Mandrake Linux 8.0 Final Released For PPC 178
rstewart points to this press release, writing: "Mandrake has released version 8.0 final for the PPC architecture. Now Mac users have a choice of distributions between Mandrake and Yellow Dog. Now if only we could easily buy parts and build them cheap in our basements. " And PPC choices already include SuSE, LinuxPPC, Debian, NetBSD and more.
Where is RedHat? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Where is RedHat? (Score:1)
Who cares? Intel is big enough. (Score:3, Insightful)
Regardless of whether or not RedHat is doing it, or YellowDog, or Mandrake, Linux itself is still being ported to yet another architecture.
That's good news, no matter how you look at it.
Redhats hands are full (Score:1)
Later
-The Hog
Re:Where is RedHat? (Score:1)
Re:Where is RedHat? (Score:1)
Re:Where is RedHat? (Score:1)
-Nano.
Nice ! (Score:2)
Portability is one of the major strength of free software.
Re:Nice ! (Score:1)
Re:Nice ! (Score:3, Interesting)
-/.ers love PPC hardware and would love to see more of it
-Not every Mac user is a six-colored-fire-breathing zealot. The ability to run something other than MacOS on Mac hardware is a selling point (a weak one, yes, but still a selling point).
On top of that, the PowerPC chips in theory are better than the Intel chips -- less power usage, more orthogonal instruction set, and a few other niceties. The only problem with them is Motorola.
/Brian
The next big question is... (Score:1)
If it does, I definetly know what my dream machine is.
Any owners out there wanting to mess up their machines?
Re:The next big question is... (Score:1)
Re:The next big question is... (Score:1)
Re:The next big question is... (Score:1)
Re:The next big question is... (Score:1, Informative)
Not for newbies (Score:4, Insightful)
There are just too many flaky things needed on various systems... whereas with RedHat 7.1 it was boot off the cd and you're done.
I know someone will post about how the cds are bootable on Mac, too, and they are, but it just isn't the same. On the old world macs you have to make a fake system folder on a partition... it's a big old mess.
Newbies have enough to worry about without throwing PPC specific issues into the mix - if you have experience, however, PPC is a nice platform.
Depends on their expectations (Score:3, Interesting)
I do agree that it may not be the easiest platform to start out on with Linux. It is much easier than Alpha or Sparc though; you've got to give it that. It's not terribly difficult to master. You just have to be Linux-competent enough to be able to compile your own software sometimes. You also have to understand that not everyone programs in a portable way. You also have to understand that PPC development is usually 2nd priority or lower for many developers. Not everyone understands this. Also not all hardware works in PPC Linux variants. That's a pain. Personally I have numerous PPC-based servers (pre-G3 Macs mainly) that run flawlessly with LinuxPPC. Then again I'm also not a newbie. :-) YDL and LPPC have made great strides towards making PPC Linux very user friendly, at least on default installations. They sure beat RedHat to the punch on that one.
What?!? Alpha Hard??? (Score:1)
WTF? Figuring out SCSI chains and figuring out obscure SRM firmware commands were part of what made installing Linux FUN on alpha!
Oooh how I long to install Milo again.
On a more serious note, FreeBSD was a dream to install on the old Alpha Stations. Muuuuuuch easier than installing Linux.
Incidentally, I've found OpenBSD easier to install on PPC than Linux on PPC. YMMV.
-Peter
Re:Depends on their expectations (Score:1)
However, I hear that multibooting to other OSs on the PPCs is easier nowadays, although I have yet to try it out.
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
Linux on PPC might be extremly complicated and mind confusing to install, but this is the reason why linux newbies should solely use linux on PPC. The steep learning curve will grow their brain and their linux powers making them Überadmins in no time.
Everything that doesn't kill us, make us just stronger.
And, in fact, you must agree that, unless there are some really rare and strange circumstances, linux doesn't kill you, even on a PPC.
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
PPC Based linux' ARE for newbies (Score:1)
Re:PPC Based linux' ARE for newbies (Score:1)
* new and old world roms the require different boot loader installations
* Variating mac hardware without support for certain features (For example, later model ibooks (pre ib2) with no SOUND support, no touchpad tap support)
* Lack of PPC specific binaries which means you have to compile most software from source and THEN deal with compiler specifics that were meant for intel the intel architecture.
