For instance I could go to Newegg and get a nice 300 dollar Tyan motherboard (with AMD chipset), slap a couple Opterons in there, stick on a gig of ram in each memory bank, buy a nice Nvidia video card, nice sound card, 3-4 SATA harddrives and still come out ahead $-wise of a person that would buy a top of the line Power G5 and outperform it by a wide margin for the majority of tasks I would need a computer for.
OS X isn't free
Personally if I bought a Mac I would be trying to come up with reasons to use OS X over Linux on it, not the other way around.
Originally posted by: drag
I could go to Newegg and get a nice 300 dollar Tyan motherboard (with AMD chipset), slap a couple Opterons in there, stick on a gig of ram in each memory bank, buy a nice Nvidia video card, nice sound card, 3-4 SATA harddrives and still come out ahead $-wise of a person that would buy a top of the line Power G5 and outperform it by a wide margin for the majority of tasks I would need a computer for.
Originally posted by: Mags
Originally posted by: drag
I could go to Newegg and get a nice 300 dollar Tyan motherboard (with AMD chipset), slap a couple Opterons in there, stick on a gig of ram in each memory bank, buy a nice Nvidia video card, nice sound card, 3-4 SATA harddrives and still come out ahead $-wise of a person that would buy a top of the line Power G5 and outperform it by a wide margin for the majority of tasks I would need a computer for.
What tasks would that be? Now, I'm not contending that you could build a machine of similar power as the top dual 2.7GHz Power Mac for much cheaper - of course you can -, but I would like to know in what tasks a dual opteron outperforms it with a wide margin.
Originally posted by: Mags
Originally posted by: drag
I could go to Newegg and get a nice 300 dollar Tyan motherboard (with AMD chipset), slap a couple Opterons in there, stick on a gig of ram in each memory bank, buy a nice Nvidia video card, nice sound card, 3-4 SATA harddrives and still come out ahead $-wise of a person that would buy a top of the line Power G5 and outperform it by a wide margin for the majority of tasks I would need a computer for.
What tasks would that be? Now, I'm not contending that you could build a machine of similar power as the top dual 2.7GHz Power Mac for much cheaper - of course you can -, but I would like to know in what tasks a dual opteron outperforms it with a wide margin.
It's not just that OS X is expensive, it's that you have to keep paying over and over again for every update. Needless to say, free unixes don't require that.
Trying to get my laptop to work through WiFI USB/PCMCIA is virtually impossible.. ( For the most part )
Originally posted by: Red and black
It's not just that OS X is expensive, it's that you have to keep paying over and over again for every update. Needless to say, free unixes don't require that.
Originally posted by: Link19
Can you run most MAC programs that run on OS X with a different version of Unix for the MAC? Or no, are they not the same?
Originally posted by: drag
This came out a bit under 3200 dollars... with shipping. With the PowerG5 I could bump the ram up to 1gig and get it, with shipping, for around the same price.
Now Apples are nice.. (I should know. I own one.) But 4 gigs of ram and 400gigs of harddrive space is nice, too. You see it's not just CPU speed, which the powermac has more then enough of, but the whole computer.
It's Mac. MAC is something else entirely.
If the program uses the aqua gui, then you need Mac OS X.
Originally posted by: Link19
It's Mac. MAC is something else entirely.
If the program uses the aqua gui, then you need Mac OS X.
I know it's MAC. I was talking about Unix for the MAC. Do most programs written for MAC OS X use the aqua GUI? If they don't, can you run the same programs on any Unix version for the MAC? Is the aqua GUI the part of MAC OS X that is NOT open source?
The "MAC" is something other than an Apple Macintosh. You probably have a MAC, and are utilizing it RIGHT NOW.
Originally posted by: Link19
The "MAC" is something other than an Apple Macintosh. You probably have a MAC, and are utilizing it RIGHT NOW.
I am refering to Apple Macintosh when I say MAC. Are you refering to the MAC address on networking devices? I know that is something other than MAC computers. But when I said MAC, this time I was refering to Apple computers.
MAC means Media Access Control. It is not short for Macintosh. The short form of Macintosh is not all capital. I understand what you mean, I'm just trying to help you use the correct terms. It's painful when computer people use the wrong terms. You should be smarter than that.
Originally posted by: Link19
MAC means Media Access Control. It is not short for Macintosh. The short form of Macintosh is not all capital. I understand what you mean, I'm just trying to help you use the correct terms. It's painful when computer people use the wrong terms. You should be smarter than that.
Oh, I see. Just don't capitalize the term Mac when refering to Apple computers.
Originally posted by: drag
Heh. A Mac head?
Ya, sure with specific tasks you can get a bump up with the G5's Altivec unit, but that's about it. Internally The Opteron and the Power970 stuff is similar, both are mostly 'risc' with added logic to keep the ISA standard with their respected platforms.
I don't know if you realise it or not, but the Opteron was developed using technology exchanges between AMD and IBM. Silicon on Insulator, for instance, is directly from IBM.
Benchmarks:
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,112749,pg,8,00.asp
http://www.aceshardware.com/SPECmine/top.jsp
http://www.theandyzone.com/computer/shootout/shootout.html (opterons are only in one graph)
http://www.aceshardware.com/read.jsp?id=60000284
There aren't very many comparisions aviable. And I am sure you know about the Doom3 benchmarks, which mac-fans try to blame on Id rather then lack of performance from Apple.
See here:
http://arstechnica.com/reviews/hardware/G5.ars/8
http://www.anandtech.com/printarticle.aspx?i=2229
I went thru the trouble of specing out a Dual-op machine from Newegg.
2 2.4ghz opterons, FOUR gigs of RAM, 3 200gig harddrives (which i'd run on Raid5 with Linux MD), Nvidia 6800 card, and a very nice M-audio delta 410 (with the linux-friendly Via envy24 chipset). A name-brand dvd burner and a 550 watt enermax power suply.
This came out a bit under 3200 dollars... with shipping. With the PowerG5 I could bump the ram up to 1gig and get it, with shipping, for around the same price.
Now Apples are nice.. (I should know. I own one.) But 4 gigs of ram and 400gigs of harddrive space is nice, too. You see it's not just CPU speed, which the powermac has more then enough of, but the whole computer.
would somehow outperform a top of the line G5 by a wide margin in the "majority of tasks".
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Trying to get my laptop to work through WiFI USB/PCMCIA is virtually impossible.. ( For the most part )
Depends on the hardware. A friend of mine has a Quicksilver Mac and Ubuntu (via the orinoco driver) started up the wireless all by itself, I'm not sure about the Extreme (802.11g) stuff though. I have a PCMCIA 802.11b card that I use on my x86 laptop because it's prism2 based and I can use kismet, hostap, etc with it without any hassles.
I have tried numerous cards 802.11 G and B with no luck. Seems a bit harder to find a prism chipset.. I believe some broadcom chipsets work as well.
I have also tried ndiswrapper as well with no luck ..