Should I buy A/UX? Opinons, advice appreciated
Brian Bechtel
blob at Apple.COM
Thu Aug 9 23:39:35 AEST 1990
fsjpc at acad3.fai.alaska.edu (CLEMENS JONATHAN P) writes:
>- How much space does it *really* take up on a hard drive?
You really want to devote 80Mb to it, at least. If you're doing serious
programming, I think you'd prefer 100Mb.
>- Can Mac Applications *really* be run from within A/UX? How much trouble
>is it to run a typical application?
Yes, most Mac applications run just fine. You can run several
different user interfaces: a command shell that look like any other
Unix (sh, csh, ksh) or Multifinder, or X Windows. Under Multifinder,
you double click on the application, just like under the MacOS. Under
Multifinder, you can run X Windows and a command-shell window, so
Multifinder is the preferred way of running A/UX by almost everyone.
>- How easy is it to set up and maintain?
Setting it up is as straightforward as on any Unix machine. (Maybe
better :-)) I'd recommend the CD-ROM version as the easiest to
install, if you aren't buying a pre-installed hard disk. You can get
A/UX on hard disk, CD-ROM, tape, or floppies. Floppies are a *royal*
pain.
>Is A/UX for me?
Only if you need the features, or if, as you've said, you want to learn
more about Unix. I happen to think that A/UX 2.0 is an outstanding Unix
machine. It's much easier to work with than any other Unix flavor I've
seen (and I've used many, from a Cray to a PDP-11/45 running version 6.)
Disclaimers: I'm not on the A/UX team. I use A/UX in my work. Even
though I'm inside Apple, I'm a customer of A/UX.
--Brian Bechtel blob at apple.com "My opinion, not Apple's"
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