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SDL支持以下作業系統: iOS,Android,Linux, Windows, Mac OS X, Windows CE, BeOS, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, BSD/OS, Solaris, IRIX,以及 QNX。同時代碼中包含了針對Raspberry Pi, AmigaOS, Dreamcast, Atari, AIX, OSF/Tru64, RISC OS, SymbianOS, 和OS/2的支持,但這些並不是正式的支持。 自由,免費. Quadropolis Cube engine mapping, modding, and mayhem. Home Forum New Content Highly Rated Events Games Guides Polls News Archive Create Content. Old Nintendo GameCube emulator for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux - by SaulFabre Updated: Apr 16, 2021 at 4:41 PM TurboGrafx-16 CD / PC Engine CD-ROM Wii Virtual Console iNJECTOR.BETA VERSiON.
Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Mac OS X. I wrote a bit about it in my Macworld column this week, and also put together a little Mac OS X timeline.
I’ve written a lot about Mac OS X over the years. Compiling that timeline reminded me of that. I was a features editor at Macworld when Apple began shipping OS X precursors, and so I edited most of our early coverage. Beginning with Mac OS X 10.1, I wrote most of Macworld’s big feature stories covering each release.
I’ve lived in the same house since 1999, so I have spent many springs and summers sitting out in my yard under our redwood tree writing and editing articles about Mac OS X, OS X, and now macOS.
How many? This many:
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- OS X Prehistory (compiled by me from multiple Macworld features)
Wow, that’s a lot of operating-system releases. Here’s to the next uncountable number of them.
(While I wrote shorter reviews for Macworld, John Siracusa was always reviewing OS X at length for Ars Technica. Here’s a list of all his reviews.)
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What is Mac OS X DP2?
Mac OS X DP2 is the second 'Developer Preview' release of Mac OS X (pronounced 'ten', not 'ex').
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What is Mac OS X? The most common answer is that it's the 'client' or 'consumer' release of Mac OS X Server. (What is Mac OS X Server? Find out.) Like its server counterpart, Mac OS X is targeted at any Mac that Apple shipped with a PowerPC G3 processor or better. This means that Macs based on the PowerPC 60x processor are stuck with Mac OS 9.x--even if they've been upgraded with a G3 processor card. The scheduled release date for Mac OS X is (surprise!) a moving target. The current party line has Mac OS X on store shelves some time in 2000. I fearlessly predict that it will not appear until 2001 at the earliest (unless they decide to ship a half-finished product a la Mac OS X Server 1.0), but maybe I'm just a pessimist.
What differentiates a 'consumer' or 'client' release of an OS from its 'server' version? In the case of Mac OS X, the answer is 'a lot.' Or rather, the answer had better be 'a lot,' because Mac OS X Server in its current state is absolutely unfit as a replacement for Mac OS 8.x/9.x ('classic' Mac OS). Mac OS X Server 1.x is an OS in transition, half way between its NEXTSTEP roots and its Mac OS future. It looks kind of like Mac OS, but it behaves like NEXTSTEP. This will simply not do for an OS that aspires to supplant classic Mac OS. Thus the need for Mac OS X, sometimes referred to as 'the real Mac OS X.'
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Unfortunately, Mac OS X DP2 is not that OS. It's simply an environment that allows developers to build and test their applications on an early version of the core of what will become Mac OS X. This being the case, certain traditional software review metrics make little sense: ease of installation, hardware support, feature count, even performance. This article will not be your typical review, or even your typical preview. There will be no step-by-step installation instructions, no comments on the lack of DHCP support, no guided tour of the networking setup, user account administration systems, and no benchmark graphs.
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Mac OS X DP2 itself may not be the future of Mac OS, but it does provide a lot of information regarding the likely future of Mac OS X if you're willing to do a little digging. So let's get started.