MorphOS 2.5 Released, Supports More Old Macs
An anonymous reader writes "The MorphOS Team has released version 2.5 of its PPC computer-only operating system. The new version extends its support of the PPC Mac range to include the eMac, which was the 2002-2006 Mac model consisting of a CRT monitor and computer in a single housing. MorphOS previously and continues to support the PPC Mac mini, as well as the Pegasos and Efika niche computers (all discontinued but available second-hand). MorphOS includes a web browser and TCP/IP stack and a few traditional baseline OS-associated apps among its features. Further software is available from a range of online repositories. MorphOS 2.5 comes on a bootable 30-minute demo live CD ISO which may also be installed. The ISO is available for free download by anyone. The 30-minute limit is removed by online purchase of registration/key file which is available for a limited period for the sum of 111 euros to celebrate the launch of this version."
Morph from Orph?
It's free and probably works with more programs.
This is quite clearly a sales pitch - am I the only reader left thinking, 'well so what'?
Its all well and good keeping old computers running (providing the OS is secure enough), but I for one feel that this is neither news for nerds, nor stuff that matters.
And I'm not even clicking the link to vindicate the posting, click-through-wise.
111 Euros means about $2000 in US dollars because of the weak US currency.
Why pay for this OS which is likely worth more than the Mac it is running on as opposed to a BSD or YDL? It isn't like developers are going to write applications for an OS for a market segment of computers with no upgrade path.
This "story" is an ad, with promotional language in the slashdot summary like "available for a limited period." The OS isn't open source. Looks like someone knows how to game the firehose.
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I've never heard of this before. It sounds stunningly retarded. It's not going to make the freetards happy, because it's not completely open source. And it sounds damned expensive, considering it's basically a crippled OS. Why on earth would I use this????
Aw man, I was hoping for a PPC toaster OS.
Seems like a bit much for a very limited operating system that only works on PPC architecture. Can anyone explain why this would be attractive at that price?
Facts have a liberal bias.
For $150-ish dollars the same price as the OS, you could easily buy a cheap, second-hand x86 computer and do more. Or heck, why not just get PPC versions of Linux?
Unless MorphOS has some killer feature like the ability to emulate Windows perfectly, or something that Linux doesn't have, I'm not seeing the point in wasting hundreds of dollars on software that nothing really runs on.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
Now, I'm not trying to troll here and I genuinely loved the Amiga, back in the day, but why on earth would anyone want to run an Amiga-compatible OS these days?
Can the modern Amiga OS run old Amiga software? Could I really fire up my old copy of Alien Breed, Titus the Fox or some of the old mega demos?
What can you do on an Amiga compatible OS that can't be done more easily and cheaply with, say, Linux or even OS X? I'm asking this because I'm genuinely interested...
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http://lmgtfy.com/?q=111+EUR+in+USD
Then again, it's closed source, pricey and runs Amiga apps.
Any suggestions for Linux on G3?
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I have an old 15" PowerBook G4 with 512 MB of RAM, dial-up, WEP wireless, etc.
What runs well on it since its Mac OS X 10.2.8 and softwares are outdated these days.
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Yea, I maintain a few FreeDOS systems that virtualize Novel PCDOS and Caldera Dr DOS for various processes. They surprisingly run much faster and more efficiently for single tasks of website CGI processing offloaded to them from the main servers. Have had Linux and XP systems that crash and burn under load and the sites I run are switched into a lower resource export to the web while these FreeDOS CGI servers keep chugging along.
With the nature of MorphOS it can greatly pick and choose features induced or parallelized from Open Source without actually being liable to GPL. After all, the technical specifications of hardware disclosed by Open Source or GPL is sometimes easier to re-implement when all the difficult discernment re-implements it in an actual tool on Linux.
So, poor (!) Xerox, IBM, Microsoft has to buy (possibly bid) ads from huge ad networks to show ads on /. but some no name, fantasy OS company can buy stories.
That is what you mean right?
An implemented not derived, but somewhat induced to develop in parallel with a competing product is how MorphOS could inter-operate with Linux.
Those all run great. I still run an fairly old version of Ubuntu on my B&W G3 tower. I have OSX 10.3 on it too and it runs okay, but Linux runs circles around the thing. Gentoo is a better choice for PPC these days because the ports.ubuntu.com stuff is not as well supported as the standard ubuntu stuff, back when I install the PPC version it was one of the main supported architecture for ubuntu. There is even Fedora Core for PPC, it's a little tricky to install but once it is on there it runs like a champ.
But really all you need is some Linux distro that you like that also supports PPC, X11 and all that runs very nicely on PowerPC, and Linux tends to scale to the low end better than OSX and Windows so you'll have a pretty comfortable experience. I have a 1.6Ghz Atom and an 800MHz G3 (got an overclock chip in it) both running Ubuntu with some 2D video acceleration going on (ATI Rage128 in the G3, GMA950 in the Atom) and the G3 feels quite a bit snappier. And the load times when I ran a stop watch was 10% faster for the small apps and 20% slower for the big ones, I don't like waiting for a simple Xterm to load so it's worth it to me. I don't really run OpenOffice or the GIMP that much on a low end system anyways.
You can usually pick up a Powermac B&W G3 in the paper or local shop for around $50. The built-in IDE controller has issues with anything bigger than a 120GB device. But there are PCI slots and it is possible to boot off them if you pick the right controller. I have a SATA card in mine and just boot off a 40GB drive and mount two 1TB SATA drives for storage. There is a G4 500MHz upgrade for the old B&W but it's not worth it, there is a 1GHz G3 upgrade for about the same price which is a much better deal as it is faster and more stable than a G4 in that system.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
What? Apple doesn't support your eMac 4 years later? Quick, scoot down to Best Buy and pick up an iPad. You can buy the replacement iPad 2G next year and the iPad 3Gs the year after.......
I now have an expensive TiTanium slab that boots to a DOS prompt but NO GUI.
I'd be plenty pissed off if I didn't have other hardware available. As it is, I'm merely peeved.
OS X 10.5.x is the end of the line for Apple's support of the PPC anyway.(I thought development on Ubuntu PPC was stopped a few years ago.)
If you know of somewhere I can download Linux for PPC I'd appreciate an email charles [at] msbpodcast.com
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One situation where the extremely low overhead and high level of optimization of MorphOS comes apparent is when playing media files on hw with limited resources. Try for example playing a x264/720p stream in Mac OS X on a Mac Mini G4. Then do the same under MorphOS on exactly the same hardware, and spot the difference!
Seriously, why would anyone pay to use this limited garbage when they can install a full-featured Linux distribution for free?
Biggest waste of money I've ever seen in my life to try to prolong the life of outdated Macs, and only 2 models are supported.
The other computers I've never even heard of. Even opening up these two Mac models is a nightmare to behold. The eMac is a ball of wires and the mini is like
a hand-held cassette recorder. Don't waste money on this old hardware anymore, UPGRADE!
I did a comparison between MorphOS & OSX Tiger...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvmWIqqRR-g&fmt=18
gibs
Ubuntu on PPC is "community supported" as opposed to officially supported by Canonical. I'm not sure that it makes that much difference in practice; I suspect that many of the fixes that you'd care about are applied to upstream (the Linux kernel) and end up working on both platforms equally well.
You can get it here:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PowerPCDownloads
Alternately you can install plain-Jane Debian instead of Ubuntu, which is supported on PPC to the same extent as it is supported on any other platform. Arguably this is equal to Ubuntu's "community support," but if it helps to not feel like you're on a second-tier platform, that might be the route to go.
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