TBH I'm not ecstatic about multiple OSes now I think about it. One OS means every app written for PS3 works on every PS3 (with the OS installed). Multiple OSes means fragmenting the user base. If, say, Windows, OSX and Linux are available on PS3 in their own flavours, and you have one app on Windows version you love, and a different app on OSX, and another on Linux, you need to install all three to use those applcations. Yuck!
TBH I'm not ecstatic about multiple OSes now I think about it. One OS means every app written for PS3 works on every PS3 (with the OS installed). Multiple OSes means fragmenting the user base. If, say, Windows, OSX and Linux are available on PS3 in their own flavours, and you have one app on Windows version you love, and a different app on OSX, and another on Linux, you need to install all three to use those applcations. Yuck!
I think I'd prefer one standard OS. A single builf and flavour of Linux that is uniform across all PS3s. What we have now sounds like a recipe for trouble. 'To use PhotoCell Pro, you need this version of this OS, that version of this interface library, that version of Mick Fergal's rendertime libraries, yadayada,' and you find running applications becomes a faf. That's not what I'm after. I want a move to simplicity
TBH I'm not ecstatic about multiple OSes now I think about it. One OS means every app written for PS3 works on every PS3 (with the OS installed). Multiple OSes means fragmenting the user base. If, say, Windows, OSX and Linux are available on PS3 in their own flavours, and you have one app on Windows version you love, and a different app on OSX, and another on Linux, you need to install all three to use those applcations. Yuck!
Those were just named examples. The nature of the open platform is obviously open to OSes other than just Linux, which means the possibility of BSD, BeOS, RISC OS, or whatever creations. Some of these, if tailored to the PS3, could be very effective - moreso than Linux which is a multi-platform OS. I'd rather one OS was taken and refined to be the PSOS. As YDL is the first, fingers crossed it does become the standard and the gekk community doesn't fracture into bickering factions who all think their OS.Linux flavour is the right one and those who use alternatives are the Devil's Own (like that would ever happen...)pcostabel said:Good thing that there will never be a Windows or OSX version for PS3, then.
I agree with Shifty's concerns. If you read my earlier posts on the subject, you'll see that in my mind one of the biggest assets of PS3 linux was to be the homogenous hardware and software platform. Now, if we get a dozen of distributions with different library versions and maybe even package managers, then that advantage is void. It may be the more free software-y thing to do, but personally I'd much prefer a unified platform.
But probably YDL will take over anyway. Or the first distribution to get OpenGL support
RuGalz on GAF has installed Fedora Core 5 on his PS3:
His was a minimum install, I think he wants to re-do it as a full install. But he's off for now, so no more details..
Great news! So it's released already??
very very cool
with a keyboard + mouse connected i dont see how anyone can argue seriously it aint a PC
*) Could get less in the future (I really hope so *glares at Sony*), they cant increase the reserved memory in the future without breaking existing games, so the reserved RAM might be very conservative.And why Sony had to fuck up this again ? WHY, WHY WHY ? Why there is just 197 MB available for Linux. ?!?! Firmware is inside flash, why you need to takeaway 60 MB of RAM ?!??!? I understand need the for so called "virtual mode", but why the hell there needs to be "full game os" on background?
Unless this changes, Sony has once again managed fuck things up. For anything more than trivial, you need all the memory you can get.
Yes, that's clearly the best solution. I'll also commence writing at once. I'm sure they'll be very understanding of our plight.*) Sony might recall the PS3 and rerelease it with 512MB XDR Ram. Im just typing an email directed at them.