And i wont even mention the loss in performance for software packages that were optimized on intel platforms that you (usually) get because of hacks and tweaks you have to do to even get it to RUN on your mac platform. Now your saying a linux newbie should have deal with all that initially? I think not. Dont get me wrong, everyone's different and some people enjoy different levels of punishment but personally i can honestly say that if i were initially exposed to a PPC version of linux (years ago when such a thing was virtually non existant no less) i would have been extremely discourged with the linux OS. Im not knocking PPC linux at all but speaking strictly from my experience trying to get it to run on my own mac hardware (which i managed to do succesfully after much research and fiddling, and am quite pleased
Re:Not for newbies (Score:3, Interesting)
Despite the fact that the most popular PPC distros are Red Hat based and use rpm there are very few .ppc.rpm files avaliable on freshmeat. People with more *nix experience may prefer to compile and install themselves, but newbies almost certianly don't. Add to that the fact that anything that avaliable for Linux in binary only form (Loki games, browser plugins etc.) isn't avaliable for PPC and you leave the former Mac user with the impression that Linux is a very limited operating system.
Re:Not for newbies (Score:2)
What newbies are going to be getting packages from freshmeat, though? There are plenty of systems, x86 and PPC, that are installed with a variety of packages off the installation disk, and left at that.
Sure, there might be some problems with some hardware, but you find the same thing with x86 machines as well. I tried installing RHL 6.2 on a Dell PIII, and I still haven't figured out how to get X to start up in any mode larger than 320x256 or something ridiculous like that. Plug'n'Play, yeah right. Installing LinuxPPC on an APS Mac clone (equivalent of a Starmax machine), the only problem I had was that it wouldn't use the 2nd video monitor.
I do think that the initial bootstrap solutions to the New World architecture machines weren't very good for machines that weren't going to be dual-booted; having to install a Mac partition in order to boot Linux isn't nice. However, Quik still works on New World machines, as far as I know, and is fairly easy to use (certainly no more difficult than configuring Lilo)
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
Re:Not for newbies (re installation) (Score:4, Informative)
Reformat your hard drive. You need an hfs partition (not hfs+) to install the boot loader on. This is a good place to put OS9 if you want to run Mac on Linux.
Install Linux. This includes setting up your swap, root, and other partitions.
Install yaboot (a lilo like program) onto the hfs partition. Configure yaboot. No worse than lilo
Set up the open firmware to boot lilo (not too hard), or set up the open firmware for dual boot. Dual booting is the hardest part, although there are some tools that automate the process. I dual boot so I can play with OS X. Mac on Linux meets all of my OS9 needs.
The distributions keep getting better and better. GCC is a general purpose compiler, so it generates general purpose (real slower) code on almost every platform. I've been using some flavor of PPC Linux for almost 2 years now, and find the platform to be very mature.
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
Newbies shouldn't have to worry about x86 specific issues either. You are likely to run into just as many problems with your x86 depending on the hardware in your computer.
Re:Not for newbies (Score:1)
I've never had a problem with installing Linux on a Mac, and, in 1998, I was a newbie dropping himself into a pretty archaic Red Hat installer, and I still understood what I was doing (even got the hang of pdisk after a couple of tries). I think stating that Mac Linux distros aren't for newbies is not making an educated satement...
Re:Not for newbies (Score:2)
The bulk of the problems are after installation, though. Newbies usually aren't experienced compiling software. If it's not included, or available as an PPC .rpm, they're out of luck.
Even if you can get the source, sometimes it doesn't work right due to PPC specific issues. It's hard enough learning to acquire, compile, and install software on x86, let alone on PPC when you might do everything "right" but something still doesn't work.
this is great! (Score:2)
Linux already has more market share than MacOS, but what a great victory it will be when Linux has more market share among Apple users than MacOS does!
"Nude" MAC? (Score:2)
Re:"Nude" MAC? (Score:1)
However the point should be made that current Macs (and many old ones) can now boot straight into LInux without entering MacOS at all.
