• 0

Cherry OS Trial Available!


Question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

CherryOS I have to admit sucks as a program. It crashes when its trying to created Drive images, saying 'warning, this program may hang for 5 to 10 minutes while the disk is formatted' .... yeah, great programming there. 15 minutes later and my hard drive stops spinning about 4 minutes ago? Still no program responce. *blam* End Task'ed.

Next, it claims in the features that it supports sound, unlike PearPC. Check the hard to find release notes. 'There are currently issues with sound on most configurations'. ... See, 'we haven't finished coding it yet, but give us money anyway for something to emulate a PC to run an operating system that's primary use is multimedia.

PearPC at least admitted its foilbles, with the help of various frontends was easy to configure and didn't crash all the bloody time before the O/S had even started either!

<crosspost with discussion on latest CherryOS news item>

  • 0

ok im back i have installed mac os x when my computer shut down automaticly last night so it must be finished, now i have set my boottable to selection 2 and it still boots the installation again, can some body take a look at my cfg file.. thnx

cfg.zip

  • 0

holy CRAD!!!....DID YOU READ THE FRONT PAGE?!?!?......From the "creator" of Cherry OS. He said, that Cherry OS is based on a complet different code and archtecture and that is why they can achieve such stability and "speed".

MY A$$....there was no stability and speed and it was an almost 100% copy of PearPC....this guy is ****ing me off and who ever pays for this deserve to be slapped...

  • 0
It crashes when its trying to created Drive images, saying 'warning, this program may hang for 5 to 10 minutes while the disk is formatted' .... yeah, great programming there. 15 minutes later and my hard drive stops spinning about 4 minutes ago? Still no program responce. *blam* End Task'ed.

Same here :no:

me---> bicz.gif <--- CherryOS creator

:devil:

ohh well ..... back to my good old XP

  • 0

Yes its slow, yes it's unbearable, yes it's not a mac. But it's a view into the mac os world, wich I really need as an administrator and as a nerd. You can't excuse that they've taken the code from ppc, and expect to payed for it. I'm an open source fan, actively in the EU. But it has one advantage to ppc, ICS, which means that you don't have to hassle with your nic, or buy a new one.

I had a realtec nic rtl8139, but it didn't seem to work out with ppc, so my solution was cherryOS, with ICS.

But to newbees, open source fans, I would highly recommend PPc control panel

It works very good with ppc Pear ppc

Its much easier this way.

Slow old computer xp1600, 512, 2100, i know

I've enjoyed this thread, since it made me smarter, thanks to all of you.

sincerely

/ahave

Edited by ahave
  • 0
Yes its slow, yes it's unbearable, yes it's not a mac. But it's a view into the mac os world, wich I really need as an administrator and as a nerd. You can't excuse that they've taken the code from ppc, and expect to payed for it. I'm an open source fan, actively in the EU. But it has one advantage to ppc, ICS, which means that you don't have to hassle with your nic, or buy a new one.

I had a realtec nic, but it didn't seem to work out with ppc, so my solution was cherryOS, with ICS.

But to newbees, open source fans, I would highly recommend PPc control panel

It works very good with ppc Pear ppc

Its much easier this way.

I've enjoyed this thread, since it made me smarter, thanks to all of you.

sincerely

/ahave

585598834[/snapback]

Actually if you want PearPC on par with CherryOS in the ICS networking department get openVPN beta 2.0 from sourceforge http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/openvpn...ta2-install.exe

It works like CherryOS's extra NIC that gets installed. Instructions on how to use openVPN beta 2.0 with PearPC are found on http://dev.realistanew.com/win32net/

  • 0
Actually if you want PearPC on par with CherryOS in the ICS networking department get openVPN beta 2.0 from sourceforge http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/openvpn...ta2-install.exe

It works like CherryOS's extra NIC that gets installed.  Instructions on how to use openVPN beta 2.0 with PearPC are found on http://dev.realistanew.com/win32net/

585598883[/snapback]

Wicked, I've searched of course, but didn't find that. Thanks.

