Waccoon wrote:
Yeah, but how many hardware platforms does Linux support?
How many does it support
well? I have tried Linux on loads of systems and it is always a headache to get it working properly. I would prefer to buy in to a proprietary platform and OS and know that everything will work properly.
Waccoon wrote:
Can you run the latest OSX on a Mac that is 6+ years old?
Why would you want to?
Waccoon wrote:
Plus, high-level driver support is a joke. All you need is one bad driver to wipe out a system. Contrary to popular belief, Linux is no more immune to crashes than Windows if you have buggy drivers, and Linux has plenty of those.
My point exactly...
Waccoon wrote:
Never confuse "clean" with "sparse". Besides, Linux isn't clean by any standards. I'd be more fair to compare OSX to BSD, its parent. What has Apple done to improve BSD? Or, have they merely stripped out the stuff they think they don't need?
I fail to see the difference. The end result is a stable platform. Does it really matter exactly what they did to achieve that?
Waccoon wrote:
I tried to play a DVD, and I got one of those infamous "negative number" error messages. I tried to make a connection to my web server, and I got an error "-50". Great work on the usability front, Apple. Everyone knows negative numbers are the best way to handle unexpected results. It also locked up during the NFS connection, once I did figure out why I was getting "-50".
I really don't understand why you are getting problems like that. I have never had a message like that, and have been using Macs for several years.
Waccoon wrote:
I don't agree. Apple is far, far more aware of their brand image than most other PC companies. They can't do anything to the free software guys, but they get pissy when commercial companies move into their territory, even if it may increase hardware sales.
What can they do, legally, if a commercial entity decides to write and sell an OS for their hardware? My guess is nothing.
Waccoon wrote:
Define "IBM Compatible". ISA is long gone.
That's splitting hairs. I think you know full well that by "IBM Compatible" I mean any brand of PC which has evolved from the IBM model - IOW, any consumer board which will run Windows.
Waccoon wrote:
Modern PCs are based on open standards. It's relatively easy to get hardware documentation. Even Macs are just PCs in a different box, though there's more weird stuff going on at the firmware level AFAIK.
I don't think that's entirely relevant. The fact that PPC Linux runs on Macs means that it is possible to port an OS to Apple hardware. Why would OS4 be any different?
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moto