Will Apple Adopt Windows?


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What happens when I have more than 300 or so programs, like I do on my Windows laptop?

Oh wait, I forgot. It's impossible for a Mac to have that many programs. After all, there aren't that many apps written for it, is there?

I was going to stay out of this thread, but the glaring ignorance in this post made me want to reply.

Firstly, do you truly believe that all your application shortcuts show up in the Dock automatically? Because that's not how it happens. They are voluntarily put there by the user, much like you voluntarily put (or don't put) shortcuts on your Windows desktop. The only difference is the amazing amount of functionality the Dock icons give you, as opposed to the simple function of just launching the program as do the Windows desktop shortcuts.

Secondly, there may be less software available for Mac, but I must say that the average level of quality is better... I have found better quality programs for Mac than I ever have on Windows. Out of all the freeware/shareware apps available for Windows, 90% of them are lackluster and don't perform the function you want at the level of quality you're expecting. For Mac, there were only about 10% of the apps that I found that were developed poorly. I don't know about you, but I'd much rather have quality over quantity.

People who want a pretty laptop have a few choices out there like Alienware, Sony Vaio or those new Titanium Thinkpads. Some people may be drawn to macs by the industrial design of their cases but the majority of mac switcher take the plunged because of the OS.

i orginally took the switch to a ibook over a windows laptop was becuase of its cheap price and battery life for what it is, after getting it i feel in love with macosx i use it now as my primary desktop. If they were to switch to windows i wouldnt bother saving up for a imac or mac mini, i only want them for mac osx

Yeah, Apple does one heck of a job on OS X. IMHO it is the best Operating System to be found. Granted you're paying a premium for it, you'll realize it was worth it with the time you save not reformatting, defragging, etc.

I hardly ever use Windows anymore. The only time I use Windows is for games. The remainder of the time is spent on my mac mini. :)

Two words: HELL NO! :D Mac OS X is the best system out there and demand for the Macs is actually outstripping supply! As a matter of fact, so many people I know of want to switch to a Mac because of the crappy Windows user interface. Chances are, it's more likely that Apple would be forced to allow Mac OS X installations on non-Apple systems if they are not able to keep up with the hardware demand.

the evn show, I think you are getting caught up in the details of what .NET and Cocoa are. They are both API's for connecting to the underlying OS in an Object oriented way. You could also say that Carbon and Win32 are somewhat analogous as they are both C based with kind of messy syntaxes.

I don't want to get into a nerd contest with you especially since I'm recovering from bronchitis. You don't need to prove how smart you are. I've written plenty of code to interface with Win32 at work and I'm sure you have too.

From a very high level, both .NET and Cocoa + the Core frameworks help developers concentrate on writing applications instead of interfacing with low level OS APIs or implementing basic network and file I/O.

Regardless of which one you happen to prefer or what features one has over the other, the fact remains that Apple and third-party developers use Cocoa and the Core frameworks to a large extent these days. Switching to Windows would throw all that functionality out the window or it would have to be ported to Windows. I think it would destroy Apple as we know it.

Essentially, this Dvorak fantasy is not going to happen. Apple might be working on providing some sort of compatibility libraries to speed up porting of windows Apps to OS X.

Actually, more likely, porting OS X apps to *Windows*, not the other way around. However, they *won't* be necessarily for Macs.

