General

Dual Booting is Yesterday - Virtualization is Tomorrow.

I have to say I’m not optimistic about Apple’s recent decision to support dual-booting their new Macs. That’s the sort of sophomoric corporate blunder that can capsize even the healthiest of businesses. In short, I think it’s going to backfire. Companies aren’t going to spend millions of dollars porting software between two operating systems when Macs can now natively run both. The fiscal bottom line doesn’t care whose widgets are prettier and whose user interface is more pleasant overall.

Why Red Hat is doing everything right

Since beginning to use Linux I’ve learned to tolerate a lot in the name of free software. Unpolished programs, non-working features, ugly user interfaces - these are the price to pay for freedom from proprietary operating systems designed by corporations. Bit by bit though, I lost patience with Linux. It became obvious that a lot of these shortcomings and lack of polish weren’t a result of software application development being overwhelmingly complex.

A Linux switcher’s upcoming tale of tragedy

Just read an article commenting on the professor who switched one of his labs to Ubuntu Linux; this is something to keep your eye on, as I’m positive within a year if you check back we’ll find the lab has been switched back to proprietary software. Many times people invoke the principles of free software as a good reason to switch from proprietary solutions, not realizing that paid professionals do indeed take the time to make higher quality, more usable desktop and workstation software.

Running Windows on a Mac the right way

I came across this forum thread in my daily browsing; it details an effort under way to enable virtualization in the open source Qemu emulator using MacOS X as the host operating system. What does this mean? Instead of having to dual boot, this will allow Windows and other Intel based operating systems to run at nearly native speeds within MacOS X itself. This is especially useful for those who still need Windows for those one or two oddball applications they may need to use at work (IT departments are famous for cooking up their own little proprietary things) or in some other setting.

Advocacy gone wrong

I read an article yesterday advocating desktop Linux, and immediately had issues with the credibility of it. The fact that it bears the word ‘pwns’ in its title is the first sign of trouble, but I decided I’d try and see if the author had valid points to make. A few problems. The article begins with the usual fact that Linux is more secure and less vulnerable to attack than Windows, as proven by several studies and contests.

Windows now bootable on Intel Macs

In the past couple of days the news that Microsoft Windows XP has been made installable on Macintosh computers has been generating a great deal of excitement. In the comments section of every article I’ve read I see at least half the readership asking why this is such a great thing. I’m also asking that question. When you can buy a Dell computer for $299 and run Windows on it, or build a Windows based gaming system for less than you’d pay for a Mac, why would you buy the Mac only to run Windows on it in an unsupported configuration?

Brad’s first blog entry

My first blog entry using iWeb, from Apple’s iLife ‘06 suite. I’ve made a few attempts at blogs before, but they’ve usually been rarely updated. This is also my first web page made on a Macintosh in seven years, since I originally created my website (which is now http://www.brad-x.com/) on a Power Macintosh 6100/66. Since that time I’ve been experimenting with Linux and FreeBSD on PC compatibles (originally because I didn’t have the cash to get a Mac capable of running OS X).