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Groups > comp.sys.mac.apps > #1265 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2011-04-14 00:21 +0000 |
| Last post | 2011-04-17 14:52 +0000 |
| Articles | 19 — 9 participants |
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Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 00:21 +0000
Re: Fink Chris Schram <chrispam1@frontier.com> - 2011-04-13 20:59 -0700
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 13:12 +0000
Re: Fink Lewis <g.kreme@gmail.com> - 2011-04-14 10:52 +0000
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 13:13 +0000
Re: Fink Richard Kettlewell <rjk@greenend.org.uk> - 2011-04-14 12:25 +0100
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 13:13 +0000
Re: Fink Warren Oates <warren.oates@gmail.com> - 2011-04-14 07:44 -0400
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 13:12 +0000
Re: Fink Warren Oates <warren.oates@gmail.com> - 2011-04-14 11:38 -0400
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 21:07 +0000
Re: Fink Paul Sture <paul.nospam@sture.ch> - 2011-04-14 22:39 +0200
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-15 00:30 +0000
Re: Fink Paul Sture <paul.nospam@sture.ch> - 2011-04-15 09:48 +0200
Re: Fink Stainless Steel Rat <ratinox@newsguy.com> - 2011-04-15 14:41 +0000
Re: Fink Tom Harrington <tph@pcisys.no.spam.dammit.net> - 2011-04-14 10:24 -0600
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-14 21:08 +0000
Re: Fink "giuseppe.on.usenet" <giuseppe.on.usenet@gmail.com> - 2011-04-17 06:19 -0700
Re: Fink Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> - 2011-04-17 14:52 +0000
| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 00:21 +0000 |
| Subject | Fink |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan> |
Hello all, Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he declared his horse a Senator. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Chris Schram <chrispam1@frontier.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-13 20:59 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <chrispam1-C0DC8A.20591713042011@free.teranews.com> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > Hello all, > > Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite > impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: > > http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en > > ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems > like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively > available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond > of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. > > Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. First off, point your fiendish web thingie to <http://www.gmane.org/>. Look for newsgroups in the form gmane.os.apple.fink.*. There are several ways you can access the groups. (I use MT-Newswatcher, so I can have multiple newsrc files.) That said, I've used Fink for a few years. Before that I used MacPorts, whose goal is pretty much identical, ie: getting *nix software working on Macs. (Also look for gmane.os.apple.macports.*) Some ports work great, some don't compile properly on some platforms or some Mac OS versions or some versions of Xcode. The support community in the gmane groups is quite helpful in getting issues like these sorted out. (I never could get the latest version of kdegames4 to compile on a G4 iMac running Tiger and Xcode 2.5, but the same machine running Leopard and Xcode 3.* compiled fine.) -- chrispam1@frontier.com is a filtered spam magnet. Email replies WILL be lost. Try <http://public.xdi.org/=chris.schram> instead.
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 13:12 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.13.12.11@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1266 |
On Wed, 13 Apr 2011 20:59:17 -0700, Chris Schram wrote: > In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> Hello all, >> >> Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite >> impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: >> >> http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en >> >> ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems >> like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively >> available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am >> fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. >> >> Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. > > First off, point your fiendish web thingie to <http://www.gmane.org/>. > Look for newsgroups in the form gmane.os.apple.fink.*. There are several > ways you can access the groups. (I use MT-Newswatcher, so I can have > multiple newsrc files.) > > That said, I've used Fink for a few years. Before that I used MacPorts, > whose goal is pretty much identical, ie: getting *nix software working > on Macs. (Also look for gmane.os.apple.macports.*) > > Some ports work great, some don't compile properly on some platforms or > some Mac OS versions or some versions of Xcode. The support community in > the gmane groups is quite helpful in getting issues like these sorted > out. (I never could get the latest version of kdegames4 to compile on a > G4 iMac running Tiger and Xcode 2.5, but the same machine running > Leopard and Xcode 3.* compiled fine.) Sounds good, thanks for the info. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he wondered why he bothered to answer. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Lewis <g.kreme@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 10:52 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <1601410019324468821.499297g.kreme-gmail.com@news.eternal-september.org> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > Hello all, > > Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite > impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: > > http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en > > ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems > like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively > available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond > of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. I much prefer macports.org -- this is not a signture
