iMac Linux 103
slim sent us
linkage to a detailed guide to
installing Linux on an iMac.
" There are comments about LinuxPPC R4 and R5, but
its come a long way. If those iMacs were a few hundred
bucks cheaper I still think they'd be fun thinnish
linux workstations. And the pretty colors.
Hardware Predictability? (Score:1)
Rev. A iMacs down to $749 (Score:1)
Please... (Score:1)
Code or die. The G3 is an excellent piece of technology. Get with it.
Linux ain't Unix????? (Score:1)
USB? (Score:1)
BSD (Score:1)
Why pay for an iMac? Pay $60 for an SE and run it on that. Oh and, you can get BSD for Mac.
YUCK!!! (Score:1)
An Alpha WHAT? 500? Talk about comparing a Corvette to a Yugo. Of course you would take an Alpha over an iMac. I would take an Alpha over an iMac, and I'm a Mac owner. You really can't compare the two, though.
Want a real app benchmark? You got it. (Score:2)
Try this one on for size. Adobe Photoshop 4.01, running an action involving mode conversion, shadows, blurs, and a whole slew of other things, on a 50 meg file, on a Compaq 400, G3/233(basically an iMac), G3/300 and G3 350, all configured as close to equal as possibel(RAM, cache, HD, etc.). The Compaq lost, by a significant margin, to all the machines, including the 233, whixh, as I stated before, is basically a Rev A & B iMac. Now then, I know this isn't Linux, but I have LinuxPPC running on my machine(a G3/233, coincidentally) at home, and it SCREAMS. Not to mention that other forms of Unix, such as NetBSD, run at a fast clip, on an SE/30, which came out in the eighties.
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
USB? (Score:2)
ISO (Score:1)
You Whiners (Score:1)
Want to improve Apple/Linux relations? (Score:1)
It's far easier to forgive your enemy after you get even with him.
Link fix... (Score:1)
Try this.
It's far easier to forgive your enemy after you get even with him.
Useful after all (Score:1)
Or - has anyone done this already?
--
These machines perform just fine (Score:1)
Mmmmmm, not necessarily. I can easily take a G3, work out a 10MHz bus or something, pop in a meg of RAM, no cache, a 40MB ESDI hard drive, and an ISA video card (granted, it would take some serious MB hacking) and have a butt-slow machine. From what I understand, the iMac has the disease common to most store-bought Wintel machines (which Apple managed to avoid until a few years ago): processor-heavy. I got your WinModem right here!
That still doesn't mean the iMac's aren't decent machines; I think they're an alright idea. I just disagree with pushing them as massive powerhouses.
Yep... (Score:1)
I would (Score:1)
I know if I was just going to run linux, I could build a PC or buy one from an online dealer for less (BTW, I was surprised that Gateway is bundling Corel WP Office 8 with some of their machines). That's a given. However, my wife and kids don't want to run linux. I don't blame them. The stuff that they want to run doesn't run under Wine yet. It should with VMware, but I haven't acquired that software. I don't want to run Windows if I can get away with it, even on a VM.
Enter the iMac. The kids love it (the 4yr old takes to it like a duck to water) and the wife thinks a red one would be cute. It runs all their software, doesn't take up a lot of space, and I don't have to pay the M$ tax.
Now that a form of linux is available for it, I would be happy with it too. It would join my SE/30 dual booting MacOS & Linux.
I am going to buy one sometime this year. I was disappointed that Apple decided to not include the Irda and the Mezianne(sp) ports/slot on the newer ones, especially since one can get scsi cards for the internal slot.
Refund for MacOS (Score:1)
If it's anything like the mac68K version of linux (and from the web page it sounds like it), you will still need MacOS to boot into linux.
what?. (Score:1)
Where did you get that idea? The first form of Unix that I ever used was on a M68K Sun workstation. I don't think the pdp-8 that unix was first booted on would be considered a RISC machine either. It doesn't really matter if it's a CISC or RISC cpu.
