1 new of 28 responses total.
Darwin road leads to Hell. (From the east, anyway.) I'm a pretty sophisticated user of Mac OS X, including enough of its underlying Mach BSD system to have done some shell scripting -- including a simplified interface for the fs_usage utility -- and combining of shell- and apple-scripting into functional tools like a clickable app that takes a partial app name as an input and pauses or unpauses the matching processes (using kill -STOP and kill -CONT) and a script in a FileMaker database that automatically uploads a compressed copy of itself to a webserver upon closing (using curl, in the background, and only if the file has been modified). I don't have a lot of experience using other modern OSs except Windows, so I haven't a lot of basis for comparison except to say that I have had very little difficulty figuring out a way to make my Mac do just about anything I want, and I have had extensive difficulty making Windows machines not do any particular thing I don't want them to do. I recently used an Ubuntu machine and was very impressed with the LAMPP set of tools and the easy interface of the VNC system. I downloaded an ISO for my older G3 laptop, but haven't been sufficiently motivated to install it.
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