in the background when you use iSync or sync an iPod in iTunes, and never nags you as far as I can tell (unless you sync from the app itself). So you could use it for free. It's certainly not open source though.
another Mac invented it... ...then why did they come second?
having something before Microsoft windows doesn't mean they invented it.
thx e
>Actually, Google developers have *Linux* boxes by default,
True, on the desktop.
>so many of these people are opting for Mac over *Linux*.
Not true, mostly. Most developers have Linux desktops, since most of us work on server-side applications. (Many of us have more than one, actually. I have an extra one that runs my group's continuous builds and tests.) But engineers who are working on Windows or Mac apps have a desktop box running one of those. Or maybe more than one if they work on multiple platforms. All of us also get a laptop if we want one. We can choose between a Mac or PC laptop. Most of the folks with PCs run XP on them, but some run various flavors of Linux. (I have an XP laptop because that's what I still use at home, mostly due to Photoshop and Lightroom. I dumped the Mach for NT 4.0 back in the days when Macs had no protected memory or hardware multitasking and crashed all the time. Next time I upgrade my home machine I may switch both back to the Mac.)
The reason I said "mostly" is that some people I know run their main monitors off of their Mac laptops and do remote X sessions on their Linux boxes so that they get the best of both worlds: the Mac UI and all the development tools on Linux.
One thing I love about working at Google is that they give us all the tools we need to do our jobs. You get all the computers you need, and primary workstations come with a 30" monitor or two 24" ones (your choice) and a ton of RAM. If you need another software package (say, an IDE) or more RAM, you just file a "ticket" asking for it, and it shows up on your desk a few days later. Most items don't need approval. I just asked for an 8 Gb RAM upgrade for one of my workstations recently (for analyzing insanely large heap dumps) and got it with no questions asked.
-- Laura
What's so special about this that it deserves a headline? Many Y! [last I heard well over 6000 at the company] have done the same thing as I know some Microsoft people have as well. Why don't you do posts about their accomplishments?
Well one reason that you may not have seen much Mac software porte elsewhere is that up until Mac OS X, the code was highly platform specific. It is not like the code was normal unix code that could be ported in c with a standard library. The code was mostly written in Pascal with very specific language bindings and may not have been convenient to port.
That's not a real OpenSource project, but started on the Amstrad CPC as a commercial app,
Incorrect. You're thinking of StarOffice, OO.org's commercial predecessor.
Saying Openoffice is not a real open source project because of StarOffice is like saying Firefox is not a real OSP because it came from Netscape - do you really believe that?
and was actually on the Mac before it was available for Linux.
No, you're thinking of Staroffice, not OpenOffice. The Linux version of Open Office was available over two years before the Mac version.
IOW - you're a complete dumbass.