Simply GNUstep Delivers UNIX, Simply 396
Eugenia writes "A new, Linux-based operating system released recently, called Simply GNUstep and it is based on the GNUstep architecture, originally built by NeXT (OpenSTEP) and is now also used by MacOSX (Cocoa). The alpha version of the x86-based OS is available for download and boots off the 110 MB bootable CD. The cool thing about Simply GNUstep is its partial source compatibility with MacOSX programs (further compatibility is still worked on) and its clean infrastructure, as it only includes GnuSTEP graphical applications like WindowMaker, Mail.app etc. You can read an introduction article of the OS at OSNews."
The sad part is.... (Score:4, Interesting)
I am getting tired of my Gnome and KDE. I am starting to long for the days when I used WindowMaker, Postilion and FSviewer together with a cobbled up list of other xapps to get my job done simply.
The problems are paramount. Fsviewer barely works on my updated SuSE 7.3 Postilion does not like my cutting edge versions of tcl/tk and I am not yet ready to give up the laundry list of apps I need to do business for a barebones environment. Plus, I like unified look and feel that I get with say KDE or Gnome.
If I got a distribution with a laundry list of apps centered around those apps with a Nextish look and feel then I would be a happy man.
The problem with Simply GNUstep is that it is what it says it is. It is Linux with GNUstep already built and configured but it has nothing else.
If it was supplemented with other X apps with a Next feel or gtk apps with a Next theme maybe into a usable package then I think I would be in love.
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Re:The sad part is.... (Score:4, Insightful)
I am getting tired of my Gnome and KDE. I am starting to long for the days when I used WindowMaker
So... simply don't use them. Remove the packages if you don't even what to support apps written for them. Install your prefered GUI/WindowManager and don't look back. Seriously. It's that easy. You don't need a "special" distro to do what you want. Just simply install / remove what you want / don't want.
That's what Linux is all about: choice
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:3, Insightful)
And besides, the customizability of the KDE/Gnome environments is somewhat restricted by very complex interdependencies.
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:5, Insightful)
ACK!!'s feedback is actually important and valuable. The more people who adequately represent their own needs, the easier it is to create templates for profiling users and develop systems that fit those profiles. Yes, technically, with enough customization, 95% of distros can be made to fit 95% of the needs of 95% of the people, but relying too much on customization means that a lot of redundant work goes on (if over half the users are spending 2 hours making the same customization, wouldn't it make sense to make that customization available as a default?) and a lot of people who don't have the time to customize will go elsewhere (might not bother you, but personally I believe in network effects - the more people who use the platform I use, the more development will happen on that platform, and the more goodies I get.) Since open source development doesn't have focus groups and useability labs and market research, forums like this are frankly pretty good ways to present wishlists, complaints, and the like.
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:2)
I suppose it could've been read that I was impling that, but that's not the way I wanted to come off sounding (because I didn't even think that). I think my point still stands, though. If he doesn't like it, change it. We have the choice.
ACK!!'s feedback is actually important and valuable.
You're damn rite it is! I'm VERY glad to see opinions like that posted in a global place (and replies like ours). It shows a (sort of) unity. We all agree to disagree (so to speak). THAT'S why the Linux comunity exists and I'm am happy to be a (small) part of it.
Anyway, thank you for a good discuition.
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:2)
What happened is more that the applications he wants, like Postilion are not much being used and developed, and are suffering from bitrot.
You could even say that the attention the gnome and kde desktops get diminish the attention for others.
So what's happening is that choice is disappearing.
Maybe that's just because of GNUstep that is slowly developing. I don't know that.
But I do hope GNUstep becomes/stays a choice.
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:2)
I want a unified look and feel to my application. I tried to find alternatives in WM or WINGs apps but had trouble with dependency issues Postillion with tk particularily and FSviewer was screaming for an older version of a library that has already been updated a zillion times.
GNUstep compile-all on core kept dying with what I think might be linker issues with the version Objective C I have on my box.
Like what another user said the older WindowMaker look and feel apps a lot of them anyway have not been updated in awhile. Other apps like GNUstep itself just barf probably because from the requirements SuSE comes with 2.95.3 gcc instead of gcc 3.0 and it will not compile against the
I have even thought of just running a bare bones sawfish windowmanager without the gnome stuff but have not gotten around to trying it on for size.
After all, right now I use mostly gtk+ apps. Just a preference BTW not a religious point of view (no pro-KDE flames please I know its advantages).
I ran WindowMaker for two years and had little trouble besides the fact it annoyed me that all the apps had a different look and feel.
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Glib response (Score:3, Interesting)
DisplayPDF, Aqua window manager, a Dock, Finder (with three view modes), Mail.app, and all for a low price of $1,799!
You even get a DVD-R and LCD screen out of it
Re:Glib response (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:4, Insightful)
If you want Gtk+ apps with a NextStep theme, then use Gtk+ apps with a NextStep theme, any current linux distro can give you this.
Re:The sad part is.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Or you could chose option 4. (Score:2, Troll)
Why pick yet another Linux Distro (This is this weeks Distro of the week) when you can pick FreeBSD, an OS that has shipped with a NeXTish interface for years.
