Hi everyone,
My last post about the Mac vs. Linux debate was perhaps hinging on the negative... This lead me to take a more critical stance towards Mac and its posix-compliant OS X. Last June 8th (2009) there was the WWDC keynote, which is a conference where (chiefly) new products are announced. Its tag line was "One year later, light years ahead". To me, this sounds arrogant, and it is does not ring true. The new OS (10.6), Snow Leopard, is coming in September and is touted to be a technical masterpiece.
[img width=400 height=300]http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3196/3591148391_96e9a3b4af.jpg[/img]
However, doesn't KDE4/Kubuntu already have these technological advancements (for a considerable amount of time).
Speed: Grand Central (multi-threading), Open CL (using the graphics card to accelerate application's performance) and 64-bit seem to be marketing buzzwords. Linux takes the high road and does not require a multi-core processor to run, but balances the load of the applications between the cores if there is one. 64-bit? Linux has that for ages. Then of course Open CL, which is thought by many Mac enthusiasts to be marvellous, but only works on Apple computers bought within the last half year.
Enter KDE 4. Due to Qt4, we have a solid foundation to build memory-efficient applications. To me, KDE 4 seems quite fast, although I have read reports saying the opposite. Plus, the ext4 file system is arguably better than the aged HFS+ from Apple (http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=1278).
Furthermore, Apple wants to gain foothold in corporations. This simply is not feasible, because they are so unpredictable. They have changed processor architectures twice (68k to PowerPC to Intel) and they release a new (paid-for) OS point update roughly every 18 months. There is no telling when the old version becomes obsolete.
I could go on with my story, but I would like to hear other people's opinion about Mac and its supposed technical superiority.
My last post about the Mac vs. Linux debate was perhaps hinging on the negative... This lead me to take a more critical stance towards Mac and its posix-compliant OS X. Last June 8th (2009) there was the WWDC keynote, which is a conference where (chiefly) new products are announced. Its tag line was "One year later, light years ahead". To me, this sounds arrogant, and it is does not ring true. The new OS (10.6), Snow Leopard, is coming in September and is touted to be a technical masterpiece.
[img width=400 height=300]http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3196/3591148391_96e9a3b4af.jpg[/img]
However, doesn't KDE4/Kubuntu already have these technological advancements (for a considerable amount of time).
Speed: Grand Central (multi-threading), Open CL (using the graphics card to accelerate application's performance) and 64-bit seem to be marketing buzzwords. Linux takes the high road and does not require a multi-core processor to run, but balances the load of the applications between the cores if there is one. 64-bit? Linux has that for ages. Then of course Open CL, which is thought by many Mac enthusiasts to be marvellous, but only works on Apple computers bought within the last half year.
Enter KDE 4. Due to Qt4, we have a solid foundation to build memory-efficient applications. To me, KDE 4 seems quite fast, although I have read reports saying the opposite. Plus, the ext4 file system is arguably better than the aged HFS+ from Apple (http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=1278).
Furthermore, Apple wants to gain foothold in corporations. This simply is not feasible, because they are so unpredictable. They have changed processor architectures twice (68k to PowerPC to Intel) and they release a new (paid-for) OS point update roughly every 18 months. There is no telling when the old version becomes obsolete.
I could go on with my story, but I would like to hear other people's opinion about Mac and its supposed technical superiority.
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