Apple is a hardware company that also writes a goodly amount of software. It is also smart enough to look beyond the base of its own hardware to make money. A case in point is QuickTime Pro. While QuickTime authoring software is mostly associated with Apple's Macs, you haven't needed a Mac to author content in QuickTime for the last two major releases (6 *or* 7). Apple, however, is faced with a rather nasty dilemma: the top-drawer photography and HD editing software outside of Avid is written by Apple itself. However, the vast majority of software that *competes* with Apple Logic Express/Logic Pro, FinalCut HD and Motion are not even available for Apple hardware (they are available for that *other OS*). That means that Apple must do one of two things: either be content with their niche market, or port their software to that other OS. Let's be honest: what percentage of iPod sales are going to non-Mac owners? Forty percent? Fifty percent? Even (egads!) *sixty percent*? Personally, I would say that even the sixty-percent figure (iPod sales to non-Mac owners) is actually underestimating the case, considering the number of downloads of iTunes for Windows (even though you can use iTunes with portable devices other than iPods). The fact that people with portable devices that *aren't* iPods (and also don't own a Mac) are using iTunes on Windows obviously means that Apple is doing SOMETHING right when it comes to writing software on Windows. Could it be that Apple (which is, as I said earlier, smart enough to look beyond their own hardware base to make money) is actually looking to port some of the applications (and possibly even development tools) to *Windows*? (One thing that is seriously lacking is a low-cost, or better still, no-cost, entry-level development environment to write managed code in Windows. Xcode, which Apple *gives away* with every copy of OS X, can be used to write managed code. Name *one* thing in Xcode that would prohibit its use to write managed-code-based Windows applications other than the usual cross-OS issues that Apple has dealt with before with QuickTime and iTunes. Xcode could be the way to woo still more developers away from Microsoft.)

Apple moving whole-hog to Windows? Not a chance. Apple porting some of their own *software* to Windows? Why not?

That guy is a ****in retard. He's like the Nostradamus of IT. He sits there and spouts a billion predictions and if one turns out right 10 years later he brags about it. It's like throwing a bunch of **** at the wall and waiting for some of it to stick.

PGHammer, that's not going to happen. Those Pro Apps rely very heavily on OS X specific Core technologies like Core Audio, Quartz extreme, Core Image and Core Video not to mention the rest of Cocoa.

Porting that technology would be like porting .NET and all of the pillars of Longhorn/Vista to OS X. It's not going to happen.

You cannot just recompile and have it run on windows. Cocoa is as alien to windows as Win32 is to OS X.

What many Windows users fail to realize is that there is almost always an alternative program for every program that runs Windows and many of them are much higher in quality and often freeware or shareware (very cheap). This Apple switching to windows bull**** is a load of crap and Dvorak needs to take his crazy pills! More probable would be Microsoft giving up the OS industry and letting Apple take over. Also... someone earlier mentioned that Microsoft has better marketing and I must disagree... Just look at the success of the iPod! Microsoft doesnt have to do anything to sell new copies of windows except to say that there is a new version. The few ads from microsoft I have ever seen were extremely lame at best.

Also... someone earlier mentioned that Microsoft has better marketing and I must disagree... Just look at the success of the iPod! Microsoft doesnt have to do anything to sell new copies of windows except to say that there is a new version. The few ads from microsoft I have ever seen were extremely lame at best.

That's anno 2006. Microsoft did do a better job getting Dos/Windowsto to the masses in the early '90s, something Apple failed to do with Mac OS.

yeah, because he was soooo off the mark when he predicted that Apple would switch to Intel processors...

Actually, he predicted that Apple would switch to the Itanium chip in 2002. Yeah, that happened.

Dvorak spews a lot of crap, it should be taken with a grain of salt.

Apple adopt windows?!? Lol, I think not. They may embrace a situation where it is used in conjunction with OS X on the same Mac or even possibly the Red Box technology but hardly ditch one of the most advanced consumer OS's for something still stuck in the 20th century...

Apple adopt windows?!? Lol, I think not. They may embrace a situation where it is used in conjunction with OS X on the same Mac or even possibly the Red Box technology but hardly ditch one of the most advanced consumer OS's for something still stuck in the 20th century...

Ummm... kinda got it it the wrong way around there... :o

Oh lord, not turning this into another OS X vs Windows thread man, but its true. Evn Show explains it terrifically, wish I could find that post he made a while back. Oh well.

Btw, for those of you who do not know what Red Box is, its the fabled OS X technology that would allow for windows programs to run natively within OS X. Most say that it would spell the end of OS X developed programs but I tend to differ. With extremely advanced technologies such as quartz, core image, cocoa, etc built into the system, I don't think this would have any impact on the developers that use those to make smoother and more efficient programs.