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 13:13 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.13.12.29@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1269 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 10:52:46 +0000, Lewis wrote: > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: >> Hello all, >> >> Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite >> impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: >> >> http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en >> >> ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems >> like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively >> available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am >> fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. > > I much prefer macports.org Thanks, will take a look at that too. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as Kanga sneezed in his honey pot. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Richard Kettlewell <rjk@greenend.org.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 12:25 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <87vcyhm5vw.fsf@araminta.anjou.terraraq.org.uk> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> writes: > Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite > impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: > > http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en > > ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems > like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively > available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond > of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. > > Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. A bit shaky on occasion, but it basically works. -- http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 13:13 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.13.12.50@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1270 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 12:25:39 +0100, Richard Kettlewell wrote: > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> writes: > >> Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite >> impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: >> >> http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en >> >> ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems >> like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively >> available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am >> fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. >> >> Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. > > A bit shaky on occasion, but it basically works. All right, thanks for the feedback. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he put on the hockey mask and started the saw. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Warren Oates <warren.oates@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 07:44 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <4da6de39$0$32663$c3e8da3$40d4fd75@news.astraweb.com> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems > like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively > available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond > of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. > > Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. I have all my open-source stuff self-compiled and installed in /usr/local (and ~/bin for my experimental Apache/PHP 5). That way I can keep as up-to-date as a I need to and not rely on the fink package system (or be subject to Apple's bizarre approach to BSD/Darwin updatery). Fink (and macports) will install a huge secondary system that you really don't need. On the other hand, Pan will be a problem, since it's a Gnome app and needs Glib and gtk and pango and stuff which is pretty much broken out-of-the-Mac-box, and difficult to set up. I keep Arch Linux (with Gnome) in Virtual Box for that kind of thing. Works a treat; your iMac will run it very quickly. You'll need to re-write your $PATH (and $MANPATH too if you like) to deal with /usr/local. What Linux were/are you using? -- If you could teach a cat to dance, you'd never have to leave the house. -- Pat Sajak
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 13:12 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1271 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 07:44:55 -0400, Warren Oates wrote: > In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems >> like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively >> available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am >> fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. >> >> Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. > > I have all my open-source stuff self-compiled and installed in > /usr/local (and ~/bin for my experimental Apache/PHP 5). That way I can > keep as up-to-date as a I need to and not rely on the fink package > system (or be subject to Apple's bizarre approach to BSD/Darwin > updatery). Fink (and macports) will install a huge secondary system that > you really don't need. OK. > On the other hand, Pan will be a problem, since it's a Gnome app and > needs Glib and gtk and pango and stuff which is pretty much broken > out-of-the-Mac-box, and difficult to set up. I keep Arch Linux (with > Gnome) in Virtual Box for that kind of thing. Works a treat; your iMac > will run it very quickly. Hmmmm... the old dependency issue... OK. I certainly could run a Linux distro in a VM, but if going that route I might as well just do it on a Linux box, since I am certainly not abandoning Linux to go Mac-only... I am quite familiar with VB already, so may do it anyway just for fun. Was hoping to run Pan "natively" on the Mac, and may still try to do that. > You'll need to re-write your $PATH (and $MANPATH too if you like) to > deal with /usr/local. Gotcha. > What Linux were/are you using? Slackware. (is there anything else?) ;) -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he got cattle-prodded in the groin. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Warren Oates <warren.oates@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 11:38 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <4da714dd$0$28312$c3e8da3$12bcf670@news.astraweb.com> |
