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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!uchinews!kimbark!stdkap1
- From: stdkap1@icarus.spc.uchicago.edu (Dietrich Kappe)
- Subject: Re: RE-MACS COST TOO MUCH (NOT!)
- In-Reply-To: ewright@convex.com's message of 28 Aug 92 16:13:20 GMT
- Message-ID: <STDKAP1.92Aug28131344@icarus.spc.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Organization: Center for Population Economics
- References: <714823281.F00001@blkcat.UUCP> <ewright.714853873@convex.convex.com>
- <1992Aug27.205714.13960@CS.ORST.EDU>
- <ewright.714956536@convex.convex.com>
- <STDKAP1.92Aug27224620@icarus.spc.uchicago.edu>
- <ewright.715018400@convex.convex.com>
- Date: Fri, 28 Aug 1992 19:13:44 GMT
- Lines: 108
-
- In article <ewright.715018400@convex.convex.com> ewright@convex.com (Edward V. Wright) writes:
-
- >Oooh, hypercard. That is serious software. I bet that you use
- >hypercard quite a bit, or else its just some peice of software you are
- >subsidizing with your overpriced mac purchases, right? You do seem
- >like a major hypercard power user to me. Can you point me to a good
- >CAD stack? :-)
-
- A program isn't serious software if it can't do CAD? By that standard,
- most PC software isn't serious, either. Turbo Pascal, Lotus 1-2-3,
- Ventura Publisher, DBase II, and all Microsoft products included. Of
- course, I'm sure your CAD program gives you full online versions of the
- Windows developer's documentation and the King James Bible, in addition
- to cataloging all your disks for you, right? I also assume that the
- Center for Population Economics uses CAD software to write all its
- reports, crunch its statistics, and keep track of its budget, right?
- Or don't you do "serious" research there?
-
- I'm not a PC owner. I don't even play one on Usenet. My first "real"
- computer was a Macintosh. I still own one, I write programs for it. My
- sympathies are with the Mac, but I'm openwinded enough to realize that
- things are changing in a big way in the PC world, changing in ways
- that impact the Mac community in nontrivial ways.
-
- Since you asked, we use SparcStations running SunOS at the CPE. Use
- the right tool for the right job. Batting around several concurrent
- revisions of 6GB of base data shouldn't be done on a PC (Read Personal
- Computer, i.e. Mac, IBM, Amiga, Atari, etc.).
-
- Of course the price of the Mac subsidizes Hypercard's development.
- That's the point I've been trying to hammer into you. When you
- buy a Mac, you're getting a complete system. When you buy a PC,
- you get a stripped-down machine, then you pay for the nose to
- buy the capabilities you need (or, at least, as many of them as
- you can afford).
-
-
- >Wow! You must do an awful lot of systems programming (in Hypercard, I
- >bet. Boy, that is a real feat. I'll go and sell all my OS books now. )
- >Have you written much in this area? Where can I get your books?
-
- Actually, all of my books have been on optimizing FORTRAN and
- C coe performance, not writing operating systems in Hypercard.
- If you send me your address, I'll see that you get ordering
- information. BTW, how many books have you written?
-
- I have written none. But I am truly amazed that someone who has
- written what I assume are reputable books on CS topics could be so
- ignorant of the current state of hardware and software in the PC
- world. Let me outline this state for you and others in the briefest
- way I can:
-
- 1) The IBM compatible 286, 386, and 486 machines have no built in 640k
- limit. That is a limitation of DOS (Disk Operating System), which is
- software, not hardware, as I am sure a man of your experience must
- know. If you run a different operating system such as OS/2 2.0 or UNIX
- on a 286 and up, NO SPECIAL TRICKS ARE NEEDED TO ACCESS ALL OF THE
- MEMORY ON BOARD (vintage Mac512 PC's excluded, of course).
-
- 2) OS/2 provides virtual memory, a gui, a cli, and much much more.
- Much of it is still buggy and slow, but it is a very usable system,
- perhaps somewhat more complex (but also more flexible) than the MacOS.
- If you wanted to write a program that behaved on OS/2 exactly like an
- equivalent program on the Mac, you could get darned close. IBM is
- using many of the same design and implementation concept that arguably
- made the Mac interface preeminent in the 80's and early 90's.
-
- >That is quite a zinger. Those dumb DOS heads (well, OS/2 is just DOS
- >6.0, isn't it?) might as well fold up their tents. You neglected to
- >mention that A/UX is free, right?
-
- I never said that A/UX was free, or that it was worth the price
- Apple charges, or that it would be worth having even if it was
- free -- none of which I believe. I merely pointed out that AU/X
- exists which disproves your claim that the Macintosh hardware is
- incapable of running a preemptive operating system. I don't claim
- it's desirable, but it's possibly and available if you're silly
- enough to want it.
-
- I forgive you for attributing that claim to me, although I did not
- make it. Again, your ignorance is showing. Since I assume you are an
- expert in some CS field, you must be what the Germans call a
- "Fachidiot."
-
- In conclusion, I don't necessarily disagree that the Mac is superior
- to the PC running a real OS, but I do disagree with your attack dog
- style of arguing that point. And I find your arguments laughable.
- Where they aren't hopelessly naive, they are way behind the times.
- Your "640k barrier" argument is analogous to someones argument in
- favor of the bycicle versus the car -- represented by the Model T.
-
- "Yes, but you have to crank it up by hand everytime you use it."
-
- If you do use PC's so much, and you can handle the bile rising above
- your eyeballs, investigate OS/2 2.0, maybe even buy it for your PC.
- Heck, get Xwindows on it, throw in some fancy networking. I hope your
- PC computing get more pleasnat as a result. Remember: the PC is just a
- machine, all that counts is what you run on it. Face it, Ed, you've
- been brainwashed by too many water cooler religious wars.
-
- Ciao.
-
- --
-
- ---
- Dietrich Kappe
- kap1@icarus.spc.uchicago.edu
- Center for Population Economics
-