T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1584.1 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | I was focused when focus wasnt cool | Wed Oct 18 1989 13:39 | 23 |
| A Macintosh emulator for DECW?
Without the unlikely event of Apple "opening" the their proprietary
technology, this is a practical (and perhaps legal) impossibility.
Digital chose to use the MIT X Window system and its API, and chose for
its toolkit an API and UI style, appearance, layout, and behavior quite
different from the Macintosh.
Superficially, they share a direct manipulation essence and artifacts
such as buttons and menus.
Closer approximations of this interface, Microsoft Windows, and Hewlett
Packard New Wave, formed the basis of litigation by Apple against those
vendors.
Any hunk of glass, circuits and external interface can be a MIT X
Windows Server, including the Macintosh. It's a small matter of
programming. But it's a giant stretch to say that Macintosh
applications would run on anything but a Macintosh on that basis.
Remember that "X server capability" means "X terminal capability" not
"X applications capability".
|
1584.2 | Actually... | DECWIN::KLEIN | | Wed Oct 18 1989 17:09 | 8 |
| >> Wouldn't it be nice if there were a MACintosh emulator that could
>> run ontop of DECwindows? Is there ever a hope of such a thing?
Actually, I know of two independent efforts going on in this area.
It can certainly be built, and I'm sure that eventually it will be.
-steve-
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1584.3 | Servers Yes, Emulators unlikely | RAINBO::HARRIS | Repeal the law of gravity: Juggle! | Thu Oct 19 1989 10:16 | 23 |
| Apple has also announced an X-Windows Server for the Macintosh called
MacX. It is expected to work with the new Macintosh CommToolBox
communications interface so that it will be able to use different
protocols for connecting to X-Window Client machines (including
DECwindows running on Ultrix and VMS). I do not know when they expect
to ship it.
There is also Exodus from White Pines Software which is an X-Windows
Server for the Macintosh. I have seen this being demoed at MacWorld in
August of this year. I think this is available today.
I don't know of any others, but then again, I don't remember half of
what I know :-)
As for a Macintosh emulator running over DECwindows, this is a 262144
byte moving target (the Mac ROM). It started out as a 64k ROM, grew to
a 128K ROM, and is now at 256K. Apple keeps changing the ROM. For
someone to reverse engineer the ROM in a clean room environment to
avoid legal problems would be a massive effort (and an on going
effort). To date, the closest anyone has come is to build the
hardware, but plug real Apple ROMs into it. You couldn't do this with
a software emulator.
|
1584.4 | EXODUS (X server for MAC) ordering info | DELNI::MHARRIS | Netwrk Integ'n Projects | Fri Oct 20 1989 11:04 | 5 |
| EXODUS is available from 800-DIGITAL, Q6-VMZ-CZ, about $230 internal.
m
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1584.5 | poke for my favorite PC | WJG::GUINEAU | | Fri Oct 20 1989 13:29 | 26 |
|
The Commodore Amiga has a product called AMAX which emulates a MAC.
It requires the MAC ROMS and if you want disk data, a MAC floppy drive.
From what I hear it runs better emulated on the Amiga than a real MAC!
Amiga's can emulate MAC's and IBM 286 PC's - all at once! They each run in
a screen ( Amiga concept is you can have several screens, all of differing
resolution each having several windows in it. Screens sit "on top" of one
another and can be dragged up and down vertically with the mouse or depth
arranged just like windows).
So you can have a screen with Amiga DOS
a screen with a MAC
a screen with a 286 pc
But wait!
and! a screen with color X windows!
Amiga will even run UNIX soon...
Try that on *any* other machine of it's class (and many of higher
class as well)!
John
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1584.6 | ramblings | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Fri Oct 20 1989 14:24 | 13 |
| Atari ST has Spectre GCR which with Mac 128k ROMS will run most Mac software
better than a Macplus and will read/write Mac disks in a regular Atari
drive. Also various forms of PC emulation available. Sorry, no X yet.
Has Minix, a Unix-like OS.
Mac emulation is possible with the ROMs. Without, reverse engineering
would be difficult to do legally. It would be nice however if someone
did it... :-)
Now back to your regularly scheduled DECwindows news.
Chad
|