Jul 23 2008

Shuttleworth making a good point?

Tag: Tech, apple, linuxmark @ 12:47 pm

via eWeek

Yup. In short, this is what they need to do. Screw GNOME, KDE and the rest, we need something that looks stunning (even on relatively modest hardware), works stunning and is stunningly easy to develop beautiful and functional apps on. Like… well… OS X.

BUT… and this is a big but (no, not a big butt, that’d be crass and schoolboy-ish), it’s not going to happen on ‘Linux’ like Shuttleworth says. Why? Because the open source community that controls ‘Linux’ and all things attached to it has aptly demonstrated over the past few years that, try as they might, they are still incapable of producing something as tidy, elegant and good looking as Apple’s Aqua/Quartz model. Yeah we can have flashy rotating 3D crap everywhere, and window transforms that actually bring on nausea. Yes we can had a good development model. But like everything the product is ugly, over-complicated and ultimately unsatisfactory, no matter who does it.

The answer? One Linux distributor/author has to do an Apple, take a good basis from open source and build a world-beating layer above it that makes it the desktop everyone wants. Too many cooks. Shut out the extra cooks and make your own broth and it’ll turn out just like you want it.

Yeah tons of folk will deride me and call me a fan boy. I don’t care. It’s not Apple I like, I used them as an example because Shuttleworth did, and because they are a good example. The key is in the method. Because it works. Harness, control and regulate, while using open source as inspiration, testing stuff and developing new ideas, filtering and channelling that into the non-OSS final product. Works for Apple, Sun, Red Hat et al.

Linux won’t succeed without regulation. Linux isn’t a socialist community, its Anarchy. Anarchy isn’t a system, it’s an anti-system.


Apr 16 2008

At last! GeForce 8800GT Goodness for loyal Mac Pro early adopters

Tag: Tech, applemark @ 7:40 pm

Finally, it’s arrived. It’s available from the Apple Store now in the UK and US (and presumably elsewhere too).

There’s another huge bonus too. They’ve sliced a BIG lump off the price too.
The UK item has dropped from GBP 220 (which the original Gen 2 card was on release day) to GBP 170, a 50 GBP drop.

That takes a whole 100 GBP off the price of a new graphics card for my Mac Pro compared to the old X1950XT, plus I don’t get ATi grief in Windows when I’m playing games.


Apr 14 2008

OpenMac - What? April Fools was weeks ago!

Tag: Tech, The Webmark @ 11:04 pm

via ARSTechnica

This is some sort of insane Joke, right? Selling to the general public a computer with a copy of OS X with a pre-violated User License? That’s not good guys…

I especially like the part about ‘non-safe’ Software updates. Really nice. The average user is REALLY gonna understand that one :P
Hmmm… we’ve seen this attempt to create non-Apple Macs before from people selling Apple hardware in their own cases:

http://web.archive.org/web/20031120002821/http://2khappyware.com/

Anyone remember that?

They got their asses sued so damn hard they almost spontaneously caught fire in the process.

I don’t expect this Psystar bunch to last long before Apple Legal catches up.

Hark! Is that the sound of the world’s largest proverbial ton of bricks I hear hurtling towards them?

UPDATE: Yes, it appears it’s now called the ‘Open Computer‘ instead… Interesting.


Mar 31 2008

Lawl!!

Tag: Uncategorizedmark @ 9:51 pm

via Scoble on Twitter
on Hell Yeah Bitch!.com

This is funny. Thanks:


Mar 21 2008

Down with the Beige Box Idoits™

Tag: Development, Rant, Techmark @ 4:39 pm

While looking for something totally different (Applescript Tutorials for idiots), I stumbled over this brilliant article. It’s basically a rant about how old skool OS 7-9 Mac users are ruining OS X’s stability and security by using bad hacks to do stuff instead of programming it properly, or accepting it cannot be done securely.

What the hell am I rambling about? Well lets put it simply. OS X is written on top of UNIX. UNIX has things in place that have been crafted carefully over decades to ensure stability and security. When Apple wrote OS X they carried these right on up to the user level, making the whole OS stable and secure. Yet still these morons insist on hacking it about, like they did OS 9 and earlier, to make stuff work the easy way. This compromises the integrity of what is otherwise a great OS.

Take ‘Unsanity’ (singled out right at the beginning of said article). They are the Kings of Beige Box Idoits™ in my opinion. Their most popular product, APE, is an open framework for bad and dirty hacks for OS X, basically. The fact it exists at all is a travesty. The fact it caused Apple huge headaches and bad press during the launch of OS X 10.5 Leopard is an apt and vivid illustration of just how bad it really is.

The article goes on to describe also a paper from a dev conference specifically detailing how and why overriding application behaviour is good. I’ll give you a clue IT ISN’T GOOD!

It’s clear this breed of Beige Box Idoits™ has no clue how a real Operating System is supposed to work. They probably belong to the same camp of half-assed developers that keep complaining that Windows Vista’s User Access Control has stopped their application from working.


Mar 20 2008

Bravo, Mr Gruber…

Tag: Tech, The Webmark @ 10:26 pm

via Daring Fireball

I have to extend congratulations to John Gruber again, for another damningly accurate critique of a typical tech-fluff article. Leander Kahney wrote an article about how Apple is evil and secretive and horrid and a proper meanie.

The original article was lame. Gruber’s critique is sublime.