(Oh, and you get to avoid GNOME or KDE bloat, at least until you install gnumeric.)
Re:Or you could chose option 4. (Score:2, Interesting)
Not only that, but it would be a Mac OS like OS for PC that is based on the Mac kernel. Using the same kernel and API set as Mac OS would be really useful. There is already starting to be quite a presence of GNU software for Darwin (can be run on Mac OS X too, not just plain Darwin installs). You can check it out at www.gnu-darwin.org [gnu-darwin.org]
Re:Or you could chose option 4. (Score:2)
I don't see that it really matters. Any lower level calls are just abstracted through the toolkit anyway. And Linux probably supports a lot more hardware and has better performance.
Why Linux?? (Score:5, Insightful)
I dunno.
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2, Interesting)
OK perhaps darwin isn't ready for prime time, but hey....
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2)
- If Apple ever licenses Darwin as free software, Simply GNUstep could switch.
This is a little misleading. The Free Software Foundation doesn't consider Apple's license to be free [gnu.org], but puhleeease...Darwin is free software. It's just silly how RMS thinks he owns the word "free." Next he'll be expecting us to call it GNU/MacOS X.AFAICT, it doesn't matter that the APSL is GPL-incompatible, because a Darwin-based GNUStep wouldn't have to link to the Darwin kernel; Darwin is a microkernel design, so you don't need to link anything to it.
Anyhow, GNUStep sounds like a great project. I'd kinda like to help out with it myself. I like MacOS X, but I figure Apple's going to be out of business within 5 years, and I need an exit strategy. Once GNUStep is running on Linux, it doesn't sound like it should be a big problem to get it running on Darwin (famous last words!) I really don't want to mess with an OS that forces me to recompile the kernel periodically.
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2, Informative)
Would you think it was silly if you put lots of work into modifying Darwin for internal use, and then realized that you were legally obligated to publish your changes? Because, according to the link you provide, that's why the FSF doesn't call Darwin free.
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2)
IMO, BSD-style licenses are more free than GPL-style ones. Therefore, all GNU software is unfree. But so what? Why should you care what I think, and why should I care what you think? Nobody's forcing anyone to join a free-software project under a license they don't agree with. It's just misleading to state that Darwin isn't free, when really all that's meant is that it isn't free-as-in-RMS.
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Put up or shut up.
I'll wager good money ($1,000 sound good? How about $10,000?) that Apple will not be out of business within 5 years. We can define "out of business" as "having declared Chapter 7 Bankruptcy and in the process of selling off remaining assets."
If Apple is purchased by another company and still making Macs/Mac OS X/etc., that doesn't count as "out of business" in my book.
So, you willing to bet?
-jon
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2, Insightful)
With FSF driving the bus, I don't see it making any forays into software which doesn't support the GPL.
I, personally, have grown weary of Linux distros. Redhat is chock full of bloat, Two attempts at debian have left me frustrated and angry. I read on the "You can roll your own" like LinuxFromScratch, but dont have that much time to invest.
When OpenBSD 3.0 came out, I installed it on a spare box just for giggles. I was shocked to find that it was EXACTLY what I expected from an OS. That box became my new cable modem router. I can't quantify it, but OpenBSD just FEELS right. If it did SMP, I'd have it on every box I own by now.
Re:Why Linux?? (Score:2)
If you're still interested in finding a decent Linux distro, give Slackware a look. No fancy configuration wizards or package management, just good clean Linux.
GNUStep (Score:2, Interesting)
However, I'm not sure it's ready yet. redraws are slower than mollasses headed uphill in January, and the sample applications (what little there is) are characterized by a lack of features and a tendency to crash.
When GNUStep is ready for prime time, I'll be happy. Hopefully, this can help that day come sooner
Good to see (Score:4, Insightful)
I remember trying to get GnuStep to work a few months back. The code compiled pretty cleanly, and I played around a bit with the development framework for GNUStep (which is rather cool btw, makes writing build files for apps extremely clean, and ObjectiveC is an extremely nice language).
I just wish there was a better way of integrating GNUStep, KDE, and Gnome. I really think a concerted effort by all three teams to support a common base (common component interfaces, clipboard, look&feel configuration files) would be beneficial for all involved.
GNUStep brings with it a good, tried&true development framework.
KDE & Gnome are both more evolved, with more and better applications.
Getting these to work together would be a worthwhile proposition.
-Laxitive
Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course that may be a bit pointless given you can get Mac OS X which is more mature, but it would still be interesting to see it.
What willbe really interesting is if this becomes kine of like a "Mine", allowing PC users to run some select Mac OS X software along with their Linux apps. Think of this as a way for Apple to take a more back door foray into the x86 world, to expand use of Apple's software and show people how cool some of Apple's software on the Mac is by getting iTunes and such to run on this thing. It would certainly give PC users who used this (who I admit would likely not be your run of the mill PC user) a taste of Apple's world without them having to go out and purchase a Mac right away.
Maybe wishful thinking, but any alternative to the current status quo (i.e. Windows) is welcome at this point even if it doesn't do all I hope it eventually can.
