Cubes VS. Dots Mac OS
I came here because of all the hype that's going on about Cubes-OS at the moment, mainly because of the Snowden movie. I liked what I've seen in the video tour.
I have a Mac SE/30 (1989) running A/UX, Apple's first UNIX. The stumbling block for A/UX was the same as the early releases of what came to be OSX: classic Mac/OS emulation. A/UX runs Mac OS 6 under emulation, kind of like the Classic subsystem in OSX, and performance on even a 68030 (which was a pretty fast chip at the time) was lousy. Native Apps for Mobiles, Tablets, Touch Screens, Touch Tables, Mac & PC Have One Solution Effective and informative video layouts Customer understanding of property enhanced massively Grab Your Customers' attention Fun & engaging experience increases.
During the first Match Day celebration of its kind, the UCSF School of Medicine class of 2020 logged onto their computers the morning of Friday, March 20 to be greeted by a video from Catherine Lucey, MD, MACP, Executive Vice Dean and Vice Dean for Medical Education. Windows: Which OS Really Is the Best? When it comes to performance, usability, security, and specific tasks, which of the two leading desktop operating systems reigns supreme? What type of OS might be the best one for you depends on you. MacOS is optimized for web designing, video editing, and music-making as the software for these tasks optimized for macOS. Linux is excellent for programming as many IDEs, and text editors were designed for Linux. Now before we start to discuss macOS and Ubuntu, let's have a brief look at their histories.
On the main website, Cubes-OS is advertising that its able to run Mac OS X and iOS.
I also own a Macbook Pro and would like to run Mac OS X as a Cubicle / multiple cubicles .. at the moment, I can quite easily install a OS X VM with VMWare Fusion - they even provide a explicit installation option for it, where you can install it from the rescue partition.
So obviously, the legal part is already tackled by checking for some properties on the underlying hardware.. Apple seams to be fine with it, as else VMWare wouldn't allow it.
The two main questions now are:
1) Are there skilled CubesOS developers that would be willing to do this?
2) What resources would they need to do this (hardware, money, other developers)?
if we have a yes for 1) we can try to find a way for 2) ... crowdfunding comes to my mind. If of course no Devs are interested in this, the whole thing makes no sense and references to MacOS X and iOS should be removed from the website, so people now right from the start that this is not supported.
cheers,
Dominik
Many of us are initially surprised to learn that our devices do not support the kind of secure compartmentalization that our lives demand, and we're disappointed that software vendors rely on generic defenses that repeatedly succumb to new attacks.
In building Qubes, our working assumption is that all software contains bugs. Not only that, but in their stampeding rush to meet deadlines, the world's stressed-out software developers are pumping out new code at a staggering rate — far faster than the comparatively smaller population of security experts could ever hope to analyze it for vulnerabilities, much less fix everything. Rather than pretend that we can prevent these inevitable vulnerabilities from being exploited, we've designed Qubes under the assumption that they will be exploited. It's only a matter of time until the next zero-day attack.
Cubes Vs. Dots Mac Os Download
In light of this sobering reality, Qubes takes an eminently practical approach: confine, control, and contain the damage. It allows you to keep valuable data separate from risky activities, preventing cross-contamination. This means you you can do everything on the same physical computer without having to worry about a single successful cyberattack taking down your entire digital life in one fell swoop. In fact, Qubes has distinct advantages over physical air gaps.