Refund for MacOS (Score:1)
Is the method for setting the OpenFirmware varaibles in a HOWTO someplace? I guess the iMac Linux page assumed that most people would be dual booting. If it was mentioned, I must have skipped over it. It's unfortunate that something like BootX or Lilo doesn't exist for the M68K macs. If I'm wrong, I'd love to have it.
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
Admittedly, you have a point here. Linux is not a cross-platform OS. It's a PC operating system which happens to run on other platforms too. Take a look at any Linux FTP site of sufficient size and you'll see it: Intel-only binaries, source which only works right on Intel, etc.
Whats the point in paying a ton for a Mac to run Linux on it when you can save a load of money and buy a PC and install Linux.
It's called "you get what you pay for." You pay more for a Mac, but you get much better hardware. Couple that with Linux (especially once they get a hold of the stuff in OSX, if not the code then at least data) and you have one seriously kickass machine.
The NON-need of Mac OS (Score:1)
You do need MacOS for MkLinux, but you don't for LinuxPPC.
iMacs are still a pain... (Score:1)
On the plus side, the video is slowly getting faster, and three-button mice are available for them, which is good, since right now you have to use the one-button mouse with the "=" and "[clear]" keys on the numeric keypad to emulate middle and right click!
You can buy them for $30/month. (Score:1)
403 Forbidden :( (Score:1)
iMac availability (Score:1)
As a side note, if you are in the Montana area, Vanns [vanns.com] is advertising that they are selling iMacs. DO NOT buy from them. Their sales people are rude and to make matters worse they *LOST* our computer.
Notes from an iMac owner... (Score:1)
My opinion is that an iMac is the best computing value for the money. And a 300MHz machine at a cheaper price is rumored to be due mid-April.
Does LinuxPPC work with the iMac modem? (Score:1)
MacOS is free (Score:1)
Therefore, you'd get back your refund request with a cancelled stamp.
OF in iMacs... (Score:1)
http://www.linuxppc.com/userguide/new/
sorry... no HREF tag.. I'm being lazy...
BSD (Score:1)
USB? (Score:2)
Ihack (Score:1)
But, no, it's definatly not worthing trying to use as a workstation. If it was $499....well, maybe.
LinuxPPC, however, rocks. I've got a LinuxPPC box next to two RedHat boxes, and they're all cool. Hardware is irrelevant if you've got the right OS.
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
Long Live Slackware!!!
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
These machines perform just fine..? (Score:1)
Remember also that Mac OS X, due by the end of the year, will be built on a real Unix kernal, and will feature premptive multitasking and protected memory. So once it is out, the iMac will easily outperform a similarly priced PC.
iMacs are still a pain... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Real Universities (Score:1)
The iMac is more than fast enough (Score:2)
I have two 68030-based machines that are plenty fast enough for 80% of what I do, one Mac and one BSD box. I have a PPC 601 and a P5-90 that are plenty fast enough in MacOS or Windows (resp.) for 95% of what I do. Oh, yeah, they both run Linux in alternate HD partitions. Linux is fast enough too.
If an iMac isn't fast enough for 100% of your computing needs, my friend, you are not sane.
Linux ain't Unix????? (Score:1)
ArsonSmith
Refund for MacOS (Score:1)
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Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
My last computer was a Mac, which I got for the simple reason that my brother was getting a PC, and I figured it would be good for us to have different computers so we could use each other's computers and be "platform independent" users.
It turned out to be a good choice for me because I got into alot of layout & design work in college -- and most of the software I was using in class and at work was on Macs.
Now I work on different things and want a UNIX-y environment to play in and do Web development -- so my new computer is the best computer I could find for the things I'm working on now. It happens to be some Linux-y things and a bit of Be thrown in, and I went for an AMD chip setup. But if the iMac had been what was best for my new projects, I would have invested in that.
Who cares what someone else thinks about my computer? I get to make the choice that's best for me -- isn't that what the whole Linux/[Open|Free] Software movement is about?