Re:Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:3, Insightful)
Pretty unlikely. Remember, its partially *source* compatible. OS X PowerPC binaries compiled against Cocoa cannot possibly run under Linux/GNUstep on x86. Since most Mac software is distributed commercial in binary-only form its unlikely that any of it will be instantly available on linux, and even if it is, they are as likely to port it using something "standard" like Qt even if it means rewriting much of the program, than to try to get it to work with GNUStep in its present form.
And certainly software sold by Apple itself, like iTunes, is about as likely to be ported to linux as, say, Microsoft Office, GNUstep or no.
Re:Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:5, Interesting)
NeXTstep has something called "fat binaries". It means that the same application that runs on my 68040 NeXT machine will also run on my HP and Intel machines running NeXTstep. When I compile my application, I simply tell the compiler to compile for all these platforms.
Sure, the binaries end up being bigger (about 50% larger for each platform, if I recall), but it was completely painless, and you could use "lipo" to reduce the binary size (and make the application only run on a single platform) if you wanted.
Yes sir, this was state-of-the-art back in 1992. 10 years later, it's all but disapeared.
Re:Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:5, Informative)
Obviously the Darwin/Intel contingent is pretty small, so I haven't seen this in practice.
On my Mac OS X 10.1.2 box:
% which lipo
/usr/bin/lipo
Re:Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, PowerPC version? (Score:4, Informative)
openstep (Score:3, Insightful)
My point was that if he did this, and developers did adopt the platform, he'd end up with lots of apps that would run on the Mac, and would thereby neutralize the Windows API proprietary boondoggle.
He ignored my advice at the time, and this is nice, but too little too late to solve the problem of creating a true platform-independent API that developers would want to write to.
Re:openstep (Score:2)
Corrections (Score:4, Informative)
The above is wrong. The original NeXT Computer OS was called NeXTSTEP (notice capitalisation--it's important in what follows). When NeXT Computer ditched hardware, it became "NeXT Software", and spun off it's OS (in the 3.x version) into a cross platform OS called OpenStep (4.x).
This OS was to run on Sun, Intel and NeXT boxes. The API was modified, and made public (the API, not implementation).
This API specification was called OPENSTEP (capitalisation differs from the NeXT Software OS name).
GNUStep is therefore based on the OPENSTEP specification. No other permutation of name and inheritance is correct.
Re:Corrections (Score:2)
> (notice capitalisation--it's important in what
> follows).
Oh so close, but not quite. The original OS was NeXTstep. Got changed to NeXTSTEP around 3.0.
Re:Corrections (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Corrections (Score:2)
OpenStep ran on x86, sparc, motorola (68k) and hppa architectures.
OpenStep tended to have poor integration and "feel" on all of the above archs except the native 68k on real black hardware.
Re:Corrections (Score:2)
But you're right about the poor integration. Here's a comment from some code I wrote when NeXTSTEP for Intel was first shipped,
#ifdef NSFIP
/*
* memcmp (as per ANSI definition) was shipped broken on
* NeXTStep for Intel Processors. This should be removed
* sometime after it is fixed.
*/
Oh boy. When memcmp doesn't work what else is broken :)
The C library version of memcmp assumed big-endian [68K] and did word accesses to compare ints rather than bytes, IIRC it messed up the end case, comparing the wrong bytes of the last word. There was no problem when optimizing, gcc uses a (good) builtin, but turn off -O and things broke.
But it all lives on... I bought a Mac a while ago to run Mac OS X. Immediately after getting it I install OS X and reboot. And a big smile comes to my face. It was like stepping back in time. The blue background, the spinning color wheel, the boot graphics, the login panel. The look's updated a bit but it's NeXTSTEP. Services, NetInfo, .app's, Interface Builder. Finally, its all out there again.
Screenshots, please. (Score:3, Insightful)
And you can get more users to try it out too, if they can see something before they download that 110MB of data. Even at that "small size", it's still a lot, for people like me who don't have access to high speed internet.
Re:Screenshots, please. (Score:2, Informative)
Bootup is EXACTLY like RedHat/Mandrake.... guess they didn't implement that part yet.
After booting it starts up X in vesa mode and up pops the GUI... It looks...well..exactly like WindowMaker... I'm guessing cause thats what theyre using.
As far as apps go it's minimal...you got a terminal, email, and stuff...nothing out of the ordinary.
They do have a nice IDE Development though.
I'll check it out next release probably.... it seemed pretty fast. Worth checking out.... just make sure you burn this on an CD-RW....
Chow!
Re:Screenshots, please. (Score:2)
If you follow the link to OS News [osnews.com] there's a link to the left for screenshots and a bunch of other stuff
Download doesn't work (Score:3, Informative)
:(
Re:Download doesn't work (Score:2)
Re:Download doesn't work (Score:2, Informative)
Not there yet. (Score:4, Informative)
The startup looked interesting, at any rate. It failed to detect my NIC (a pretty standard DEC Tulip card) and gave a few other errors I can't remember. Then it tried to run X, but since it was configured to use the framebuffer driver, which wasn't working, it choked. Needless to say if they had at least allowed the option of using the XFree86 accelerated drivers, it would have been fine, but they don't. So then the system shut itself down. This worked ok, except their kernel is compiled without APM support, so it didn't actually turn itself off.
