Archive for December, 2007

QEMU

Monday, December 31st, 2007

Fabrice Bellard’s excellent QEMU is up to version 0.9.0 (a Windows port is in alpha stage).

So far, QEMU is the first thing I’ve found that runs Windows 98 and Dungeon Keeper properly.  Virtual PC was fast but couldn’t run anything other than the DOS version, and had problems with screen refresh.  Bochs was slow and clunky.  VritualBox couldn’t run the DirectX version either, and wouldn’t run the DOS version at all.  DOSbox was fine - but had problems with the integrated graphics on the laptop.

QEMU was fast, especially with the kqemu acceleration layer (which works fine on Windows Vista Home Premium, folks).  Couldn’t get the networking going, but it wasn’t really too much to worry about - getting the main game going was the main priority.  :-)

Shock news: virtualisation not to be hottest thing on planet next year.

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

The Inquirer’s top ten trends of 2008, unshockingly, suggests that virtualisation won’t go mainstream next year.

Simon Collis, editor of esotechnica, expresses no surprise: “virtualisation is gaining slowly among those sort of people who like this kind of thing.  But for those who don’t, it’s no big deal.”

Peter Stringfellow, London nightclub owner and entrepreneur, wasn’t consulted for this post, and didn’t decline not to uncomment.

“Well,” said an unnamed spokesperson for a company that preferred not to be named at some yet-to-be-revealed point in the near-to-distant future, “this doesn’t tell us anything we didn’t already not know.”

Spokepeople for companies not mentioned in this article didn’t forget not to uncomment on this article.  Or not.  As the case may be.  Or may not be.

Apparently several people still remain unshocked by this non-unobvious prediction.  “I remember”, says Craig Deeplimaydup, “when they told me that this was true.  It sounded fairly right to me,” said the fictional member of staff of whatever it was.

Source: Brown.  Not HP.  It’s totally different.  Trust me.  Ask anyone who likes sauces.

OS/2 redux

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I remember running OS/2 Warp 3 back in 1994, on the most powerful machine in the company - a 486DX running at 33 MHz with 8MB of RAM - and really enjoying the experience.  And actually using it in anger to do proper work with as well, using the Windows 3 (blue) edition.

The one I bought off eBay is the red one - no built in Windows 3 layer - but it works nicely for me (using FreeTCP, of course).  What is fairly timely (or was, a month ago) is a second round of petitioning from the OS/2 World site to open source OS/2 to be sent to IBM.  Sure, there is still development on OS/2 - Serenity Systems continue to develop eComStation, and have recently issued version 2.0 release candidate 4 - and there’s still a few great OS/2 download sites around as well.  You can still get all the fixpaks and the device drivers from IBM’s ftp site (not available on the website any more), there’s still hobbes (although sadly leo seems to have disappeared), and that’s about 6GB there for your downloading pleasure (or otherwise, depending on your inherent level of patience…  if you’re using Windows, I recommend FTPSync, by the way - not updated for ages but works fine on Vista.)

Virtual PC Guy has an excellent guide to installing Warp 3 in Virtual PC 2004 - in Virtual PC 2007 there’s nothing much changed, except turn hardware-accelerated virtualisation off before you start.   And of course, you can get Firefox for OS/2 quite easily (much easier than IBM Web Explorer, Netscape 2.02 or Netscape 4.61, none of which I was able to find).

Everything changes

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

Suddenly the world seems to have changed, one way or the other.

First, Benazir Bhutto has been assassinated by a suicide bomber: a disaster for Pakistani politics (if not world politics), as far as I can tell.

Then, there’s the fact that digital storage is much more costly and problematic than traditional film storage.  Or the fact that Alexander Graham Bell didn’t invent the telephone.  Or that the Sistine Chapel is now copyrighted by the Vatican (public domain?  We’ve heard of it…).

Although perhaps the most technologically significant story of the day is the latest chapter of the SCO v its customers saga: they’ve been delisted from Nasdaq.  Seems a fitting punishment for what appears to be their corporate misbehaviour to me…

Open sourcery

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

A few quick open source links for you today.  First up is darrelljon’s excellent post to the Ubuntu forums, listing Linux distros by size (my favourite of which is Damn Small Linux, personally).

Then there is The Inquirer’s guide to free operating systems. Told with their normal humour and satire, of course.

Finally - and saving the best to last - there’s the new Open Source Living website, which lists a lot of open source software in a nice, easy to read interface. It’s nearly all quality stuff, though no doubt there will be one or two missing bits and pieces as it’s still very new, so suggest your favourite piece of open source.

Anyway, a belated Merry Christmas to my readers, all both of you, and a happy new year! ;-)