Understand your Mac and iPhone more deeply by tracing the evolution of Mac OS X from prelease to Swift. John Siracusa delivers the details.
You've got two main options:
This gist is out of date and I can no longer help much, as I got rid of my Mac.
Please visit T2 Linux website for more and better information:
This gist is just a compilation of the hard work that others have put in. I'm not a software developer, so if there are any mistakes or better ways of doing things, I'd appreciate any suggestions. Here's a list of the real heroes who made this possible:
{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }: | |
with lib; | |
{ | |
imports = | |
[ | |
<nixpkgs/nixos/modules/installer/cd-dvd/channel.nix> | |
./machine-config.nix | |
]; |
macOS install itself is quite easy using OSX-KVM scripts
igpu setup is quite easy by following instructions on Arch Linux wiki
#![feature(lang_items)] | |
#![no_std] | |
#[no_mangle] | |
pub fn add_one(x: i32) -> i32 { | |
x + 1 | |
} | |
// needed for no_std |
Recently I was informed that Blackmagic Design is using AppImage to distribute Fusion for Linux. So I had a look, and what I found is rather surprising. They hide the fact that they are using AppImage (using .run
rather than .AppImage
as an extension), and they do not make use of it advantages because they a) encapsulate it in an archive, making unarchiving necessary, and b) run an installer. So they throw away two advantages of AppImages: a) that they do not need to be unpacked, and b) that they do not need to be installed.
What the heck?!
I am doing this analyis on Ubuntu 16.04.
keycode 97 = grave asciitilde | |
keycode 132 = grave asciitilde |