Re:"Nude" MAC? (Score:2)
By the same token Gateway (or Dell, etc.) is selling you a Unit of one working MS machine. The price difference is what it (theoretically) costs them differently to bundle it with NT/9x/ME/W2k/etc.
The only real difference is that if you want to build your own Intel machine you can buy the parts and assemble it yourself (because the industry commoditized) which also entails the OS, versus PowerPC machines which have much few choices, and include an OS bundled. Of course the higher prices you pay for a Mac can be justified by a stable PC, good support, compatability, etc....
But you're right, Comparing Windows to Mac licensing isn't very useful (g-d help for saying this, but...) with Windows, you have a choice.
;)
(lots of different flavors of MS-OS, build your own, buy a 'naked' PC and install BeOS/Linux/Solaris x86/etc)
Re:"Nude" MAC? (Score:1, Troll)
Well, I guess this was just someone trolling, but oh well:
I'm sorry, but a mac is no more stable than a PC. in fact, much less so. There are a few models on the Apple product line that are stable as hell, and then you have a few that are just plain shit.
Then there is dell and gateway's managed platforms. which pretty much blow apple out of the water in stability, performance, and price.
And now that you mention support, you can pretty much mark Apple off your top 3 when it comes to that. If you consider support to be > 1week turnaround times on repairs, $50 CC charges to schedule a WARRANTY repair with their tech support, etc, then i guess you can say Apple has it all. But they cant even touch the repair speed of dell and gateway. Not only that, but they break less often (its called testing, something apple doesnt do much of. want proof? Just take a look at apple's TiBook, which only goes up to 50 ft with airport card, and the origional iMac's lifespan, and the PB G3 wallstreet's lifespan)
Now you go on to compatibility. welp, we all know you are an idiot now, so you might just want to stay quiet on this point.
Re:this is great! (Score:1)
it seems like such a waste. especially with their really really kewl GUI now...
Re:this is great! (Score:3, Interesting)
What we need is to get Linus using a G4 (yeah, right) and bury the hatchet with Paul Mackerras, and then convince someone, anyone, to start shipping commodity PPC mobos (doesn't have to be, probably shouldn't be, in fact, Apple).
/Brian
Re:this is great! (Score:1)
Re:this is great! (Score:2, Interesting)
It won't happen. The Mac OS is the primary reason why I'm running PPC hardware to begin with. On top of that, why would you uninstall Mac OS X (with a FreeBSD-based userland) in favor of Linux?
Linux may become more widely used than Mac OS/Mac OS X, but not on PPC hardware.
Re:Get yer head out yer ass (Score:1)
StarMAX Linux! (Score:1)
Yeah yeah, BSD is dead (Score:1, Flamebait)
Why would you want Linux on there, aside from the lack of good software and geek factor?
Re:Yeah yeah, BSD is dead (Score:1, Interesting)
Note that this was over a year ago, so OS X Server was completely different than OS X today. OS X server back then was based on Rhapsody/NeXT, not Darwin/BSD. There wasn't even a pretty Aqua GUI back then.
But today, I really can't see a viable reason to choose Linux over OS X on Apple hardware. All the GNU tools are being ported [gnu-darwin.org] and OS X actually has decent web browsers, printer support, multimedia, GUI admin tools, and loads of other goodies built in.
Re:Yeah yeah, BSD is dead (Score:1)
What color is Mandrake? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What color is Mandrake? (Score:1)
Dancin Santa
Re:What color is Mandrake? (Score:1)
Mandrake offers the most up to date PPC RPMs (Score:4, Informative)
(Linux is a great way to put older Mac Hardware to use!) Mandrake offer's great online installation instructions [linux-mandrake.com], too! Also, check out the Mandrake Linux PPC 8.0 FAQ [linux-mandrake.com] (it says "beta", but applies to the more recent releases, as well.)
Curious George
Re:Mandrake offers the most up to date PPC RPMs (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux is a great way to put older Mac Hardware to use!
Can I just say that it is also a great way to put *NEW* Mac Hardware to use. I installed LinuxPPC on my Titanium Powerbook G4 and it rocks. You wanna put Dell Notebook Linux users to shame. Show them how you can triple boot Mac OS 9, Mac OSX, and Linux on a Tibook (using yaboot). And how you can run Mac OS 9 in an X window using MacOnLinux and then bring up Virtual PC to run Windows. All that plus an awsome screen and formfactor makes for some jealous x86 users.