EDIT: Hurray!!!! 2000 posts!!! Yea I know, I'm a loser but when you are bored and its almost midnight, little things like that make you feel good :D

I needed a break from trying to decipher source code due to lack of documentation; the following is not proof read or fact-checked. Beware rampant opinion and speculation.

I could find that post he made a while back. Oh well.

Search is broken for anything more than a couple years back.

Just as a sort of final follow up to Aristotle from that side-topic we were having:

I like Cocoa, OS X, and even XCode just fine. I don't think has been another platform that would let me get nearly as much done as Cocoa and Xcode have?in fairness I've only written for maybe half-a-dozen operating systems so my experience is limited. We got off a bit of a stretch about features of IDEs APIs, and all sorts of nerdery not because I think .Net is leaps ahead of Cocoa (it's not) or because XCode sucks (only compared to VisualStudio) but because I don't agree that Mac developers couldn't have been at least as successful writing Windows Applications.

I also don't think that consumers really give a damn about how good their applications are?the number of them still using crap pretty much seals that one. I think it would be dreadful to lose Carbon and I think applications would suffer?especially small ones like Textmate and Delicious Library?but I don't think that'd effect most companies any worse than trying to sell to < 1/10th of the market does.

As a side bit: Cocoa almost completely abstracts all of the implementation details from a program. Moving an application from Cocoa on OS X to Cocoa running atop Windows may not even require a recompile in some cases. The problem (as always) is getting Cocoa to run anywhere but OS X. We already know that parts of OS X's API are running on Windows just fine (Rendezvous^wBonjour, Quicktime, all of the BSD Subsystem). We also know that OpenStep (Cocoa's grandfather) ran on a number of platforms, including Windows. Maybe Apple's been maintaining a mostly-current stand alone "cocoa runtime" that can be installed on other platforms the way the .Net can, in theory. I doubt they'd be spending the resources on such a project because there's little benefit to be seen from it?which is completely unlike maintaining a platform independent operating system?but nothing apple does surprises me any more.

The whole idea that Apple would ditch their OS as old as the "going out of business" and "apple becomes sony++" and the "switching to <X-brand> processors" rumors, all of which have been circling longer than I've been follow Apple.

Also, for what it's worth: Dvorak talks about this article on This Week In Tech where he makes it pretty clear?to my ears?that this article was written pretty much to put ads in front of your eyes. I haven't read this article specifically (him and Thurrot are little more than well paid trolls as far as I'm concerned) but I can't image there's anything in there that he hasn't said in 2005, 2000, 1995, etc. At the very least this whole the whole argument is pretty weak from what I've seen hear and on Ars. Listening to him try and explain himself on TWiT pretty much sealed the deal for me: this is a non story.

Sure - it's ad. hominem but the guy is talking out his ass?but it's getting a million page views a day so good for him: he's apparently much better at his job than I am at mine.

