Archive | June, 2005

Cringely: Apple-Intel more than it seems

Bill McGonigle of BFC Computing in his comment to my previous post “Maybe it wasn’t about the Mac Mini After All” that Cringely sees a vast conspiracy behind the Apple-Intel switch. I’ve heard a lot of discussion, including some pretty wild speculation on Slashdot (this one was a favorite. Warning: this one uses the “shit” word, so stay away if easily offended.)

A fellow member challenged me on the ProFox list on whether I thought the Apple switch was bad for Microsoft. No, I think the Apple switch is good for Apple. As far as Microsoft goes, I think they are on a self-destructive death spiral that they brought on themselves. It isn’t going to be Beauty that kills the Beast. In this case, the Beast needs no help.

Patch Tuesday packs a wallop!

Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley says It’s Going to Be a Packed Patch Tuesday. “Mark your calendars, Windows fans. Microsoft is planning to issue 10 new security bulletins on the upcoming Patch Tuesday, June 14.”

Have a Happy Flag Day, folks!

Hopefully, it will be a smoother day of patches than the faulty April patches. Darned if you do and darned if you don’t, eh?

Kuro Box at MonadLUG

Guy Pardoe did a great presentation of the Kuro Boxes, using the US-branded Buffalo Tech LinkStation. Fourteen attendees got into the hardware and the discussions were far-ranging and intriguing.

Maybe it wasn’t about the Mac Mini after all…

On Ed Foster’s Gripelog: Did Apple Sue the Rumor Blogs to Keep Intel Deal Quiet?. “Something’s bothering me about Apple’s switch to Intel, and it has nothing to do with…” Ed connects the dots on Apple squashing rumor sites and the Apple switch to Intel.

Well, we’ve still got the cool codename…

Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley reports that ‘Monad’ Scripting Shell Unlikely to Debut in Longhorn. “However, Microsoft is planning to make its alternative to Unix and Linux command-line scripting available as part of Exchange 12, due next year.”

One complaint I hear about Open Source software is the lack of a “roadmap” – a plan with features and ship dates. On the closed source side, no one can claim to know anything about which feature will or will not make it into Longhorn (WinFS? Monad?) but the ship date of “end of 2006” seems pretty firm. However, what value is committing to a ship date without a similar commitment to a feature set?

P.S. If you’re really looking for a bash-like scripting shell for Windows, why not install CygWin and use Bash and an entire UNIX-like environment? Or you might prefer Ruby, if you’re interested in some of the object-oriented features that might (or might not) be in Monad. Both are shipping now, supported now, free, and don’t require you to use Exchange 12. Waiting on Monad is likely to be, well, monadonous.

IBM reluctant to discuss their use of Wine

Interesting post from InfoWorld: Top News stating the IBM seems reticent to talk about using Wine in-house, perhaps out of concern for potential liability. The article that the threat is likely to come from Microsoft’s vast patent portfolio, and the thought that a Wine developer could be unknowingly infringing on a patented process. This is yet another example of why software patents are inherently a bad idea. Copyright protects the expression of an idea, so that someone cannot lift your source code without your permission. But patents protect the very idea itself. In the physical world of patents, an invention physically identical to someone else’s is unlikely to happen by chance. But in computer software source code, there are only so many ways to make a process happen, to click, drag and drop, and there are common and “best practices” guidelines on how code should work. Software development should be a commons of ideas building on other ideas, not a wasteland of locked-up, owned, restricted ideas.

IBM a reluctant user of Wine software. “IBM’s effort to promote Linux as a viable alternative on the company’s 350,000 corporate desktops took a step forward last month, when the company’s IT organization began supporting the open-source Firefox browser. However, while the move to support a browser that runs on Linux may provide a boost for both Firefox and IBM’s internal Linux effort, Big Blue hasn’t been nearly so eager to promote a lesser-known piece of software, called Wine, that it has used to advance Linux on the desktop.”

MonadLUG meeting, 9 June 7 PM, SAU 1: Kuro Box

The Monadnock Linux User Group meets the second Thursday of most months at the SAU 1 office in Peterborough. This month, there will be a demonstration of “The Kuro Box” a PowerPC-based box costing $160 that needs a hard drive to run. Tom’s Hardware reviews it here, another from Penguin PPC. and IBM DeveloperWorks. Looking forward to seeing the presentation.

CentraLUG meeting last night: Scribus.\

Despite a lightning strike taking out power at our regular meeting place, the CentraLUG finally got to see Scribus presented by Ed Lawson. Ed had tried twice before to do the presentation and was thwarted first by hardware and next month by a family emergency. This time, we made a quick move to member Bruce Dawson’s, and got to see a great presentation. One of our regulars, Luke, is an experienced graphics designer, using Quark and the other top-of-the-line tools, and he was impressed with what Scribus could do.

Apple OS X runs on Intel hardware, has for five years…

OSNews posts Confirmed: Apple to use Intel Chips. “Mac OS X has been leading a secret double life. There have been rumors to this effect… We’ve had teams working on the ‘just in case’ scenario.” said Steve Jobs. Apple will ship a Mac with Intel processors by June 6th, 2006, as reports said. It should be complete by June 2007. Says that Intel offers a better roadmap for the markets that Apple services. Jobs talked about IBM missing the 3 GHz mark for the G5, and in not being able to put one in a PowerBook. Today’s WWDC keynote demonstration has been done entirely on an Intel Mac. Developers applauded Steve when he said that both processors would be supported for a long time and the core to this will be universal binaries (as I predicted yesterday).”

I’m following along on Brian Jepson’s blog. If the keynote was simulcast, I couldn’t find the link. Bummer. Perhaps Apple will post the keynote later.

I find the idea of OS X on Intel intriguing. I wonder if it will run on anything other than Apple-branded hardware.

Apple Press Release

MacMerc is also posting the keynote, although their server seems to be melting…

Apple stock is rising (disclosure: I am a minority stockholder, a tiny minority), but how long will it be before investors realize that PowerPC sales are likely to tank with new Intel models a year away? The Rosetta technology Apple is using promises full binary compatibility between the two machines, but buyers tend to be shy…

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This work by Ted Roche is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.