Well I guess I'll shut up now and wait for the mod down from the anti-PPC people.
Computer equiv. to a Swiss Army Knife! (Score:2)
Hey! Wouldn't that be a cool idea for Apple and Victorinox [victorinox.com] to get together and offer a G4 Powerbook in the Swiss Army Red (replace the apple logo with the Swiss white cross?) Too cool. It would be a win/win for both companies!
I am a marketing GENIUS! hee hee!
Curious George
Re:Mandrake offers the most up to date PPC RPMs (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake offers the most up to date PPC RPMs (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake offers the most up to date PPC RPMs (Score:1)
I'm sure the mandrake install is easier than debian's, though...
PPC Linux questions (Score:2)
Re:PPC Linux questions (Score:3, Informative)
That machine won't run LinuxPPC though; a 100MHz 601 in a 7500 is probably the minimum.
That's about like a pentium 120.
What's the machine you're going to run it on? I think you'll be pleasantly surprised... a 300MHz G3 runs Linux quite fast... and that's basically an iMac. I'm not sure where it'd stack compared with a Sparc (which Sparc? Ultra-IIi 400MHz is one thing; an old Sparc Classic is quite another).
Re:PPC Linux questions (Score:1)
Re:PPC Linux questions (Score:2)
Re:PPC Linux questions (Score:2, Informative)
I've run LinuxPPC R4 on my beige G3 (266 MHz, 64 MB RAM) before, and was extremely impressed. It was highly responsive, and seemed quite capable of saturating my 100 Mbit Ethernet connection when I was testing. I will admit that I eventually removed it because I missed the Mac OS interface too much, (and am about ready to move to OS X, so probably won't go back to Linux on my Mac), but I have only good things to say about Linux's PPC performance.
This isn't your fault, it's the fault of marketing drones, but the PPC really isn't a RISC CPU. It does take some RISC concepts--for example, it has many registers (32x32bit integer and 32x64bit floating point registers on all PPC CPUs, and 32x128bit vector registers on the G4), all instructions are 32-bits in length, the chip was designed to enable things like OOO from the start, etc. However, the PowerPC actually has just about as many instructions as an Intel chip. In fact, IBM redefined RISC to mean "Reduced Instruction Set Cycles" when they decided they wanted to advertise the PPC as a RISC chip. (See http://www3.sk.sympatico.ca/jbayko/cpu.html#Sec5Pa rt3 [sympatico.ca] for details.) (As an example, the G4's AltiVec unit adds 160 new instructions for SIMD ops. It's really hard to call the G4 a RISC chip anymore even if you do consider the G3 one.) So I wouldn't exactly group the SPARC, which last time I checked doesn't have a multiply instruction in its standard spec, with the G4, which has an instruction that means "add these eight integers to those eight and then multiply them all by this constant" as a standard opcode.)
Re:PPC Linux questions (Score:1)
If you are used to running fast ultra's then a two or three year old mac will seem slow, if youre used to older ultras or sun4m's then a G3 or 604e will perform nicely in comparison in general desktop use.
Mandrake linux will not run on any machine that is the "equivalent of a 286". The slowest PCI powermac (required for PPC linux) is nearly Pentium II class....So you shouldnt be dissapointed.
Why aren't ASUS making PPC boards? (Score:2, Interesting)
this [ibm.com] document.
A free Open PowerPC Platform implementation using
parts that companies like Asus, Abit, etc. are able to obtain in large quantities. What is holding them back?
Re:Why aren't ASUS making PPC boards? (Score:1)
The powerpc chip is nice, but I think apple enjoys the simplicity of having closed hardware, and then tying an OS to it, makes things much easier/better for them.
Fixing an apple computer is fairly easy compared to a pc, and I believe that is one of the things that apple strives for, its a fairly low maintenance box.
Re:Why aren't ASUS making PPC boards? (Score:1)
Apple uses proprietary firmware to make MacOS only bootable on Apple Systems, and I think the stopping of the clones was Steve Jobbs doing (They were cheaper than Apple's offerings, but up to par with Apple's machines).
