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Unread 10-09-2013, 10:13
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Re: Is OSX (mac) FRC Friendly?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Greg McKaskle View Post
Actually LabVIEW was born on the mac, first released in 1986, and was mac only until the team and I released a port to Win31 in 1992. While we were at it, we also ported to unix, specifically Solaris. Over the years, we added HPUX, Concurrent, linux. Internally, we had LV running on WinNT on Alpha, and a portion running on BeOs. But the market ultimately decides what stays as a product.
Well Solaris 11.1 is still around I just shoved it in a SPARC emulator the other day and I've got a few hundred of the UltraSPARC2 and UltraSPARC3 floating around.

BeOS it's still out there.

You ported it to NT on Alpha CPU and HPUX but not OpenVMS?
That makes my Alphas unhappy

I am guessing this original Apple Mac support was Classic OS as NeXT and NeXTStep is not listed. Big parts of that are in OSX these days. Course the Carbon API and Classic interfaces are sort of end of life since 10.8.

Since you worked on it ever tried this in Wine?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bpk9p4 View Post
Thanks for the advice about the classmate.

I am currently trying to get some free version of windows for the team through techsoup.org (they work with Microsoft to release software to non-profit organizations)

if this does not work out does anyone know any other methods of getting windows licences?
School maybe offer some help if you put it in a VM and release the bundle at the end of your time as a student?
This way the school can take all your work in a bundle anyway.

Also the cheapest product offering that will get you 3 license for Windows 7 Home Premium is this:
http://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Wind.../dp/B002MV2MG0
Be aware this is an upgrade so technically you should have some old non-OEM OS floating around to qualify.

Also be aware that some people will tell you to use the OEM license of Windows that is a license violation.
Technically Microsoft has a virtual machine licensing program that costs usually about $100 a year (yes recurring) but it gives you basically 4 licenses per user and all the updates (so it sounds bad but it's not really all that bad cost wise).
Also you can run anything back to MS-DOS under that license.
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windo...ation/vdi.aspx
The trick with this is you need to pad your volume license with some cheap SKU to qualify because you won't buy enough volume otherwise (just your circumstances, ask a reputable reseller for a hand).

I have a TechNet license I just bought before the option to buy those closed at the end of August (about $400).
I also have a personal MSDN subscription (this is expensive).
$400 sounds like a lot? Not even close. It gives you access to dozens of operating systems and expensive products.
However my MSDN license includes Microsoft Visual Studio Professional which itself is more valuable than TechNet.
If I have to fork over $1,000+ plus I'd like to test without having to buy things everyday.

Last edited by techhelpbb : 10-09-2013 at 10:29.
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