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Raptor Engineering Helping To Improve POWER Support In Wine, Eyes Hangover

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  • #21
    Originally posted by ZeroPointEnergy View Post
    So ironically proprietary Linux "native" games will not run but win32 will?
    Proprietary Linux games should run already, you just need qemu to emulate their binaries on the flight.
    ## VGA ##
    AMD: X1950XTX, HD3870, HD5870
    Intel: GMA45, HD3000 (Core i5 2500K)

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    • #22
      Originally posted by Vistaus View Post

      An open source GPU is not the same as a GPU with open source firmware, so which of the two are you referring to?
      You're right. I simply meant a GPU running open source software (which includes firmware).
      ## VGA ##
      AMD: X1950XTX, HD3870, HD5870
      Intel: GMA45, HD3000 (Core i5 2500K)

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      • #23
        Originally posted by Vistaus View Post
        An open source GPU is not the same as a GPU with open source firmware, so which of the two are you referring to?
        If we are talking of modern hardware, yes they are the same.

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        • #24
          Originally posted by mzs.112000 View Post
          I wonder if this could lead to being able to run Windows apps on G5 PowerMacs? Those are based on POWER4 architecture. And it could keep them useful for longer....
          Their CPU is too weak, trash them already.

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          • #25
            Originally posted by jacob View Post
            Remember, IBM aren't the "good guys". They never were.
            Considering what known "bad guys" do (Microsoft, Oracle, Intel, AMD following Intel's footsteps), IBM does sure look good though.

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            • #26
              Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
              Considering what known "bad guys" do (Microsoft, Oracle, Intel, AMD following Intel's footsteps), IBM does sure look good though.
              Where do you think Oracle, Intel, AMD and especially Microsoft - particularly old Microsoft of the Gates-Ballmer era, the worst kind - learnt their tricks? FUD, Embrace & Extend, client lock-in and extortion, patent trolling, deliberate anti-features, they all have the IBM trademark all over them. IBM started doing it all before everyone else and they never stopped.

              Why did OS/2 fail? It was not Microsoft's fault, but IBM's. IBM insisted that all OS/2 should do was to allow vertical IBM applications to connect to an IBM mainframe (from an IBM PS/2 desktop) and not much else.

              And remember the SCO Affair? At the heart of the case, which didn't really have anything to do with Linux at all, was a breach of contract on IBM's part. If SCO stack with that, they would have had a legitimate case and yes, they were wronged by IBM, but instead of seeking any sensible resolution, IBM moved to simply crush them. SCO then sealed its fate by embarking on a demented plan to try to parasite off Linux by spreading BS about "stolen" code and Steve Ballmer's conspiracy theories about a bunch of evil communist coders who are out to destroy capitalism. But Incredible as it sounds, IBM were the evil guys even against SCO.

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              • #27
                Originally posted by jacob View Post
                Where do you think Oracle, Intel, AMD and especially Microsoft - particularly old Microsoft of the Gates-Ballmer era, the worst kind - learnt their tricks?
                Economic textbooks? It's not like those practices didn't exist in the physical product world already.

                Why did OS/2 fail?
                Because of the usual IBM comical mismanagement and bureaucracy. Which is the actual IBM's trademark.

                Also BIOS and the IBM modular PC failed for the same reason. Comical mismanagement caused both to spin off and become a major world-changing thing outside of IBM's original dumb project.

                And remember the SCO Affair?
                The thing where SCO accused IBM of stealing their UNIX code during a failed joint venture they did with IBM and contributing it to Linux?

                Wasn't that a cash grab from the start? Imho there was very little "certain IBM breach of contract" there and someone really had to prove that claim.
                Last edited by starshipeleven; 27 February 2019, 12:59 AM.

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                • #28
                  Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
                  Economic textbooks? It's not like those practices didn't exist in the physical product world already.
                  They sure did, but in the computer industry (both hardware and software) IBM has always been, and remains, the world's dirtiest player and the world's largest patent troll.

                  Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
                  Because of the usual IBM comical mismanagement and bureaucracy. Which is the actual IBM's trademark.
                  I don't think you can accuse IBM of mismanagement. Overly burdensome and bureaucratic management maybe, but generally whatever they do, they do it competently and forcefully. The exception would be the PC Jr, that really was a tragicomical tale of mismanagement and moronic execution. But it remains an exception in IBM's history. They had many more famous duds (the PS/2, OS/2, the PowerPC to name just a few) but those projects died by alienating IBM's partners and clients alike, not because the products themselves were inherently bad (which is not to say that they were necessarily brilliant either).

                  Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
                  The thing where SCO accused IBM of stealing their UNIX code during a failed joint venture they did with IBM and contributing it to Linux?

                  Wasn't that a cash grab from the start? Imho there was very little "certain IBM breach of contract" there and someone really had to prove that claim.
                  It has been many years but IIRC it went something like this. IBM got SCO to sign up for Project Monterrey, which was to create a new version of UNIX for the Itanium platform. Then shortly after that, IBM changed their mind, lost interest in creating any new UNIX, killed off the project and decided to push Linux instead. SCO was furious because not only IBM let them down, but in fact started investing big time in Linux, a product that was competing against SCO's own Unixware. In a nutshell that's all it should ever have been about. But then McBride got the idea that if he could "sell" it to the public and the courts as if SCO "owned" UNIX and IBM was "stealing" it and giving it to Linux, none of which was ever remotely true, he could yet turn it into a money making scam. The rest is history, as the cliche goes.

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                  • #29
                    Absolute heroes!

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                    • #30
                      The immediate reason OS/2 failed was that IBM invested in OS/2 for PowerPC rather than OS/2 x86, and mismanaged their relationship with software vendors that could have created a solid application base. Win16 compatibility didn't help, either, particularly when a number of OS/2 versions were less functional than their Windows alternatives.

                      The longer term reason OS/2 failed/would have failed anyway was poor architectural decisions. The kernel remained (still is, in Arca OS) almost entirely 16 bit and single user. Not to mention Presentation Manager was not overhauled, it got a 32 bit GDI in SP1 of OS/2 2.0, 32 bit Windowing had to wait till Warp 3. NT did not make these mistakes, and managed to create win32 with an extremely high level of win16 compatibility, then it largely managed it again when x64 versions of Windows were released.

                      There were other reasons too (poor install, poor vendor preloads, drivers, memory requirements, graphics origin being opposite to Windows) but they probably weren't as much of a factor.

                      WINE/WinOS/2/other mostly solid emulation options can be a mixed blessing. Whilst there was a solid contributing community of OS/2 users, a large proportion of the user community expected a higher quality Windows like marketplace. This was not realistic : some of the best OS/2 applications were from small companies, the expectation should be to pay more (than Windows) for a lesser amount of functionality, but at a higher quality. The distinct danger is that users don't accept this and opt for Windows apps under emulation.

                      Linux is in a better position than OS/2, because it's open source and doesn't have to succeed. However, if you want companies contributing to Linux you need to buy their stuff..

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