From: William Warren <hescominsoon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > I am wondering what the list's opinion is on the Apple to Intel > switch. It means that IBM thinks like a foundary, not like a PowerPC partner. Let's face it, for Sony and Microsoft, they make millions of units of the exact same product. For Apple, they are wanting multiple products with 1/10th the volume. So this wasn't a surprise, especially with Intel courting Apple since '03. It also explains why Apple didn't go AMD, even though they were using HyperTransport for I/O interconnect on the PowerPC 970/G5 (although not the full NUMA/HyperTransport that A64/Opteron does). AMD can't offer the "preferred status" deals/margins that Intel can. > This is going to put a slick desktop that runs on top of > BSD directly into the mainstream. Well, I always thought Apple was mainstream. It's still not a PC. It won't run on all PCs. That's fine, I always liked Apple's designs more. If they become the economies-of-scale competitor to Dell, that's fine with me -- and I'll even pay 20% more than Dell for them. In fact, I hope to God that Apple's firmware ends up being a standard approach that replaces the God awful PC BIOS. Even if Apple won't ever open it up so MacOS X runs on regular PCs, at least it will be nice to see a good firmware on a PC platform for once! (God I hate the PC BIOS compared to countless other platforms!) > What does this hold for Linux in general, Linux on the desktop..and > microsoft. It means that you'll be able to tri-boot. And if Apple does as good of a job on the new PC firmware that they did on their PowerPC, then multi-boot geometry/conflicts are a thing of the past. -- Bryan J. Smith mailto:b.j.smith@xxxxxxxx