Currently:
2002-07-12»
James and Marybeth»
Lisa's song about
the Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel is so sad. I doubt the music
industry gives a toss about the world it's shutting down - but you'd think
that the preservers of a country's entire heritage would care. I hope so.
2002-07-10»
Apple almost had me.»
The iBook's power adaptor went on the blink earlier today. And me with only
ten minutes left to copy my work files over! No problem, I thought, with
neophyte MacAddict glee - I'll just pop over to the nearby swanky Apple Store and pick
up a new one.
The G3 iBook AC adapter costs $68. Unless you want one from an Apple Store,
the man at the "Genius Bar" said. In which case it costs $68 plus an $85
"service parts charge".
To be fair, he did tell me I'd be better off ordering online, and offered
to recharge my Mac there while I wandered around the Mall for a couple of
hours. Disappointed by this level of genius, I declined, went home, ordered
the part (two days delivery), and then hacked together a fix using a
leatherman and gaffer-taped. I so wanted
to be just a meek little consumer today, too.
Anyway, enough Jerry
Pournelle-style whining. Here's another Linux to MacOS X blog. Useful notes
on identifying which OS version you have from the terminal, remotely mounting
disk images, changing shells and the like. No permalinks though.
2002-07-09»
Who's your Mac daddy?»
Well, it's day four of messing around with Loaner - Cory's old 466 ibook he
lent me on Independence Day. I was keen to poke around with the development
side of MacOS X, so I bought me a copy of Garfinkel and Mahoney's Building Cocoa
Applications on Saturday, and got to work. Inconclusive conclusions so
far:
Things I like
- That the development tools and docs are gratis these days. Yay!
- The old Project
Builder/Interface Builder stuff is great, in a weird mid-nineties timewarp
kind of way. What all the NeXT addicts endlessly go on about is true: it's a
breeze to get up to speed. I managed to get my first dumb
application up and
running by Sunday afternoon, and that's with no knowledge of Objective C,
precious little remembrance of C, no clue about AppKit - and not too
much blind clicking on buttons. Gads, I'm almost looking forward to grokking
AppleScript.
- The built-in WebDAV
support (in Finder's "Connect to Server") is cool. I can already see some
applications for that.
- the fact I can run all this on a 466 256KB iBook without strain.
- Fink. Natch. What can I say? I'm a Debian boy at heart.
Things I'd do differently (given I'm such a darn free software wonk):
- I think there should be an officially supported "Source" folder in the app
bundle. Apple's talked about encouraging open source, and having this as an
option would make sharing source on the MacOS a breeze. You could stash the
code for GPL'd or BSD'd software inside, and still be able to hand people a
single application file. It'd turn app binaries into little Kinder Eggs of
source. And somebody could sell a shareware utility called
SuperAppCompressorDeluxe which deleted that directory from all your apps, and
charge $14.95 for it.
- It's a damn shame that the NIB format is a proprietary binary affair.
Having non-text bits of a development project is nasty - it makes archiving
and oversight much harder, ties you down to one development environment, and
scares the horses.
Things that, after all these years, remind me I'm back in Macland
- Dozens of open applications, before I remember command-Q
- Dreaming of a keyboard shortcut for "Hide Others"
- Took me five days, but I still found myself messing around with File and
Creator Types. Thank goodness Quick Change kept up
with the times.
And yes, you're right. This is a displacement activity :).
I should cocoa »
I've been lent a MacOS X iBook! This is great news, because I've
been curious about this new OS for months - ever since I saw how
many hackers were playing with it at Emerging Tech.
Even better, the unspoken condition of the loan is that I do some
open source hacking on the platform.
I'll be writing most of my experiences up on the Forwarding Address: OS X" blog, but
I thought I'd dump these notes down here first, because they're a bit less
technical and very unformed.
Much of the actual OS is gently familiar from my
everyday Debian life. It's the social differences that are disorienting me
most of all. I've been looking around for good Mac sites the past few days,
and getting a lot of culture shock.
- Rumour Sites
- Despite what Slashdot might imply, I don't think it's possible
to maintain rumours for very long in Free Software land. "A little
birdy tells me that Alan Cox might be working on a new I2O
implementation!". Either the object of the rumour comes along and
grumpily puts everyone straight, or (if it's a more subjective
piece of gossip), two gangs of fanatics come along and flamewar
each other until no one cares what the truth is anymore. In MacOS
land, the only person who appears to know what's really going on
except Steve Jobs. And he's never on IRC. It's exciting!
- "User-contributed tips"
- Mac Websites have this quality of "I've been exploring and
stumbled upon this cool (yet mysterious) trick! How endlessly
curious is my strange friend!". Linux sites have much less of this
idea of PC as mysterious black box. Tips tend to come with long
explanations attached as to why they work, and why all other ways
of doing it are Considered Dangerous.
- Shareware
- I'll say it: paying for software seems eery, old-fashioned, and frankly, a
bit
spiv-like. You'll share this with me, but won't give
me the source code, and cripple it until I give you money? What
definition of "share" is this? Let alone having to pay to see what
the top shareware items even are. It seems so stingy. Oh,
and yet, so tempting...
Not saying that any of this is bad - just that it will get some
getting used to. Thank goodness for the homely familiarity of fink, hey?
Seth's analysis of Palladium »
Seth has done a great job at an
objective explanation of what Palladium is (and congratulations
to Microsoft for explaining it to the EFF without an NDA). It's
reassured me on a couple of points - for instance, it's possible
for a 386 Linux to take advantage of the Palladium's features, and
the Palladium doesn't leak ID data about the machine.
I still think that it has strong monopolistic tendencies
however. Given that anything in the Palladium can trash anything
outside of it, but not vice-versa, there's a strong market pressure
to move into the Palladium context for most uses. And now we have a
situation where not only are specific applications OS-specific, but
specific application's data files are OS-specific too. This is only
as bad as, say, the Microsoft Word or SMB situation was a few years
ago. But there'll be no reverse-engineered OpenOffice or SAMBA
projects. It still encourages homogenuity, even while being on the
face of it platform-agnostic.
petit disclaimer:
My employer has enough opinions of its own, without having to have mine too.