-sk
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
It blows most Wintel crap right out of the water.
An iMac with linux is as fast as a Celeron 300a at 300 Mhz.
And if you look at the price of it nowadays, it's is cheaper than a similary configured Wintelbox.
Nah, the rules are different (Score:1)
Strangely enough, IBM's arm has been twisted by MS so bad that they don't even install OS2 on any of their systems anymore.
Linux ain't Unix????? (Score:1)
Maybe they should drop the 'x', and call it LINU: Linu Is Not Unix.
-Snibor Eoj
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
LinuxPPC on the iWhack is faster than RedHat on a Pentium II/350. LinuxPPC on the G3/400 Server is faster than RedHat on a Xeon box.
Yeah, you're definitely not being open-minded.
Beowulf cluster (Score:1)
Good point about clustering them. Built in 100 Ethernet, too.
Not that you need all those CRTs in the cluster (hmm, put them together into a really big multi-headed X display...), but at $800 a pop for original iMacs or refurbs, the nodes are pretty cheap.
MacOS not a fair comparison of speed (Score:1)
Even if all the code is now PPC native, the architecture of MacOS was originally optimized for speed on 68K-based machines, not todays machines.
It also depends how you're judging. Going by the "feel" of the speed of the GUI is not the way to do it, because the Mac's GUI is deliberately slowed down so as to be (in the Apple user interface designers' opinions) more friendly, especially to newbies.
With a pure native PPC OS, like Linux (or AIX, on IBM's PPC machines) or OS X or (at one time) BeOS, the PPC screams.
Not today... (Score:1)
--
If Microsoft gave away there software for free and it was designed correctly it would be pretty cool
These machines perform just fine..? (Score:1)
People who Hate iMacs have no lives (Score:1)
Why is it whenever you see an anti-mac article they have to resort to inane childish comments? You can call iMacs garbage all you want, but that doesn't change the fact that you cannot get a PC with as many features at the same performance from a reuptable company at that same price.
Of course, pointing out this fact is gonna create lots of flames along the lines of claiming that this isnt true-- but if you look, each example will be a slower, older PC, or from a fly-by-night company with no quality standards, or for a machine with a much slower processor than the iMac's PowerPC.
I know its irritating that Apple has been making kick butt machines all these years-- here's a suggestion: Get over your jealousy, come out of the closet and go buy one.
BitGeek
I love My iMac (Score:1)
Sweet!!! (Score:1)
These machines perform just fine..? (Score:1)
So, my question is, how does this thing stack up against the CPUs from Chipzilla (Intel) when running a common OS (Linux)? Also, how is its graphics performance compared to, say, a Matrox Millenium II? And don't forget disk access speed..
Remember that benchmarks are more than just raw CPU speed. I want to see benchmarks of real-world apps..
Speaking of which, is there a way to script a graphical benchmark in X? (i.e. launch program X, scroll around, move the window, etc)
Want a real app benchmark? You got it. (Score:1)
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
A lot has changed since then; UNIX has become essentialy a set of interfaces instead of a specific implementation and portability has been really great. But why not? Unix has been with us since the days of 8-bit address spaces, the central design ideas have proved to be almost immutable.
Well designed software should really not care about the platform it's running on at all (see also: Java), so what does it matter if Linux runs on i386 chips or PPC chips or MIPS chips (like in the Cobalt Qube servers) or Alpha chips (like Compaq sells with Linux on them) or even Sparc chips on Sun hardware (which *is* expensive)? I like to think of Linux running on the iMac (but not my iMac, I need to run Office
Refund for MacOS (Score:1)
Two words: X Terminal. (One word?) (Score:1)
Be prepared to wait (Score:1)
It's good that you've taken MS's FUD to heart (Score:1)
And did you actually read my post? My point was that when the iMac becomes unusably obselete as a workstation (even if you think that's the case right now), it will still be well-suited to be an X terminal. It's better suited to be an X terminal than most other computers. Such as, say, a compaq presario or other random PC, because it has a good monitor, a combined monitor/cpu, and because it's neat looking.