| In reply to | #1272 |
In article <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > Slackware. (is there anything else?) ;) Man after my own heart. I don't use Linux much these days, so I keep Arch because it's very simple and the "rolling release" system suits my needs and I have enough trouble keeping /usr/local up to date. -- If you could teach a cat to dance, you'd never have to leave the house. -- Pat Sajak
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 21:07 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.21.06.44@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1276 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 11:38:03 -0400, Warren Oates wrote: > In article <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan>, > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> Slackware. (is there anything else?) ;) > > Man after my own heart. I don't use Linux much these days, so I keep > Arch because it's very simple and the "rolling release" system suits my > needs and I have enough trouble keeping /usr/local up to date. I like Arch as well. It's my second-favorite, in fact. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he descended down into Shayol Ghul. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Paul Sture <paul.nospam@sture.ch> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 22:39 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <paul.nospam-C57778.22393814042011@pbook.sture.ch> |
| In reply to | #1272 |
In article <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > Hmmmm... the old dependency issue... OK. I certainly could run a Linux > distro in a VM, but if going that route I might as well just do it on a > Linux box, since I am certainly not abandoning Linux to go Mac-only... I > am quite familiar with VB already, so may do it anyway just for fun. Was > hoping to run Pan "natively" on the Mac, and may still try to do that. > Another vote here for running your favourite apps in a suitable VM client. Unless I missed some option or another, Macports will download and recompile the same modules you did yesterday for another product. Getting the preconpiled packages from your favourite Linux distribution is so much easier. -- Paul Sture
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-15 00:30 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.15.00.30.13@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1278 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 22:39:38 +0200, Paul Sture wrote: > In article <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan>, > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> Hmmmm... the old dependency issue... OK. I certainly could run a Linux >> distro in a VM, but if going that route I might as well just do it on a >> Linux box, since I am certainly not abandoning Linux to go Mac-only... >> I am quite familiar with VB already, so may do it anyway just for fun. >> Was hoping to run Pan "natively" on the Mac, and may still try to do >> that. >> >> > Another vote here for running your favourite apps in a suitable VM > client. > > Unless I missed some option or another, Macports will download and > recompile the same modules you did yesterday for another product. > Getting the preconpiled packages from your favourite Linux distribution > is so much easier. Yeah, you may be right. Thanks for your response! -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he downed his twelfth Guinness. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | Paul Sture <paul.nospam@sture.ch> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-15 09:48 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <paul.nospam-2F4C7E.09485215042011@pbook.sture.ch> |
| In reply to | #1281 |
In article <pan.2011.04.15.00.30.13@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 22:39:38 +0200, Paul Sture wrote: > > > In article <pan.2011.04.14.13.11.47@moria.lan>, > > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > > > >> Hmmmm... the old dependency issue... OK. I certainly could run a Linux > >> distro in a VM, but if going that route I might as well just do it on a > >> Linux box, since I am certainly not abandoning Linux to go Mac-only... > >> I am quite familiar with VB already, so may do it anyway just for fun. > >> Was hoping to run Pan "natively" on the Mac, and may still try to do > >> that. > >> > >> > > Another vote here for running your favourite apps in a suitable VM > > client. > > > > Unless I missed some option or another, Macports will download and > > recompile the same modules you did yesterday for another product. > > Getting the preconpiled packages from your favourite Linux distribution > > is so much easier. > > Yeah, you may be right. Thanks for your response! The other advantage of running in VMs is that you can run mixed versions without the danger of one version stepping on another. -- Paul Sture
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| From | Stainless Steel Rat <ratinox@newsguy.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-15 14:41 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <io9lf101ka1@news1.newsguy.com> |
| In reply to | #1278 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 22:39:38 +0200, Paul Sture wrote: > Unless I missed some option or another, Macports will download and > recompile the same modules you did yesterday for another product. MacPorts does not do this on a port install unless the new port requires a variant that is not currently available.