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The app is evolving all the time and has made leaps and bounds since I first started reviewing TerraMaster devices almost three years ago. It is not quite there yet if you are comparing the likes of Synology, which, sadly, a lot of users online do all the time. OpenClaw setup One of the main selling points of the new F4-425 Pro is the inclusion of OpenClaw, with TerraMaster claiming that it is "powered by the world's first AI-native TOS 7 OS, supporting local-first smart workflows and independent data control." However, I immediately ran into problems trying to enable OpenClaw. After waiting 20 minutes at the "Enabling" message of the OpenClaw app following installation, I decided to do some searching online and discovered that it couldn't complete the installation process due to SPC being enabled, which is something TOS 7 immediately recommends to be enabled on first boot. SPC for NAS (TOS 7) is basically the same principle as UAC in Windows; it blocks executables from being launched by non-Super Users. After reaching out to my contact about these issues, I received the following response: Anyway, this only became clear when I closed the OpenClaw app screen and clicked on the OpenClaw icon in the taskbar; that is when I saw the message about disabling SPC. I think, due to the fact that this is a requirement, this should be a prompt during the installation process, not when closing the App Market and then trying to launch OpenClaw. There's also no 'Getting started' guide for people like me who have never used OpenClaw. I tried to add an LLM and discovered the tutorial led nowhere. That's when I started looking around the official TerraMaster forums, and I found a guide that helpfully explains that you won't get anywhere with OpenClaw unless you have a paid plan, which is disappointing because I imagined there would be an option to use a local LLM as I do in SubtitleEdit with Whisper-XXL. In addition, with the marketing imagery on the official site, it says that the OpenClaw feature is "all processed 100% locally for absolute privacy." which led me to believe that I could install a local LLM, not one that required paid tokens. In any case, TerraMaster does not provide guidance for this new feature, which was also a selling point of the F4-425 Pro! My contact also provided clarification about the above points I raised with TerraMaster Since it is not in the scope of the review to add paid services, I'll leave that to the people who are more qualified with OpenClaw. F4-425 Pro Surveillance App TOS also comes with a Surveillance app, which is not installed by default; it can be found in the App Market recommended section. In addition, after installing, it doesn't drop a shortcut on the Desktop or top taskbar, but you can "Send to Desktop" from the App Market listing for the app for a quick way to open it. Adding my Reolink POE doorbell camera was painless. TerraMaster doesn't appear to have a repository of preconfigured cameras; instead, the camera must be added using ONVIF or RTSP. No mobile Surveillance app TerraMaster still doesn't have a dedicated Surveillance app, although from searching online, Surveillance can be used and managed through the TNAS mobile app. I tried this with the updated TNAS mobile app beta in combination with TOS 7 and got a message that Surveillance was "Only accessible through web browser," so I reckon this must be limited to the stable versions of TOS 6 and the mobile app. More quirks In addition, whenever I minimized the Live View window in the browser Surveillance app, the feed appeared to switch to the Low-bandwidth stream, and there was no way to get the High-quality stream back. To get the High-quality stream back, I had to close Live View and then reopen it. Benchmarking A pretty cool feature of the TOS 7 is that it allows you to install directly to the NVMe M.2 SSD. In order to do that, you would have to leave out any HDDs during initialization, and even then, the system partitions are always written to two HDDs when they are eventually added. With three NVMe slots, this also gives an interesting scenario where you could build a TRAID storage Pool for installing all your apps and Docker on, and keep the third for SSD cache on the HDD pool. Limitless options! SATA PCIe 3.0 X1 A CrystalDiskMark test on a mapped network drive from within a Windows 11 25H2 PC (image above) connected over a 5 GbE hub was well within acceptable ranges. Although the read result on SATA was a little less than with the F4-425 Plus, for some reason, while writes were generally better. SATA PCIe 3.0 X1 I also ran the NAS Performance tester, which tests the link speed performance. As you can see, it pretty much maxes out the 5GbE connection. Of course, you can also opt to bond the two 5 GbE connections for a bit more umph, but I didn't do that. TOS 7, which, as of testing, is still in Beta, comes with an App Center that has a bunch of handy programs you can install right off the bat, such as Emby, Plex, Docker, as well as in-house Backup and Surveillance solutions. As you can imagine, any media streaming services you would want to host off the F4-425 Pro will work great, thanks to the Intel Core N350 CPU and its 16 GB of DDR5 memory. Accessing from mobile is only possible if Security Isolation Mode is disabled, which can put your NAS at risk from external sources, so there was no way to access it from the TNAS Mobile app. It's also quiet. I had this sat next to my computer