Cheers

/ahave

  • 0
I could really care less if it is a rip of PearPC. If its better and it works, then why does it matter?

Can someone please clarify if it is actually faster than PearPC? Or are people recieving mixed results?

585599265[/snapback]

well how would u feel if you spent 5 yrs developing innovative software and then some jackass comes and copies your code and tries to sell it?

They are the same speed.

*edit

maybe not 5 yrs...but u get the pnt.

  • 0
we should make it against the rules to even discuss this piece of crap on neowin. and put at a message on teh front page saying that it violates copyright laws. noone should be paying these ******s anything.

585594334[/snapback]

What copyright laws? You do realize that the whole reason for open source is to not have copyright laws right?

  • 0
What copyright laws? You do realize that the whole reason for open source is to not have copyright laws right?

585600377[/snapback]

Most open source software relies on copyright. The majority of open source software is not public domain and is copyrighted. What they do have is far more lenient distribution terms and end-user use terms.

  • 0
no, this is different. its not opensource, its theft.

585600422[/snapback]

I wouldn't call it theft, personally, I'd call it plagiarism, and a possible violation of their license terms. They didn't remove anything, but duplicated somebody else's work and took credit for it. If the allegations against CherryOS are correct, that is. :ninja:

  • 0

Ok, we have established that many of you think CherryOS is a copy of PearPC under a different interface. Now, can we please get into something else? Like talking about bugs, product updates, specs, speeds, etc, about CherryOS?

I for one, need help. When using CherryOS, I got to the point in the OS X installation where you are asked to select a usable volume to install it too, but am not shown any places to install it (its blank). Why?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I have a TV, but it is not used for normal linear TV, only streaming and it is not a Samsung and the best bit is, I don;'t and never have had a Instagram account. The only thing I have to do with Meta is Faceache and I only keep that just for the messaging part.
    • But building your own.. what? You can't build anything like the Steam Machine yourself. Even trying to get close costs a good deal more. Even just the CPU cooler in their price comparison is as big as the entire Steam Machine. If you want a regular gaming PC, then by all means, build that. If you want a a small console-like PC for the living room that is good for gaming, I'm not sure what else is a better deal. In the GN review, they only mentioned a small form factor Dell, which is like twice the size and hundreds of dollars more expensive.
    • Those are some popular multiplayer games. But hardly "all". Just those that don't work on Linux currently due to specific anti-cheat implementations. I think it's also fair to point out the literally thousands of games that don't work on the PS5. And it's not locked at 1080p. That's the default, which you can change.
    • Ubuntu Livepatch arrives on Arm64 to eliminate system reboots for kernel updates by Paul Hill Canonical has just announced that its Livepatch service now supports computers with Arm64 processors. For those who are not familiar, Livepatch allows users to apply important kernel updates without any service interruption or rebooting. While home users will benefit from this, it’s even more important for critical machines that absolutely should not be going offline at all. The feature is available as part of Ubuntu Core 26 for Arm64 and Ubuntu Core 20 and onwards for AMD64. According to Canonical, this will improve the security of systems that aren’t security-maintained daily or weekly, and it helps organizations work towards Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) compliance. If you are familiar with Ubuntu, you probably know that most packages can be updated without having to restart the system. There is one big exception to this, and that’s the kernel; it typically requires you to reload the system to boot into the new kernel. With Livepatch, Canonical has done something so that you don’t need to restart to begin using the new kernel. Aside from Ubuntu Core 26, users with Arm64 chips running Ubuntu 26.04 LTS can also use Livepatch. If you want to learn more about Livepatch, check out its product page. There, you can also find a button to join Ubuntu Pro (it’s free for several home devices) so that you can enable Livepatch. By linking your computer to Ubuntu Pro, you will also extend the life of your Ubuntu install from five years to ten years. If you are running Ubuntu, let us know in the comments if you have been looking forward to this feature on your ARM-based computer. If you’ve had a compatible AMD64 machine for a while and never used this feature, let us know why in the comments!
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      497
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      205
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      94
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      89
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!