Oh well. I'll try it again later, seems like a decent idea really.
Re:Not there yet. (Score:5, Informative)
As this was mainly a demo cd, I was more concerned with getting it to run on as many machines as possible with minimal effore (therefore, VESA)
The actual installation disc I'll end up creating will not try to use the VESA framebuffer.
Chad
Re:Not there yet. (Score:3, Informative)
For now, just got to http://simplygnustep.sourceforge.net and download it there.
Chad
Re:Not there yet. (Score:2)
Just keep trying to get it until the file's named back:
cloudmaster@mymachine:~> g=0; while ! wget http://simplygnustep.sourceforge.net/downloads/sta ge-1.iso.zip > /dev/null 2> do g=$(($g+1)); echo $g; sleep 5; done; echo "retrieved after $g tries" | mail -s "simply unix done" cloudmaster
Assuming you're running a bourne shell, you'll get a progressively incrementing count until the file's name gets that ".0" off of the end and people can download it again. Whee. :)
Simplicity is key (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't forget there are a lot of intelligent people who enjoy tinkering with things (computers and OSes included) but can't afford to spend too much time...
If the developers also choose a well rounded set of applications, then we'll have an interesting alternative to packing a zillion apps (almost) noone will use and creating yet another distro that confuses users about the choices, rather than being itself an alternative choice.
By having something simple you can use and extend, you are also a lot more motivated to actually use it and stick with it, rather than observe at amazement and then go back to .
Perhaps, simplicity is itself a choice sorely missed all too often nowadays...
What does RMS call it? (Score:4, Funny)
Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, Objective-C also has many fine attributes, and has never gained the popularity it deserves. Objective-C (gcc is Apple's Obj-C compiler also) is fully compiled and has great legacy compatibility with C, both desirable attributes when compared with Java. There are other tradeoffs between the languages, but Objective-C looks like a great Java alternative in certain circumstances. It also looks like a fun 'recreational language' for side projects.
I was considering one of the new iMacs anyhow, it's good to see that much code might port to an open source setting also! :-)
299,792,458 m/s...not just a good idea, its the law!
Re:Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:2)
Java is the hands-down winner here. In fact, if you are developing WebObjects code, and need to use C++ libraries, Java is the best way to go! It's that, or write C wrappers for your C++, and call those from Obj-C. Ugh.
To be fair, the problem is most likely that Obj-C has been all but abandoned, and never has worked properly alongside C++. Had Obj-C received the development resources of Java, it wouldn't have these drawbacks.
Re:Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:2, Informative)
Apple has made modifications to gcc to support "Objective C++", which allows Objective C code to use C++ syntax and classes. Hopefully these changes will eventually be merged into the main gcc sources.
Take a look at that proposal [google.com] by Ziemowit Laski ...
clarification (Score:2)
What it does allow you to do is mix Objective-C and C++ in the same source file, using C++ syntax to deal with C++ classes and objects, and the Obj-C runtime/syntax to deal with Obj-C classes and objects. They're still quite seperated. However, I don't imagine it would be hard to have an automated conversion process going. The only real blocking point on that one is the static and opaque nature of C++, where Objective-C is dynamic and reflective enough to allow such tricks.
Re:Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:3, Informative)
That just isn't true. Obj-C is not popular or widespread, but Apple continues to develop the language. Take a look at the release notes from Project Builder:
Since I do this quite a bit, I'd have to say Obj-C and C++ play quite nicely together.Re:Mmmm...Objective-C! (Score:2)
However, when you have a precompiled C++ library that used a -different- compiler from the gcc you are currently working with (such as the Sun WSPro compiler, or an older version of gcc), this is where the headaches begin.
Perhaps this is just a compiler issue, and not an Obj-C issue, but seeing as the only compiler that supports Obj-C is gcc, I tend to (incorrectly) lump the two together.
Close... (Score:2, Interesting)
I like the Linux core, I enjoy and am comfortable with Linux as a kernel and the GNU/Linux combo as an OS. I want a better GUI on top of it that pleases my aesthetic sense, makes my life easier when I want it to be easier, doesn't feature at least two separate tracks of font management systems, lots of apps of massively disjoint look-and-feel and more widget toolkits than I care to think about. In other words, Simply GNUStep is a good move, but why don't we consider dropping the X windows? Furthermore, why don't we consider taking this a step further? Hell, OS X took the old NextStep stuff and improved it dramatically. Why don't we do the same, and not be constrained by OS X or attempt to parrot or copy it, and see if we can improve on it?
I agree that source level compatibility with OS X is a nice feature at this point in time since lots of Cocoa apps are being written (primarily because OS X is doing so well), and I like the *Step environments. But I'd like to see some innovation from the Open Source world too.
Heh, build it on Darwin. (Score:4, Interesting)
Not a new OS (Score:3, Insightful)
GNUStep isn't an OS, it's the API from NeXTSTEP.
It's supposedly really really cool to program in because Objective-C is a lot more dynamic in its design than C++. (Much less type checking = less recompilation, more rapid development, it's a lot more like working in Smalltalk or a scripting language like Ruby. So I hear from people who use Objective-C in my company.)
