> Ted Gould wrote: > Well, if you consider that fine - then why not fire up Mac-on-Linux and > you can run all your Mac OS apps on Linux? It's the same thing, the X11 > apps aren't entirely integrated into everything the way Mac OS apps > are. I think by saying "from within the X11 app" you've acknowledged > that they aren't first class citizens in the Mac OS world. As another poster pointed out, I don't believe mac-on-linux runs OSX apps. I could argue that X apps aren't first class citizens in the linux world either. Look at the layers: OSX -> X11 -> X11 app Linux -> X11 -> X11 app X11 is just a windowing system. Right? You can have the X11 environment (me calling it an app earlier was a misnomer I guess) start on boot in OSX if you wish. It's transparent. > 'just working' is important, but I think that for the most part Linux is > pretty much there now. I think with GNOME 2.x on the desktop a lot of > those issues have been fixed. Not all of them, but many off them. I > would say that printers and drivers are noticeable exceptions (except on > Mac hardware where there aren't that many drivers). Yes linux has come a long way - it's very exciting. I like OSX more because it's a clean implementation. The window managers on linux will get there... they are very close. > As far as the Apps you mentioned, I like the Linux versions better. > iTunes is nice, but Rhythmbox plays OGGs too. iChat is nice, but GAIM > supports several different IM protocols and encryption over all of > them. mail.app is nice, but I can never have a mail client without > virtual folders again, I'm addicted to Evolution. Those are all very good applications - and the same ones that I used under Linux (and I run a few of them under OSX now). > Basically it all comes down to the Apps. I like my Linux apps, and some > of them have warts, but many have key features that I use on a daily > basis. If I'm going to use all Linux apps on Mac OS X all I get is > shadows behind the windows (which is really cool). That's a way to look at it. Here's how I look at it. I get to stare at my commericial mac software (photoshop, etc), my free mac apps, my free linux apps, and of course the cocoa apps that I write myself. Sweet. I get -everything- at once. Yummy. My needs are very different from the typical user though, so of course YMMV. I really love to walk into CompUSA or the Apple Store and buy a piece of quality software (or even a game - Ghost Recon anyone?) and install it on my Mac. I missed that when running 100% linux. There's a lot of good commercial software for linux, but not in specific areas that I require. > Don't tell the Debian guys that ;) Now even the debian guys have to admit that yellow dog is cool. :) *ducks*