But somehow, I couln't imagine a clone manufacturer comming up with the beatifull cases that Apple came up with
Re:Why aren't ASUS making PPC boards? (Score:1)
The market is holding them back, because apart from us Linux/BSD users that dream of a PowerPC based system, no one else would buy it, because MacOS wouldn't run on it and the normal Joe has no user of a PowerPC system running some kind of free *nix.
If they would be manufactured, they would only be manufactured in small quantities, making them expensive as hell.
choices for PPC users (Score:1, Interesting)
work is being done on a FreeBSD port
Geez, Mandrake over MAC OS X???? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Geez, Mandrake over MAC OS X???? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Geez, Mandrake over MAC OS X???? (Score:1)
The most important question: Firewire? (Score:4, Interesting)
The next question: how well does it support firewire?
I mean, *REALLY* support it? Can I take my PB G4, get an external firewire drive, and boot straight from it into the Mandrake Linux kernel?
Coz my internal hard drive on this PBG4 is getting mighty tight: it's already got MacOS 9.1, and a Mac OS X 10.1 partition on it...
Firewire...
Re:The most important question: Firewire? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The most important question: Firewire? (Score:2)
Well, you could stash your 9.1 stuff on the external FireWire drive.
FireWire stuff seems to be overpriced anyway. Why not get one of those huge IBM notebook drives instead? Costs a bit more than an external drive, but presumably you got a laptop for portability anyway.
Re:The most important question: Firewire? (Score:1)
We're using an external firewire drive here, using the latest stable CVS of the linux firewire drivers. The sbp2 module (which handles firewire drives), seems a little unstable under high load (it locked up twice - HARD - under high loads). By high I mean about 8 gzip processes running at the same time. Other than that the drive seems OK, if a little slow to respond.
YMMV, of course. But unless you've got lots of free time, I might wait a little bit.
I wonder... (Score:4, Interesting)
I look at Apple and the company they are. They are not special. They took existing software anyone in the world could have downloaded and turned it into something that has geeks and Mac enthusiasts alike excited.
What did they do with their operating system that is freely available that the Linux people have been trying so hard to do on the desktop and have yet to really come through like Apple has.
Surely the combined bulk of Linux developers is not less than the employees of Apple is it?
Apple has taken little open source pieces and parts and turned it into a truly interesting operating system that gets a "Cool factor" from most anyone I know that likes Macs.
Why can't Linux excite people so? Does the money make that much of a difference? Apple steps up and gets the word out using its standard marketing channels and creates a bonafide hype that people buy into, contrast to your average Linux story. Whats the give?
I know this will be seen as off-topic but I argue it is completely relevant to any PPC, or Linux distro. If only they could somehow capture what Apple has done with OS X. Anyway.. just my quiet musings.
None of OS X is perfect, it has bugs, but people do have faith in OS X and they keep on using it for the most part.
While OS X does not have the share of servers nor desktops and has not proven itself in either, it definitely has the mindshare of most everyone. WE all know about it and know its supposed to be the perfect blend of desktop ease of use and a # prompt to the underlying OS.
Just my thinking, I still don't have a good answer.
Jeremy
It's all about software (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
I really think you are spreading your "people" net way to wide. OS X is not even on my radar, I really couldn't care less what Apple is doing, and I "support" a group of MacOS users. Now Linux on the other hand, is the One True OS. :)
If anyone is getting excited, it's MacOS users who finely have a decent shot at a modern OS, without having to learn anything. Face it, most Mac people don't know what goes on in the box and don't want to know. "Just tell me where to click." :P
I'm sure consultants are interested; Mac people usually have money to burn and suddenly some Unix skills apply to OS X. Easy Money!!
Disclaimer: I was a Mac User in my college days. Thank Tux that is over!Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Ye gods, man. Can't you see that you have lost the open mind that led you to Linux in the first place?
Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux also has problems, and they're very different than the ones in OSX. I can't do a single click program install in linux the way I can in OSX, but my floppy drive has no problems (a real OSX problem for my work.) This is to say that neither OS is perfect at all, and both could use improvement.
