I am posting this because a friend of mine was insulted and I really can't sit by and see that happen
by pezagent
This is the typical ignorance of the Apple iDiot.
Besides the fact that you just call a moderator an idiot, Admiral has more experience with more operating systems then you have seen. These operating systems run on a broad range of processor types. You are far from any position to call Admiral (or most anyone here) and idiot.
This is my opinion based on real world facts: Motorola sucks. The AIM aliance, responsible for delivering the G4 chip, is another one of those stupid blunders in Apple's history of blunders.
Porting Mac over to x86 is not a new idea. Spindler toyed with the idea for a long time, especially when Apple was looking for a new operating system. It couldn't be done, however, so the idea was trashed.
It is like you read Jim Carlton's book and now you think you can pass as a (former) Mac user. Sorry, I don't think so. You have no experience with Apple other than knowing that it is a different platform than what you use (no, I don't believe you use, have used or are ever going to use a Mac).
Points about the
Star Trek project, the OS ran on an Intel system while connected to a secondary system has a hardware debugger. It was pull before it could stand on it's own. (this is very much like version of Copland which could not run without a secondary system to help keep it up).
Now, since OSX is based on Unix, porting Darwin to x86 is easy as pie. Something Macintosh users may not be aware of yet (I was not aware until I became PC-savvy) is that the current G4 chip is holding back performance of Apple software.
Darwin was always designed for both PowerPC and x86 systems (it is based on a port of the Mach kernel that Next made back in 1992). That was never the problem, the problem is Carbon/Classic application environments. These are not going to port easily (sorry flyke, but porting part of the toolbox to run as a runtime environment in Windows is still quite different from making things like the Finder work in x86 on top of Darwin). I would point out that Apple was still using emulation in the Mac OS for 680x0 code all the way up to (and beyond) Mac OS 8.5 (remember that System 7.1.2 was the first System to run on PowerPC processors). Also it would not be a trivial port or makers of Carbon apps.
I would note here that Apple had an OS of Intel ready to ship (Rhapsody) and it was developers (like Microsoft, Adobe and Macromedia) that said they would not rewrite their apps for the new OS that helped kill it.
By the way Pez, have you ever seen an Apple OS running on an x86 system? I know Admiral has a version of Rhapsody for Intel based systems. I have have two PCs running Rhapsody right now (and a third Rhapsody system on a PowerPC processor). I would think that means you have
NO experience in this area and Admiral does. Who's the idiot in this situation? Aren't you actually speaking on a topic which you know very little about?
Lets continue to see just how little you know, shall we.
Another consideration is DDR ram, which is faster than SDRAM, and doesn't require the use of a Level 3 Cache, which also slows performance. Although DDR isn't a huge boost in performance speeds right now (an added 10% or so) it will evolve over time like everything else.
Wow, that has got to be the most erroneous statement I have read from you in the last... 30 seconds.
Lets look at what RAM and cache really are. RAM is formatted by an operating system to store active data of running processes. This formatting is unique from OS to OS, as each manages memory in different ways. Cache is designed to store information for the processor that it may need quick access to. The quicker the access and the larger the memory (to a point, the processor needs to manage its own memory also, and each processor does that differently) the faster it can do work on common instructions. The G4 has both an on chip L2 cache and in some cases an off chip (with dedicated bus) L3 that can have a maximum of 4 MB of memory. IBM's POWER4 processor can handle up to 32 MB of cache (which is part of the reason that even at 1 GHz, it is far faster than anything Intel or AMD are working on).
So, DDR RAM is not a replacement for a processor cache system, and it can not effect performance nearly as much as cache because the information stored in it is still subject to the constraints of the OS.
This was the main reason I decided to get off the Mac platform. As much as I can appreciate G4 technology, it's not making my computers any faster.
Again, you have never been or are you ever going to be (I hope) a Mac user. You don't know enough about the G4 to appreciate it, so stop with the troll tactics.
Apple (L)Users have to stop this technoloyalty--having an Intel or AMD chip in your case will be no different than having a G4 or G5 in your case. The only difference will be benefits to you, the user, as the costs of Apple products would decrease signifigantly.
Why? The end user is going to have to replace most (if not all) their apps. Is that a benefit? And where did you get the idea that PowerPC processors are any more or less expensive than those from Intel or AMD? It is a conversion, which is never easy (which is why Microsoft had to finally force people to move to the NT line of operating systems).
by pezagent from another thread
That's just a fact, and we can debate opinion in here forever, but I'm here in New Zealand, and let me tell you something: Lord of the Rings wasn't "made with a Mac." That should tell you somethin' right there--the industries that are still using Windows platforms aren't about to switch over because of a few clever ad campaigns. They need a reliable, dedicated, and FAST system in place, and Mac still isn't ready to deliver. Why? Becuase the damn chips are too slow.
And the misinformation just doesn't stop! Where in the world did you get the idea that
Lord of the Rings was made on a Windows system? Lets look at the list of systems used for the films so far: 150 SGI Octane Workstations, 80 SGI 330 & 230 workstations, 2 SGI Origin 2000 servers, and a renderfarm that used 192 SGI 1200 & 1100 servers. Wow, that looks like the operating systems being used are IRIX and Linux... no Windows there. Get the information right before posting it.
This one has really got me stumped (re: Apple's move to Intel). I'm trying to think of a company that I could draw some CBR from, but I'm coming up blank.
Maybe I can help. NeXT ported NEXTSTEP to Intel systems, within two years NeXT hardware sales were dead. Be ported the BeOS to Intel systems, Be is now out of business other than a suit against Microsoft. Sun ported it's Solaris OS to Intel systems, they announced that they were not going to release any more Intel versions after Solaris 8 (Solaris 9 has been out for a while now for SPARC only). Apple maked both Mac and Intel versions of it's Rhapsody OS, developers write mainly for the Mac version and Apple kills the Intel version completely because of the
Applications barrier (the Mac version becomes Mac OS X Server 1.0).
And considering that Steve Jobs has already watch one of his companies die after a move to x86, why do you think he would do it again?
And so comments direct to me...
You're kidding me, right? (re: OS/2 Warp) Why don't we just bring back the Commodore 64 while we're at it.
So, I guess you have no experience with other operating systems... this is not surprising from your other posts. IBM still makes OS/2 Warp (I believe the latest version is 4.0) as an Enterprise solution. And if OS/2 is so behind the times, then you must not think highly of the Windows NT line of operating systems (including Windows XP) which is based on the OS/2 kernel that IBM and Microsoft co-developed.
I think Microsoft has more control over the computer world than Office. Bill Gates isn't rich because of Office... (followed by profanity, and rambling)
Microsoft's current primary control tactic is their document formats. The main reason Apple is still going strong is that there is a version of Office for it. Like it or not, as long as the formats for Office documents are limited to Microsoft products, Microsoft can block almost any other OS.
I don't expect you to know about such things (and from what you have said so far, you really don't know about this type of stuff), but document formats are as big a barrier as applications for operating systems. Microsoft's current push for MS-HTML is designed to force other systems that can't run IE (or the latest versions) into a second class status. The internet was created on NeXT computers, NSCA Mosaic was made for Unix and Macs before there was a Windows version (and then Microsoft bought it to make IE), but now Microsoft is working to make the internet a Windows only domain. That is the sickest thing of all the things that are happening today. Proprietary formats on the internet to limit access and force people to use MS products.
It has been nice visiting, but someone should really show this troll the door. It isn't funny when they become abusive (or really don't know what they are talking about). This guy is just Manic all over again.
Bye all.
