Master Kenzo wrote:ATI has a driver called "fglrx" for linux on their site for Radeon and other chipsets, but it required a kernel recompile.
Master Kenzo wrote:But enough of me...onto Linux. Mandrake 10 is awesome, (I've always had problems with Debian - incompatibilities between programs, but it's just because I'm stupid ) Latest software (March 3 I believe) and really easy to set up.
Master Kenzo wrote:Then a click (if you installed it right ) and a nice graphical login screen. Log in, and you get a desktop that looks nothing like Windows. It takes a little while to get used to - and the console!
BishounenCookie wrote:Au contraire, my friend. As a typical desktop user, I find that there is almost always at least one suitable replacement for my Windows ap for GNU/Linux. If not, there is always Wine. ^_^
Technomancer wrote:Is that an emulator or do you mean to say that OS debates really do drive a man to drink? ]
'Wine' is an acronym for something like "Wine Is No Emulator," but an emulator is exactly what it is, actually. It will run alot of Windows programs suitably, provided there are not too many complicated DLL dependencies and such. There is even a variation called WineX which can tackle DirectX games like Warcraft 3.Technomancer wrote:2)The main application that I use (MATLAB) has "issues" with Linux, something that I found out the hard way once. I could switch to IDL, but I'd loose a lot of the functionality that I need for my current project. In any event, MATLAB\SIMULINK is the industry standard in my field so I'm pretty much stuck with it, and thus Windows.
Haven't heard of that application. But I suppose when you're stuck with windows, you're stuck with windows.Technomancer wrote:It'd be nice to have access to Linux, but at the moment it's not worth the hassle. BTW, has anyone ever read Neil Stephenson's "In the Beginning Was The Command Line?"
BishounenCookie wrote:I'd like to give mac a shot once.
martinloyola wrote:The thing I don't like about Mac hardware is the mouse, one button yuck!!
BishounenCookie wrote:'Wine' is an acronym for something like "Wine Is No Emulator," but an emulator is exactly what it is, actually. It will run alot of Windows programs suitably, provided there are not too many complicated DLL dependencies and such. There is even a variation called WineX which can tackle DirectX games like Warcraft 3.
madphilb wrote:Actually, if I'm remembering this correclty, Wine is literally "WINdows Emulator," it acts like the Windows OS so you can run Windows programs on a Linux system. "implementation layer" may be the technical term for it, but it's essentially just an emulator, I think the main difference is that it's only emulating the OS, not the CPU itself.
Wine is an Open Source implementation of the Windows API on top of X and Unix.
Think of Wine as a Windows compatibility layer. Wine does not require Microsoft Windows, as it is a completely alternative implementation consisting of 100% Microsoft-free code, but it can optionally use native system DLLs if they are available. Wine provides both a development toolkit (Winelib) for porting Windows sources to Unix and a program loader, allowing many unmodified Windows binaries to run on x86-based Unixes, including Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris.
As Wine's name says: "Wine Is Not an Emulator": Wine does not emulate the Intel x86 processor.
Myth 1: "Wine is slow because it is an emulator"
Some people mean by that that Wine must emulate each processor instruction of the Windows application. This is plain wrong. As Wine's name says: "Wine Is Not an Emulator": Wine does not emulate the Intel x86 processor. It will thus not be as slow as Wabi which, since it is not running on a x86 Intel processor, also has to emulate the processor. Windows applications that do not make system calls will run just as fast as on Windows (no more no less).
andyroo wrote: WINE (for x86 *NIX systems) is exactly what shooraijin said it is a few posts up. It isn't a true emulater because it isn't emulating a CPU along with the software, but is only mimicking the Window's API. The Wine developers have set up a Wine Myths page for that sort of question at http://www.winehq.com/site/myths . I hope that answers some questions.
andyroo wrote:I was wondering how they were going to do the OS X port of WINE. I think that I've got bochs somewhere on my laptop-- never used it much.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 59 guests