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| From | Tom Harrington <tph@pcisys.no.spam.dammit.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 10:24 -0600 |
| Message-ID | <tph-DCB715.10242214042011@localhost> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > Hello all, > > Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite > impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: > > http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en > > ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems > like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively > available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am fond > of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. > > Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. Fink was OK, and so was MacPorts. More recently I've used HomeBrew (https://github.com/mxcl/homebrew). In general, how well these schemes work depend on how deep the dependency tree runs. Simple command line tools, usually no problem. More dependencies lead to more potential problems. Once you get up to the level where Gnome or GTK are in the mix I found them to be hit or miss at best. There's almost always something buried somewhere in the dependency tree that doesn't build out of the box. I was usually attempting to build gnucash, which is apparently the acid test of this approach, and the test failed quite often. I also found that ports listed on the projects' web sites would often turn out not to actually work, so any information you find on what's available should be considered as potentially wrong. They're least useable just after a major release of Mac OS X-- I've had to keep one Mac running an outdated version of Mac OS X at times because the porting projects took a while to catch up (I'd try to help with the updating but that's not my forte as a developer and after literally days of work I'd eventually give up). Similar problems can crop up after a major update to Apple's developer tools, which the porting projects rely on. Eventually I decided this was too much trouble and I mostly gave up on them. Gnucash has a pre-built version that I can just download and run with no issues, so that's what I do now. -- Tom "Tom" Harrington Independent Mac OS X developer since 2002 http://www.atomicbird.com/
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-14 21:08 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.14.21.08.05@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1277 |
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 10:24:22 -0600, Tom Harrington wrote: > In article <pan.2011.04.14.00.20.29@moria.lan>, > Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> Hello all, >> >> Long time Linux user, just got my first iMac (21.5" version). Quite >> impressed so far... Somebody told me about "Fink", website here: >> >> http://www.finkproject.org/index.php?phpLang=en >> >> ...and wondering what some of you experienced users think of it. Seems >> like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not natively >> available on the Mac. For instance, the 'Pan' newsreader that I am >> fond of in Linux, would love to be able to run that on the Mac. >> >> Any thoughts on this Fink thing? Does it work well? Thanks. > > Fink was OK, and so was MacPorts. More recently I've used HomeBrew > (https://github.com/mxcl/homebrew). > > In general, how well these schemes work depend on how deep the > dependency tree runs. Simple command line tools, usually no problem. > More dependencies lead to more potential problems. Once you get up to > the level where Gnome or GTK are in the mix I found them to be hit or > miss at best. There's almost always something buried somewhere in the > dependency tree that doesn't build out of the box. I was usually > attempting to build gnucash, which is apparently the acid test of this > approach, and the test failed quite often. > > I also found that ports listed on the projects' web sites would often > turn out not to actually work, so any information you find on what's > available should be considered as potentially wrong. > > They're least useable just after a major release of Mac OS X-- I've had > to keep one Mac running an outdated version of Mac OS X at times because > the porting projects took a while to catch up (I'd try to help with the > updating but that's not my forte as a developer and after literally days > of work I'd eventually give up). Similar problems can crop up after a > major update to Apple's developer tools, which the porting projects rely > on. Eventually I decided this was too much trouble and I mostly gave up > on them. Gnucash has a pre-built version that I can just download and > run with no issues, so that's what I do now. Excellent. Thanks for the input. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he puked on Christopher Robin. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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| From | "giuseppe.on.usenet" <giuseppe.on.usenet@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-17 06:19 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <0a095a1c-c43f-4017-954b-0a8119932ab0@j13g2000pro.googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #1265 |
On 14 Apr, 02:21, Dan C <youmustbejok...@lan.invalid> wrote: > [...] Seems like a cool way to run some open-source apps that > are not natively available on the Mac. [...] All open-source POSIX-compliant applications are natively available on the Mac, as long as you compile them yourself. Perhaps you meant "open- source apps that are not downloadable for Mac from the developer's website". Anyway, I prefer MacPorts: it has many more applications, which are updated more often.
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| From | Dan C <youmustbejoking@lan.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-04-17 14:52 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.04.17.14.51.39@moria.lan> |
| In reply to | #1375 |
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 06:19:04 -0700, giuseppe.on.usenet wrote: > On 14 Apr, 02:21, Dan C <youmustbejok...@lan.invalid> wrote: > >> [...] Seems like a cool way to run some open-source apps that are not >> natively available on the Mac. [...] > > All open-source POSIX-compliant applications are natively available on > the Mac, as long as you compile them yourself. Perhaps you meant "open- > source apps that are not downloadable for Mac from the developer's > website". > Anyway, I prefer MacPorts: it has many more applications, which are > updated more often. Yes, that is what I meant. Thanks. -- "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". "Bother!" said Pooh, as he put on the hockey mask and started the saw. Usenet Improvement Project: http://twovoyagers.com/improve-usenet.org/ Thanks, Obama: http://brandybuck.site40.net/pics/politica/thanks.jpg
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