HOWEVER it ain't ready, GNUStep is still laying the foundations. When they're all laid, it should be possible to add a lot of very good apps very fast. (NeXT is most famous for having been something you can develop apps very well and fast in.)
This is an interesting start.
GNUStep apps should be relatively easy to port to Cocoa and vice versa, that's the extent of the connection.
All this yammering about how pretty the window decorations are is silly. It ain't about looking like candy, it's about being pleasant to use and working well.
All this stuff about "being the next BeOS" is silly too. This isn't about users... not yet. It's about developers. It isn't a new OS, it's a new programming environment and a Linux distro optimized for it.
Terms & Definitions (Score:5, Informative)
TINATCMOP This is not a troll-check my other posts (Score:2, Funny)
GoATSTEPx: a wide-open public-domain environment supporting hot-plugging of peripherals soon to be cleaned up and released by Microsoft. (It's easy to tell where the first patch will be applied!)
graspee
corrections (Score:2)
NeXTSTEP: Not the hardware, but the original OS made by NeXT. Versions 0.3 - 3.3.
The NeXT cube, NeXT Turbo Cube, NeXT Station, NeXT Color Station, NeXT Turbo Station, and NeXT Color Turbo Station are the names of the computers NeXT sold.
OpenStep: The OpenStep API was a bit different than the original NeXTSTEP API. The "open" part of the moniker denotes that it was an open API spec, and OpenStep followed this spec. This allows for other implementations to happen, like GNUstep or OpenStep for Solaris. Versions 4.0 - 4.2.
Yes, I did say OpenStep for Solaris. There was also an OpenStep Enterprise for Windows. OpenStep for Solaris allowed you to run an OpenStep environment and related apps on top of X11, rather like GNUstep does. It ran it's own OpenStep window manager, but still allowed vanilla X apps.
OSE for Win32 was the OpenStep API for Windows, allowing one to develop and run OpenStep apps on Windows. While it didn't change the shell/wm like in OS/Solaris, you could run OpenStep apps remotely, including the Dock and WorkSpace.app- which was pretty cool to see. The widgets were given a bit more of a Windows look.
Rhapsody: Wasn't dropped entirely, as you say. The original Rhapsody vision was dropped, but Rhapsody was released as Mac OS X Server 1.x. Mac OS X Server 2.0 is based on Mac OS X 10.0, however.
Re: Terms & Definitions - typo (Score:2)
How many companies retain their CEO, President, CTO, have their development teams made primary and and their product become the central one at a company after being bought out? Next bought Apple, for negative $400 million - not a typo.
I think it was a good thing: Copeland was a disaster, Gershwin a pipe dream, Apple was unable to do what needed to be done, unable to reign in their development teams nor drop their committment to 100% backwards compatibilty, and frankly the move seems to have been good for BOTH OS's. But look whose running the show - it's the Next folks.
Re: Terms & Definitions - typo (Score:2)
There were valid reasons for Rhapsody getting canned.
First off it offered almost no migration path. Sure the MacOS virtual environment was listed but this was considered a hollow promise unikely to succeed. Furthermore it was off on it's own - no interaction with the rest of the system, an abandoned stepchild.
Second there was no way to port old code to the new platform. Everything would have to be rewritten, from scratch, using the Next frameworks. While Next's stuff was widely admired companies had millions of dollars invested in their existing code bases plus almost no one familier with the Next material.
So, faced with rewriting everything for a new OS on a platform that at the time had been steadily declining (this was pre-iMac) or having their exisiting code relegated to some lame-ass virtulaiziation environment while at the same time WinNT was requiring a ramp up and going great guns... Sorry no way Apple.
Even the promise of cross-platform support couldn't change that. Everyone is and was well familier with the "It ain't done 'till 123 won't run" strategies of MS and suspected that even if a decent Rhapsody layer were shipped for Wintel it wouldn't be long before some Windows revision broke it, leaving Apple & MS in an arms war Apple couldn't win.
Today Apple is suffering with the wins and losses of it's revised strategy with the Carbon campatibility layer. It's enabled lots of products to move over quickly but they're not really native and so aren't able to take full advantage of the new OS nor show it off to it's full potential. I expect next year once Apple's got Carbon tweaked to the point it's widely usable they'll then start pushing devopers to begin making the transition to Cocoa, likely by pushing lots of the services and features Cocoa has and which won't be made accessable to Carbon. Apple has already made more availiable to Carbon then they had planned but I expect we won't see much more - Apple wants that pressure.
What's the point? (Score:2, Insightful)
WindowMaker has already been around for awhile and comes with it's own GNUstep like interface (or it is it's own GNUstep interface if you want to split hairs). If you don't like WindowMaker, then use AfterStep which again gives you the NeXT type interface (dock, clip, etc.). Either of these can be installed onto any Linux distro. You can install RedHat and get all the cool hardware detection with it and just don't install KDE/Gnome/etc. then grab the latest WindowMaker/AfterStep files and you have the same thing this is offering. So where's the magic?
Some of the features it's touting:
Uses the latest linux kernels and its latest features (ie: pure devfs, framebuffer)
Great, except according to some people here it has a lot of problems just installing. Besides, in a few weeks (or whenever the next update happens) the latest kernels will be out of date. You may as well just ftp your own kernels and compile them for your own system.
