[Coco] For the love of an OS.
Tony
tonym at compusource.net
Tue May 3 00:09:27 EDT 2011
On Mon, 2011-05-02 at 20:37 -0700, Steve Bjork wrote:
> In front of me, I have Mac, PC (window 7 pro 64-bit) and iOS iPad2. In
> back office the are More Macs, PC windows and Linux systems too. They
> all get along together! Each computer or device it running OS that's
> the best for it.
>
> I got an number of micro-controllers that use Windows. For music and
> graphics I use both windows and the Mac. If I need to run a server or
> NAS than I would most likely drop a Linux kernel on it.
>
> But this is the way I've looked at computers for the past 30 years.
> Even back in the early CoCo days, I used other computers to help create
> my CoCo programs. Whatever computer that was best (for me) at the task,
> that's the one I would pick.
>
> Trying to use a poor virtual system is a kluge. (and not worth the
> headaches) Don't get me wrong, there are good virtual systems out
> there. (Most are a bit pricey.) Sometimes it's better to just use the
> real thing.
>
> You may say the real thing is too costly. Well that's the real test!
> Does the need justify the cost?
>
> I should disclose that I'm in the Windows camp and not so much a Mac
> user. But most of my coding time is spent work on a Mac. But use the OS
> that gets the job done. I do have other pet projects (on other OS)
> that I work to get the taste of Steve Job's nEXT OS out of my mouth.
> (Objective C, yuk!) Even a little Perl coding can clean the palette.
>
> Bottom line, don't kludge. Just build the real thing. Or duel boot
> the computer. I feel better about the number of macs I own since they
> all run Windows just fine via Bootcamp.
>
> Steve
>
What's a kludge for you, is a gold mine for me.
I have a quad-core AMD x920 BE-based Dell laptop, 8GB RAM, running
Ubuntu 10.04.2 LTS. For my corporate environment, I have a WinXP x86 VM
under VirtualBox, with the usual suspects: Office, Visio, vSphere client
for the data center, etc...
For the rest, I use the Linux OS underneath, or additional VMs.
When I'm travelling, I have an Asterisk VM I bring up so my co-workers
and I can call home, I have a separate XP VM for toying with the Android
and WebOS phones, and a few others.
I intentionally purchased and built this laptop for Virtualization, and
am extremely satisfied with the results!
What you call a kludge, I call the be-all end-all of computing!
Isn't it great that we have so many choices?
The other day, I ran across Groklaw again after a long absence.
Seriously flashing back, I fired up VirtualBox, and had a Novell Netware
6.5 server operational, with an NDS tree and everything, in under 60
minutes.
I love this stuff - right now I'm using the Linux base for this email,
and surfing, and have (2) VM's open, one of which is a server I'm
working on for work. Tomorrow, I'll copy it off the laptop, give the
VMDK to my server team on a USB stick, they'll import it into our SAN
cluster for our VMWare ESXi 4.1 cluster, and bring it up in 5 minutes.
I'm also in the process of building a home virtualization server. Right
now I have 4 systems running everything from the home asterisk, to
MythTV. A pair of nice 6-core Opteron 4184's, with an Asus KCMA-D8 dual
socket C32 mainboard, 16GB RAM, VMWare ESXi v4.1, and a Synology DS411j
SAN will run everything, have boatloads to spare, cost under $1300, and
use far less power than the current 4-pc setup.
Gotta love how far technology's come...
T
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