But to say people aren't excited about linux and are excited by OSX is a load of garbage. When I show people Linux it definitely scores cool points with them. More so than OSX, which has been running really slow on our legacy iMacs.
Despite the appearance of OSX and darwin, people keep using Linux, despite it's less simple and unified interface, because they have faith in it, same as you say about OSX users. More so than Apple, because many of us have been burned by Apple in the past and know that no one can screw us over in the Linux world.
I would disagree that OSX has the mindshare of everyone, because most every consumer who looks at it says "Cool, but it's not a PC, I can't run it, I'm not going to run it." You should see the problems we have trying to get people to use one of the three iMacs with OSX rather than the one PC here. It may be pretty, and it may have some good stuff under the hood, but it's not in the mindshare of "most everyone" any more than Linux is.
All in all, I think people are as excited about Linux as they are about OSX. While they may focus on doing different things well, if all you're judging on is "OSX looks cool" then you're not really measuring the level of excitement for linux. Just look at the posts on
Apple has done a really good job on OSX, and I'm looking forward to it getting much better, but to say it's generating excitement where linux is not is absurd. Linux has developed so much in the past two years since I started using it, and it will develop even more in the coming years, and I guarantee as it lands on more and more machines you'll see the excitement build, hopefully in the mainstream as well.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2, Insightful)
As a result, there is no big bang, no enormous release, and there will never be a relevation like MacOS 9.1 to OSX, nor Windows 3.1 to 95... As long as there is no managing Linux Headquarters saying to ALL of its developers "ok guys, you can't release your product for 1.5 more years, and make sure it follows our rules exactly- any deviation will force us to drop your app," Linux will never be able to market in the way Apple or Microsoft do. And truthfully, I never want to see Linux turn into this.
Most importantly, Apple has a marketing team. It has enough resources to show back cover spreads of single products in Time, Newsweek, US N&WR,
Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, i use Mandrake 8.0RC1 on my iMac, since it only has 64MB of RAM and its 266MHz CPU won't drive OS X very well - however, the video acceleration in X is piss-poor, and the idea that this system would be installable (The Mandrake installer screwed up fairly badly when trying to partition my disk, and had to be repaired by using pdisk) by joe average is laughable.
The idea that Mandrake 8.0RC1 (maybe they have a new ati driver for X in 8.0 final) provides acceptable desktop performance on a Rev. A iMac is also laughable.
Linux is great for people like me who are prepared to invest the time and effort to make it work for them, but theres no way 95% of the current Mac user base would want, need, or get excited about Linux because MacOS X is quite obviously a superior solution.
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Ask anyone, the major fault with any *nix platform is the UI. it's scattered, the standards aren't followed, no installations are ever easy, way too much CLI (for consumers), it goes on and on.
People like good solid UI. People even like Bad UI that pretends to be good UI [microsoft.com].
Re:I wonder... (Score:3)
It's not as if OS X is JUST unix with a pretty window manager.
Steve Jobs (Score:3, Insightful)
Steve Jobs is a computer legend, no matter what you think of him personally he deserves a lot of credit for mainstreaming the gui/ mouse and pushing the computing envelope. ( a gui computer with 128k ram and no hard drive.... even today it seems somewhat amazing)
So when steve talks, lots of people take notice. I think alot of the hype around OS-X has less to do with what it is than what people expect the "next" (no pun intended) thing in os's to be, and steve is selling this future.
He's also captured the imagination of unix folks with open source underpinnings and the ability to run word and photoshop and grep / script at the same time. Its GCC based so expect a lot of that nice GNU software will run on OS-X in short order making it more powerful at little expense to apple.
We'll see how it works out. Can't hurt to have more unix boxen out there though, especially in schools.
Very simple. (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Most "Linux people" are not trying hard to do this, or at least they're not approaching it the same way that Apple did.
It seems like a large portion of the Linux desktop development is not being spent on trying to make a good desktop. Instead, they are trying to make something that looks/works like Microsoft's Explorer. It's all Miguel's "infiltration" strategy (and even the KDE people are doing it) to make Linux/Unix appeal to Windows users, by having it look like Windows.