Graphical Boot-Up (no confusing Linux kernel messages)
Personally I like seeing the messages boot up so I know what sub-systems and modules are being loaded. If my sound module fails at least I know it.
Kept as simple as possible (no GNOME, no KDE, etc, just GNUstep)
Just install any linux distro without KDE/Gnome and slap on WindowMaker/AfterStep and you get the same thing right? So how is this a selling feature?
So we've already got this if you want it. Just go and grab whatever window manager suits your taste. If this is a move towards Mac OS X compatibility then great, but it seems like a very small step as there is a LOT of work ahead to even get something close to that.
Personally it just seems like a waste to bundle it with yet another copy of Linux. Separate it out (unless there's something special you're doing with the kernal) as a download so anyone can grab it in less than 10 minutes and let us decide which kernel to use for the base.
At the very least, toss up a few screenshots, make the download availalbe in a few formats and provide a little more information about what features this has or will have. What's the big picture and where is it leading?
liB
Why aren't the Debian packages complete? (Score:2)
Update from Chad (author) (Score:5, Informative)
thankful!
It seems I broke a rule at sourceforge which limits file sizes to 100MB
If someone could offer a mirror site I would be very thankful for that as well!
Thanks! Chad
Here's what sourceforge had to say
--------------
Greetings,
My name is ********; I am the Quality of Service Manager for
SourceForge.net. This message is directed to you since you are
designated as a project administrator for the Simply GNUstep project on
SourceForge.net.
First, we would like to take a moment to congratulate you on your recent
press exposure on Slashdot.org -- we love to see Open Source projects
succeed, and press exposure of this nature is always of great benefit.
Since the announcement of your project efforts on
received roughly 2241 downloads of the ISO image provided through your
download page at: http://simplygnustep.sourceforge.net/Download.htm
It has come to our attention that you are making use of SourceForge.net
project web services as a mechanism to release file materials in excess
of 100MB in size. Each project hosted on SourceForge.net is provided
with project web services as to ensure that they may adequately provide
an online description and information regarding their project.
... etc
Why simply GNUstep will not DL! (Score:5, Informative)
If someone would like to offer a mirror I would appreciate it very much!
Chad Hardin
Re:Why simply GNUstep will not DL! (Score:5, Informative)
We do, however, encourage people to use our File Release System (FRS) which does not have this 100MB limitation.
The File Release System is recommended for a number of reasons; one of which is
to allow us to balance the traffic load among many download servers on our high-capacity download network.
Before we removed the file, Simply GNUstep had two thousand downloads at 110MB each, during the course of the day (totalling over 200 GB of data).
Obviously we need to distribute this kind of load, which our file release system allows us to do; otherwise this kind of download traffic will impact the other 30,000 projects we host.
If you have any other questions about this, please feel free to email me at pat (at) sourceforge.net
compatibility (Score:2, Insightful)
Arent all programs 'partialy source compatible' with an OS that has that particular compiller this could be great in terms of colaberation and future development but it also could be nothing mroe than empty hype.
Their download link is 403... (Score:2)
Re:enlighten me (Score:3, Informative)
GNUstep is better! (Score:2, Informative)
Also, GNUstep will run on some pretty old hardware. I have changed the setup lately, but I used to have KDE2 on my 900mhz duron w/ 512 MB and WindowMaker on my PII 100mhz w/ 32 MB and if you didn't actually know, you'd think the PII was faster just because the environment was so lightweight.
GNUstep *is* more user friendly--by Fitts' Law (Score:5, Interesting)
KDE, on the other hand, blindly copies microsoft's system of extremely tiny, unlabelled toolbar buttons that have extremely slow mouse access times and extremely small and cryptic icons whose true nature can only be discovered by either clicking on the toolbar button and possibly performing a destructive task or painstakingly holding the mouse over the toolbar button for several unbearable seconds to get the tooltip. "But Microsoft spends zillions of dollars on usability research" some say. And they spend tens of zillions on security research with results just as good. Microsoft is by far the most frequent inductee into the user interface hall of shame [iarchitect.com], and such windows UI shennanigans as multi-level tabs, window in window MDI, and Window XP/2000's dynamic menus have been frequently and harshly criticized in the UI design community. "But Windows users coming to Linux will be familiar with lots of really tiny, confusing, toolbar buttons with slow access times" they say. Windows users are certainly familiar with the Blue Screen of Death--maybe we should put stuff in the linux kernel to make it crash so they'll feel right at home. Yes, I know that there are options in KDE to have icons and text appear together. But this is not done by default. And probably 90% of users end up using the default which is installed with their application/OS. If you don't believe me, just ask Netscape. In the cold, hard reality of end-user desktop UI design, not doing something by default is really the same thing as not doing it.
I challenge the KDE Usability [kde.org] project to, by default, give KDE have large, labelled toolbar buttons that are fast to access and easy to understand. They of course don't have to take this challenge; some people would prefer linux not to get on the desktop.
Re:GNUstep *is* more user friendly--by Fitts' Law (Score:2, Insightful)
Choose text position. Icons only, Text only, Text beside icons, Text underneath icons.
Configurable on a per toolbar, per application, and globally.