These machines perform just fine..? (Score:1)
Refund for MacOS (Score:1)
Imac fills a need (even for power users) (Score:2)
More importantly, I believe that supporting alternative CPU architechtures is just as important as supporting alternative OSes. If Intel had no competition, it is doubtful that they would be upping chip speeds and dropping prices like they are. And RISC and other architechtures provide fundamental advantages over CISC. The advances in RISC and high-performance chips work their way into every desktop in a few years (backside caches, pipeling, etc...) with an Imac you can have these advantages NOW and at a reasonable price.
iMac with linux (Score:1)
all hail UF!
iMac with linux (Score:1)
'Besides, who can resist having their favorite colored computer sitting on their desk to enjoy looking at?'
Well now that all depends, i think a pink iMac running linuxPPC, and some wacky color GTK+GNOME/E theme stuff... well.. you know =)
Re: YUCK!!! (Score:1)
one fact though, 10 of those 'things' clustered
would smoke the pants off your alpha.
Why? Because it's a beaut! (Score:1)
(My latest is a 486 held together by superglue and duct tape, running debian).
But the iMac is so pretty, I've been dreaming of setting it up as my desktop machine with Linux on it ever since I saw the first pitcure of it.
Compilations can always be done on a Pentium thing in a closed, anyway...
iMac with linux (Score:1)
Besides, who can resist having their favorite colored computer sitting on their desk to enjoy looking at? Not me! I think giving linux a try on one is not a bad idea. Like everyone has mentioned, the first revisions are pretty cheap now =)
Ditto^2 (Score:1)
Yo!
BSD (Score:2)
While the iMac isn't officially supported for this use by Apple (and since when was that a big deal to
Useful after all (Score:1)
Alphas and pIII's may be better/faster/ have more geek credibility, but if linux wants to gain users in the mainstream computing sector then making it run on mainstream (high profile, popular, generally cool) machines.
If you dont like them, dont buy 'em, but its still a usefull addition to the Linux stable.
Does LinuxPPC work with the iMac modem? (Score:1)
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
These machines perform just fine..? (Score:1)
And I doubt a machine from Apple will *ever* outperform a similarly priced commodity product. The rest of the world has the advantages of mass production and competition, which Apple fears greatly.
Want a real app benchmark? You got it. (Score:1)
Linux also runs on Mac SEs, as shown by Debian.
The iMac is more than fast enough (Score:2)
MacOS not a fair comparison of speed (Score:1)
The UI in Mac is very good and casual use won't reveal it's power. It's not right to just say the UI is "deliberately slowed down", 68k emulation aside, the UI opens windows and moves files plenty fast and has responsive feel. many of it's refinements are poorly mimicked or entirely absent in Windows (the usual comparison). Linux is very happy on these PPC's but plopping a Mac or Next or other funky interface on top is just a paint job, it not the refined workplace the MacOS provides.
A big engine will make a car go like hell but if your driver's seat is a metal box with a nice paint job you won't want to drive it often
Failings aside, when you buy a Mac/iMac/G3 (same diff) you buy an optimized and highly integrated package. Linux on iMac would be a hoot. It is on my 601. And so will MacOS v10. I can only hope Apple works Linux into it's world view in an acceptable way.
good read on PPC directions and benchmarks:
http://www.MacKiDo.com/Press/TechResponseStateO
How about appz and gamez (Score:1)
These machines perform just fine (Score:1)
No matter what you guys say, it still has a G3 processor. Where there is a G3 processor, there is a fast computer.
Plus, running Linux, it should kick many a computer's behind. Forget that, a first generation PowerPC makes an awsome Linux machine.
And as far as cost, you can get a first generation iMac for less than $800 new.
Maybe I'm just not being open minded... (Score:1)
Unix in general, was designed to run on RISC based computers. "PC"s are CISC.
PowerMacs (including the iMac) are RISC.