I'm sure that's useful in a way and I don't mean to put it down, but it's a very different thing than what Apple did, which was: try to make a good GUI and desktop for Unix. That's one of the things exciting about MacOS X: it's an attempt to do something new and a little risky. (Although it's also colored by other considerations, such as needing compatability layers, etc.) There's not much of that type of work being done on Linux (although I've seen hints that Enlightenment might be sorta trying to go that way).
I have a PowerComputing PowerTower 166... (Score:3, Interesting)
I want to drop a distro on it, but I am not sure which one would work. I don't want to spend money or time getting a distro if it won't work for me. Can anyone give me pointers on what distro I should use with this box, as well as how I should go about getting/buying the distro (ie, if I have to burn an ISO, can I do it on my SuSE box at home easily enough)?
Re:I have a PowerComputing PowerTower 166... (Score:1)
My take on Mandrake (Score:2, Informative)
I first tried the beta of mandrake, and what i found was that despite its faults, it could shape up to be the easiest distro to set up on ppc processors. One item i found in the install that no other distro's included was the option to set and choose what keys you wanted to use to emulate the second and third buttons (e.g. f12, f13). And once it was installed, even though there were som rough edges, you could see the hard work the mandrake team went through. The one thing i find strange about the distro, is that all Drak* utilities are written for GTK, rather than QT, it just seems out of place in this kde centered distro.
now on to ydl 2.0. i was dissapointed in this release, because, i went through two installs (to see if i missed anything the first time round) and there was NO individual package selection. This is a big minus in my book. Plus after the system was up, even though this is subjective, it seemed much slower than my hand upgraded linuxppc distro. But, other than thos two faults, it is a good distro overall.
ok, on to suse. This mega distro with four cd's worth of stuff is a really good all inclusive distro. It had so many packages, everything you could want. I think this is a great power user's distro, because there are so many esoteric packages, and you can customize it all you want. The only item which can be considered a drawback, but i dont think so, is that the suse way of doing things is slightly different than the other rpm based distros. Its all up to personal preference.
Well, these are my short list of opinions on linux on PPC based machines, and if Mandrake fixed all the rough edges that were in their beta distro, it will IMHO be the best PPC distro out there.
APM (Score:1)
Off-topic: Mandrake 8.1 for 586 & PPC: when? (Score:1)
Tia
Re:Off-topic: Mandrake 8.1 for 586 & PPC: when (Score:1)
http://www.mandrakeforum.com
News, discussion, and links to everything Mandrake.
Hold on (Score:3, Informative)
I've installed linux on PCs and macs. The 2 macs I've installed on are "old world" machines a starmax motorola clone and a 7200.
It was fairly easy and straightforward (the documentation could have been better though.....)
I used linuxPPC The one thing that helps on the ppc side is that most hardware is fairly standard and autodetected.
It works great.. I have a firewall/ip masq machine and a server...
Useless to the modern Macsist (Score:2)
In the PC world, there's no OS like OSX -- a mainstream OS which runs a massive amount of tested Nth generation commercial software, a great load of new software, a host of free software and all based on a Unix kernel with a swift, powerful UI and no need to get under the hood. For the hackers in the world not satiated by OSX's many, many superior offerings, there's GNU Darwin. What good is Linux to these chaps? Mac users may have a small allegiance to the Penguin thanks to the great work done in mk linux back when the macos was still for the most part a slow buggy piece of shit (os 7.6), but we've surpassed you -- we already have unix on a desktop!
Re:Don't forget debian (Score:1)
Re:Beta 8.1 (Score:1)
Re:Beta 8.1 (Score:1)
Re:Now if i only had a Mac (troll!) (Score:3, Insightful)
My previous employers got all hot and bothered over buying the newest apple hardware. I wanted to get my job done, so I installed Linux on my G3 at work. It did everything that I needed it to do, and I was grateful to be able to run Linux without creating too many waves in the company.
People like you fascinate me. You recoil at anything that is different, or anything that challenges your rigid preconceived notions. Pull you head out of your ass and try to look at the good in the world once in a while.
Re:Now if i only had a Mac (troll!) (Score:1)
Your sig is: Moderate Drunk
Is "Moderate" supposed to be an adjective or a verb?
Yes.
Re:Skimping... (Score:1)