As the the large wharf / dock icons in GnuStep, in KDE, choose a large panel, large panel icons. To comply with fitts law, just push the mouse to the edge of the screen at the panel and it will still hit the button. No repositioning, and quick, ala Apple's menubar.
The K menu, by default, is in the corner for this reason - just push into the corner and click to activate.
So, you don't know KDE. Try again. Turn on the next widget theme, kwin theme / style, and feel at home. Get the 3rd party panel add on to dock your window maker applets, and to emulate the dock.
Have fun.
Re:GNUstep *is* more user friendly--by Fitts' Law (Score:3, Flamebait)
Sure, maybe you can ship the OS with huge child-like controls for newbies, but it is essential that grown-ups be able to shrink them down to an unobtrusive size.
Re:GNUstep is better! (Score:2)
I'm not trying to be a pissant or anything, but I'm a little tired of the criticism Gnome takes sometime for being "too Win98-like."
Take a look at a fairly recent screenshot [cybermesa.com] of my desktop. Note the panel on the left, which is auto-hidden and contains icons for my most commonly used apps. Now, apart from common UI elements and the taskbar, how can you possibly say that Gnome has a "Windows98 look and feel"? I'm sure you can make it look somewhat like Win98, but you can also make it look vastly different.
I mean, do people who make these remarks fail to realize that you can actually customize the panels for almost every configuration, change the theme, modify the menus, or get a different window manager until you find a configuration that's useful?
And to address what you say about performance, I have Gnome running on a PII266 laptop with 64MB of RAM (which I consider to be "older hardware") and it's quite speedy for everything I want to do. (KDE is another story, however...)
Re:Not having a taskbar sucks (Score:2)
Re:GNUstep is better! (Score:2, Interesting)
Remember fondly? That's what I use for my router, DNS, web server, and development workstation!
It's time to upgrade when people start using phrases like "remember fondly" to describe the most powerful system you own.
Re:GNUstep is better! (Score:2)
Re:GNUstep is better! (Score:2)
its what its already /brought/ to the party! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
If you like BSD better, why not just use it?
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:4, Insightful)
People with this holier than thou attitude really need a reality check. Why does not having a TV make you a better person? I have a TV, but I don't waste every waking minute in front of it. Still, it does me good to be in on the pop culture of our times. Without a TV I wouldn't be as much a part of US society. But if you don't want a TV, I applaud that. Just don't go hyping how awesome you are for not having a TV.
Same thing goes for you. You make this implication that the second Linux became profitable and useable by the masses of computer geeks, it became not elitist. And so when BSD reaches this point, where it becomes massively accepted and useful for many things, will you then decide it too is not elite enough for you?
Is Microsoft Windows the greatest? No. Is Linux the greatest? No. Is MacOS the greatest? No. Is BSD the greatest? No. Every single one has something about them that someone doesn't like. Personally, I'm really learning to love linux, but it's taking time. Will I tell others how I think Linux is generally better for a lot of productivity and security things? Yes. Will I try cramming it down their throats how brain-dead and worthless everything about MS Windows is? No, not unless I feel like being a real ass.
BTW, good job with making this post a subtle enough troll not to get you modded down as such. Too bad people actually modded it up.
OT: Television (Score:3, Offtopic)
Why does not having a TV make you a better person?
I don't have a TV either. I don't believe that it makes me a better person. However, when I mention that I don't have a TV, a lot of people immediately get very defensive. Bear in mind that I don't go around advertising this fact. It's more like,
"Did you see Friends last night?"
"No, missed it."
"What, how could you miss Friends?!!"
"I don't own a TV."
For whatever reason, people tend to get really defensive, as if they feel attacked. The reaction is almost exactly like when I've told pot smokers that I don't smoke pot. It's not an uncommon response for them to ask, "What? Do you think that makes you better than me?" even though I made no indication that it was a moral issue. This is the response of someone who feels guilty for their behavior, right or wrong as it may be to feel that way. In the context of such an exchange, I might actually reply, in exasperation, that not owning a TV or not smoking pot or whatever it may be really does make me a better person. I think that's where the sig comes from.
Besides, TV really does suck. Can you make any argument in favor of owning a TV? Well, it looks as though you did.
Still, it does me good to be in on the pop culture of our times. Without a TV I wouldn't be as much a part of US society.
Does this really sound that convincing to you? It's just a pretty way of saying that TV is a cultural normalizer. Have you noticed that in any given time of day, all the major networks have rather similar shows? That's because TV programming is predicated on uniformity of its audience.
If you watch a person's behavior when they shoot up smack, it's the same as when they watch TV. The eyes gloss over, the body slumps, the brain goes into an alpha state, etc. Look at how a person watches TV. What's channel surfing? It's looking for something to lull the viewer into a trance. If people really watched for content they would stick to certain shows, or just rent DVDs. That's far from the norm. The norm is to get off work and look through the channels for something to dullen the senses, just like a closet drunk looking in various hiding places around the house for a bottle stashed away. This may seem like an extreme comparison. Bear in mind that liver damage will cut a person's life by ten years perhaps. How many years do people surrender to TV, thirty minutes at a time?