on my work desk for the past week, and I did wonder if the noise I was accustomed to with NAS devices would annoy me, but all I could hear was a soft whirring of the rear fan (which was a little annoying) when the disks were not actively copying or reading data. Conclusion So what have I learned? Unfortunately, this release raises a few important questions and concerns that I feel haven't been adequately addressed. What I didn't like Our variant shipped with TOS 7 beta, and it's advised not to use it in a production environment. I feel that's a bit limiting on an $800 device. The mobile app is also still in beta and does not support some of the first-party apps, like Surveillance, and it still has quite a few bugs. I am a bit confused about the OpenClaw marketing along with the F4-425 Pro. I feel like that if it's going to be a main selling point, then offer official guidance on how to get started with it. TerraMaster recommends enabling SPC, but then markets the NAS for use with OpenClaw, which requires disabling SPC to be able to use it, opening up genuine security concerns for the NAS; and that's before you get into the security concerns of OpenClaw itself. Of course, the above issues won't be a problem if you decide to install something else on it, or even go back to the stable TOS 6. I wish TerraMaster had just given TOS 7 as opt-in rather than shipping with it. TOS 7 has been available as a preview since December 2025 (so well before my last TerraMaster review), and according to a thread on Reddit where a user shared a screenshot from the TerraMaster Facebook page, it is scheduled to launch today, June 23, but there's nothing about that in the TerraMaster news blog. My contact confirmed over email that TOS 7 exits beta today. The rubber feet also deserve a mention as they continue to be a problem, with them coming unstuck the moment you shift the F4-425 Pro anywhere on your desk. What I liked What it comes down to, though, aside from what I already mentioned, you are still getting a quality, affordable device here, so recommending it will depend on the individual's use case. If you're just looking for a relatively small NAS device to manage virtual machines on, backup your files, and take care of your home theater streaming, then it is a great device that will certainly futureproof you for some time. It provides good performance, takes up little space, and is, on the whole, very quiet. Four bays afford proper redundancy using TRAID or RAID 5, and you can even expand on storage capacity by adding the 2-bay D5, or 4-bay D8 Hybrid DAS over a USB 3.2 (10Gbps) link. Considering the 2024 releases were more about power, with the likes of an Intel Core i5-1235U high-end laptop CPU under the hood, I asked my contact last time if we could expect more of the same in higher-end models and was told: It makes a lot of sense to use Intel's N350 chip inside a NAS; it is more than capable of doing what the F4-425 Pro is intended for, media streaming and backup. The only downside is still the clear lack of community and even staff support on the official forums. In the past, I have had topics go unanswered for days, or there would be generic-type "we've noted this and passed it onto our developer team" type responses. Along with the other things I mentioned, it all ends up costing it a couple of points. If you are comfortable with the command line, Docker, and setting up TrueNAS or Unraid, you'll be fine. You can do great things with this hardware. In TOS, the apps are a bit lacking, and things don't always work as expected.\ AI NAS?! What has become clear to me this year is that we are going to start seeing all kinds of "AI NAS" come to market, and while that might be good for us consumers, be diligent and research these claims. Although the F4-425 Pro technically comes with AI, it is really using a cloud service that is externally sourced off-device through the third party OpenClaw app. My colleague did review a newcomer to the NAS space earlier this year, and it includes a local AI assistant inside the Zettlab D4 NAS, and they do not even use AI in the product name, check out Chris' review here. Where to buy and a discount coupon However, it does not change the fact that this is truly a great entry-level home media-class NAS that you can buy right now. TerraMaster is having a 20% off launch discount, plus you can also still apply our unique 10% off coupon on checkout, which only works on the official website. So here is a breakdown of the pricing that is only valid on the official TerraMaster website. TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = $575.99 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = $503.99 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = £525.59 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = £460.79 Use NEOWIN coupon code during checkout for 10% discount Over on Amazon US and UK, the F4-425 Pro also gets a 20% launch discount, but here, the above 10% coupon cannot be applied. TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) for $639.99 at Amazon US (was $799.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) for $559.99 at Amazon US (was $699.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) for £583.99 at Amazon UK (was £729.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) for £511.99 at Amazon UK (was £639.99) As an Amazon Associate, when you purchase through links on our site, we earn from qualifying purchases.
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