Godot Taxis
Saturday 15th October 2011 2:03am
5,741 posts
Quote: Kevin Murphy @ October 10 2011, 9:13 PM BST
Apple is a closed shop, antithetical to everything that has contributed to the success of the internet to date.
It's a barrier to innovation nowadays.
Absolute f**king shit.
Apple computers and mobile devices use HTML, CSS, JavaScript and H.264 all of which are open standards that Apple does not control. Apple computers also use flash which is a proprietary system controlled and owned by Adobe.
Mac OS is proprietary, but so is Windows. As for holding back the internet Apple has given the world an open source web standard - Webkit. It powers Apple browsers, Chrome and all mobile browsers except Microsoft's, including Android's, Nokia's and Blackberry's.
Apple computers will run windows (as well as linux, ubuntu etc). Apple make versions of their Web browser for Windows and versions of their media player and codec. Microsoft don't make a version of Internet Explorer that you can use on a mac and haven't for about eight years. They do not make a version of Windows Media Player or their WMV codec. They rely on third party solutions for converting video and audio codecs which is incomplete. You can find hundreds of files on the web that VLC and Flip For Mac just can't play.
Incidentally Apple computers have always opened and recognised Windows files - even back in the 80s. You couldn't say the same for Windows - so far from being closed Apple has always been geared more to cross platform compatibility.
Quote: billwill @ October 14 2011, 2:03 AM BST
Actually this guy, Dennis Richie (who also just died), had a greater impact on computing technology than Steve Jobs, but he is probably not known to "the man in the street".
He 'invented' Unix and the language C; both of which are the bases of almost all current computer operating systems.
Dennis Richie was incredibly important. R.I.P..
Quote: DaButt @ October 14 2011, 2:50 AM BST
I know who he was and Apple's OS X (to me, the best thing they've ever created) wouldn't be here if it weren't for Unix.
Indeed.