Do I really think I'm better than you for not owning a TV? No. But I do feel like I'm enjoying a freedom of mind that a lot of people choose to give up in order to pass the time. Perhaps they view the choice of what to do with their free time as a burden. Maybe they are really concerned with what will happen on Survivor. I just happen not to feel that way. But if someone should get defensive with me when I tell them so, I'd probably give it right back to them.
I'm not meaning to troll... (Score:2)
it's going. Older versions of Redhat, like 4.x and
5.x were pretty nice. I like slackware, but I need
a solution that works on more hardware than x86.
I generally don't tend to be raving about OS's
anymore. When I was younger, I was an OS/2 user,
and did that then, but now I'm generally happy
with a simple, generic Unix with good hardware
support and little hassle compiling stuff myself.
Opensource is a plus. Linux used to be like that,
but it seems that the distributions I liked in
the past are becoming less to my liking as time
goes on. Will BSD ever go that way? I hope not --
if it does I'll move on if possible. I do, as
noted, like the way the linux kernel is configured. If someone had a crossplatform
Linux distro with a very minimal, nonintrusive
package system, very vanilla but up-to-date
pieces, I'd consider moving to it instead. If
you know of such a distro, tell me...
I'm not, at least in this message, talking about
windows. I just have some severe issues with
redhat's technical decisions and the way other
distributions reproduce said decisions.
Is this really a troll in your eyes?
At the risk of plugging the obvious... (Score:3, Informative)
Granted, the distro tree is a lot more desktop-oriented than it deserves to be, seeing as it makes such a decent server distribution. Just pick and choose your packages carefully and you can make it anything you want. (Hey, it's even got a sane "package" implementation.) It takes well to having bits and pieces added onto it (although doing so does tend to break down your ability to manage it as a "distribution" per se).
At any rate, it's a simple, highly-customizable, all-purpose distribution, and it doesn't boot to a GUI after install. I use it for everything from a 486 with 8 megs of RAM to serve a mailing list, to a P3 with 512 megs as a pseudo-desktop network dealie. What more could you ask?
Look over there!
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
the BSD userland stuff. The FreeBSD bootup driver
switching utility is quite impressive. But I like
the broader driver support that Linux has, and
the build tools to recompile the kernel on linux
are nice. If it wern't for those two features,
I probably would prefer the FreeBSD kernel, although
when it comes to userland features, I actually
prefer OpenBSD.
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
[freebsd.org]
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/book
It's got the menuing hand-holding of DOS Edit - and it's small.
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
Actually, when I started using Linux about 3 years ago, I had a hard time moving from edit.exe, which I still prefer over notepad and other windows editors. On Linux I've found jed to be closest to it, plus it has syntax hilighting and other cool features. RedHat ships with jed, but doesn't install it by default. It is usually on the second cd.
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
You use vi - not only because you need to edit source files - but also to satisfy some aesthetic impulse which is atavistic and minimal?
Wild trolling!
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
Re:I love vim (Score:2, Interesting)
That is an advantage to a commercial unix or a BSD over linux; you get a non-bloated working system, then you add stuff you like. It's just a cleaner way to work.
Re:I love vim (Score:2)
# cat > /etc/rc.conf
That way, I know I won't be hosed by any text editor.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:If it's a fairly BSDish Linux.. (Score:2)
It was pretty neat -- I liked the simple interface.
Some of the netinfo stuff was a bit difficult to
use, IIRC -- it was kind of hard to make DNS
work on it. I actually still have a NeXT slab
on my desk. I don't log into it much, but I love
the monitor... I hope that the GNUStep project
ends up a success -- I loved programming on NeXTStep
As close as you'll get... (Score:2)
Same goes for SGI.
Re:does this distro give the experience of using N (Score:5, Interesting)
But here we are 17 years later, and everyone has finally had a chance to catch up. (Except for Apple, who is now a good 5 years ahead of everyone else by basing their system on NeXTstep
The beauty of NeXTstep was the underlying Objective-C APIs and the dev tools. Amazing, simply amazing. The "build a text editor in under 1 minute without even compiling" example was always a winner.
Using GNUstep w/ WindowMaker is pretty close to the look of NeXTstep, but just seems to be lacking in the "feel" department (that from running GNUstep on my PC, right next to NeXTstep on my 68040 NeXTstation.)
Of course, that was over a year ago, so things might have changed a lot with GNUstep/WIndowMaker since then.
If you can get yourself a NeXT machine cheap, go for it. Heck, you might even be able to find an old Intel of HP machine with NeXTstep on it. But don't expect it to be a dailt use machine. I recently picked up a Mac Classic at a garage sale for the same reason: it's fun to remember what computers were like just a few (well, 12-15
OS X doesn't run on my Alpha (Score:2)
It means I don't have to by a new box to run it.
And I don't use anything to oppose Microsoft, I do use it becuase I prefer it, I can configure it the way I want, and I know that it lets me interface cleanly with the *NIX machines I use, ranging from OpenBSD firewall to UNICOS supercomputers.
Besides, if you'd actually read about it, you'd know that it uses Objective C, and fits in at the level of GNOME and KDE. It's not a kernel.
Re:first reaction (Score:2, Informative)
Tony