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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? If possible, would you consider buying OS X for a non Mac computer? Post 302286734 by tlarkin on Wednesday 11th of February 2009 11:03:10 PM
Old 02-12-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
Yes, I agree. Just because OS X has a amazing GUI does not mean you cannot use the command line if you desire.

On the other hand, most users will be happy with the GUI as a desktop model.

More than likely I would not choose OS X as a remote server as I do agree most packages for OS X are designed for GUI installation.

PS: I recently installed LAMP for OS X, called MAMP, and it was the easiest LAMP/MAMP install I have ever seen.
Neo, I used to admin a bunch of Windows and Novell servers at my old job. 80 servers, 10,000 PC windows clients, maybe 300 Macs. I did all the Mac work with one other guy and then did some PC work.

Now at my new job I have 30+ Xserves running 10.5.5 Server, and 6,700 Mac clients all in a pure open directory environment. I use a third party suite called Casper from Jamf Software.

I can tell you from my experience that package deployment is not only easy, it is way customizable and there are so many things I can do with it. Very very robust products. I can push out an application to all my clients with in a day if I really wanted to from my office. I can send them jobs to netboot and automatically reimage, from my office across the WAN.

Apple is lacking a few things here and there but really to be honest it is some of the best things I have worked with, when it works. I don't mean to say they don't work but I have definitely had my isues. 10.5.3 was a giant heap of dung and so was Work Group Manager 10.5.3 I wanted to thunder kick all my Mac servers at that point in time.

If you are going to run Web servers I would say Linux all the way, but if you want a file server, home directories, open directory, DHCP, or any other service you can run on a sever OS X Server isn't that bad.

My main comment from before was suppose to be, you can do everything from the command line or the GUI, you have a choice, which no Linux or Unix distro really has accomplished yet. Maybe Ubuntu has come close, but I can't compare the end user experience to that of a Mac.

I intalled TomCat, PHP 5 and MySQL on one of my servers through an installer package and it took all of 3 minutes to do so. Then configured it through the GUI. I just now need to brush up on my mysql command line abilities and I will be set.

Just saying is all.
 

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mprof-heap-viewer(1)					      General Commands Manual					      mprof-heap-viewer(1)

NAME
mprof-heap-viewer - GUI viewer for the logging profiler heap snapshots SYNOPSIS
mprof-heap-viewer file DESCRIPTION
mprof-heap-viewer GUI viewer for the logging profiler heap snapshots WARNING: this application is unfinished and experimental. Nevertheless it should work, and bug reports are encouraged. This program decodes the contents of a logging profiler output file and locates all the heap snapshots inside it. The user can then select each individual snapshot and decide to load it in memory and explore its contents. The GUI is organized to work on "object sets" (listed in a tree view on the left). All operations are performed with a popup menu on the choosen set. Initially the sets are the heap snapshots (of course a heap snapshot can be considered a set of objects!). For each set the GUI shows on the right a list that breaks it down by class (one row for each class). The user can then refine each set using a "filter", to select a subset. Examples of filters are "all objects of class X", or "all objects that reference an object of class X". This way the user explores the sets breaking them down to subsets (each subset in the GUI is a child of its owner set on the tree view). Moreover the user can issue a "compare" operation between two arbitrary sets A and B, which will compute two subsets: "A - B" (the objects of A which are not in B, a subsect of A) and "B - A" (the reverse). This can help in understanding what changed on the heap between garbage collections. Options None ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
None SEE ALSO
mono(1) COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008 Novell, Inc (http://www.novell.com) mprof-heap-viewer(1)
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