mclass wrote:.... or is this the catalyst for porting Indigo to a more cost effective, dedicated single board computer (like the raspberry pi 4)?
I'd love Indigo server on raspberry pi.
mclass wrote:.... or is this the catalyst for porting Indigo to a more cost effective, dedicated single board computer (like the raspberry pi 4)?
srkinard wrote:Based on some of the conversation I've had with some folks in the know, they ultimate plan is to have Xcode help you convert the UI elements to fit your target device's interface style.
srkinard wrote:Maybe tie in HomeKit devices natively too...have a hybrid z-wave/insteon/HomeKit ecosystem...
RogueProeliator wrote:I don't think that I have seen any real mention of this, but I wonder how this affects running non-macOS applications going foward
jltnol wrote:Mypersonal take on this is Apple has moved from content creation to content consumption, and from storing stuff on your local hard drive to storing your files in somebody's cloud.. I just wonder how long developers will continue to follow Apple over the proverbial cliff.
The information is somewhat conflicting. During the Keynote (or possibly platform state of the union or both), they made pretty big deal about virtualization. In fact, I believe they showed linux running in Parallels on Apple Silicon hardware with Big Sur. They also said they were working with Docker to get that working as well.
So my best guess is that Parallels will use it's emulation layer (probably with help from Apple), Docker containers will also use some kind of emulation (perhaps a restricted licensed version from Parallels/Apple), that Big Sur has some kind of lower-level virtualization stuff (like a hypervisor) in the OS to help out with these kinds of efforts.
RogueProeliator wrote:The information is somewhat conflicting. During the Keynote (or possibly platform state of the union or both), they made pretty big deal about virtualization. In fact, I believe they showed linux running in Parallels on Apple Silicon hardware with Big Sur. They also said they were working with Docker to get that working as well.
Okay, well that is at least somewhat promising... I didn't watch the keynote, just read some recaps. So promising in at least they seem to hopefully be planning to support some level. I will admit to having very little real experience with Docker short of a few experiments, but I don't think that is going to be a great consumer experience; might help with dev and geeky stuff though.
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