Hello all,
I just realized that I am having all of the fun with approximately 3,000 infrared images. My boss should be able to share in the joy of eyeballing and annotating each and every one of these things ;) It's fairly safe: he's a good guy, and a good enough scientist to know that what I am doing really has to be repeated. Options include: (1) fix all of the file name manipulation to be Windows-friendly[*]; (2) create a Linux box he can use for the task; (3) let him run it on his mac at home. Will my Linux file names make sense to his mac? I never paid any attention to Microsoft's functions to get the Windows drive, and just hard-coded c: all over creation. On Linux, I have been coding a lot of references to things like /home/wks/2008/IR-data. Can his mac understand that? What would be required? Create an account for "me" to he would have the password (his computer, not my data, so that should be fine) and have him log in that way to run it? Bill [*] let's pass on that one _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project |
Hi Bill,
this plan should work. MacOS is a NetBSD in elegant disguise, so linux file names are OK. There is no /home though, it's called /Users so you will have to make a symlink. And while you are at it you can make a /Users/wks that points to your boss' home directory. No need to make a new user :-) HTH, On 12 Aug 2010, at 20:53, Schwab,Wilhelm K wrote: > Will my Linux file names make sense to his mac? I never paid any attention to Microsoft's functions to get the Windows drive, and just hard-coded c: all over creation. On Linux, I have been coding a lot of references to things like /home/wks/2008/IR-data. Can his mac understand that? What would be required? Create an account for "me" to he would have the password (his computer, not my data, so that should be fine) and have him log in that way to run it? -- Johan Fabry [hidden email] - http://dcc.uchile.cl/~jfabry PLEIAD Lab - Computer Science Department (DCC) - University of Chile _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project |
>>>>> "Johan" == Johan Fabry <[hidden email]> writes:
Johan> this plan should work. MacOS is a NetBSD in elegant disguise, For values of NetBSD ultimately approaching FreeBSD and correctness! NetBSD fed OSX Server. FreeBSD userland fed OSX client. -- Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095 <[hidden email]> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/> Smalltalk/Perl/Unix consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc. See http://methodsandmessages.vox.com/ for Smalltalk and Seaside discussion _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project |
In reply to this post by jfabry
Johan,
I think I understand. If I play this right, I might even score a mac mini out of it :) I'd shoot for laptop, but I'm really quite happy with my Toshiba: it's the one with a Vista sticker but makes African drum noises when it boots. However, I will be honest enough to point out that there are macs available on campus where I could test it :( Armed with shell script that I know works, I could set it up for him pretty quickly. We also have an idle machine that is more or less begging to start running the Lynx. Thanks! Bill ________________________________________ From: [hidden email] [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Johan Fabry [[hidden email]] Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2010 9:25 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Re: [Pharo-project] Mac file names Hi Bill, this plan should work. MacOS is a NetBSD in elegant disguise, so linux file names are OK. There is no /home though, it's called /Users so you will have to make a symlink. And while you are at it you can make a /Users/wks that points to your boss' home directory. No need to make a new user :-) HTH, On 12 Aug 2010, at 20:53, Schwab,Wilhelm K wrote: > Will my Linux file names make sense to his mac? I never paid any attention to Microsoft's functions to get the Windows drive, and just hard-coded c: all over creation. On Linux, I have been coding a lot of references to things like /home/wks/2008/IR-data. Can his mac understand that? What would be required? Create an account for "me" to he would have the password (his computer, not my data, so that should be fine) and have him log in that way to run it? -- Johan Fabry [hidden email] - http://dcc.uchile.cl/~jfabry PLEIAD Lab - Computer Science Department (DCC) - University of Chile _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project |
In reply to this post by Randal L. Schwartz
On 12 Aug 2010, at 21:44, Randal L. Schwartz wrote: >>>>>> "Johan" == Johan Fabry <[hidden email]> writes: > > Johan> this plan should work. MacOS is a NetBSD in elegant disguise, > > For values of NetBSD ultimately approaching FreeBSD and correctness! > > NetBSD fed OSX Server. FreeBSD userland fed OSX client. Ah I did not know that, thanks for pointing it out! -- Johan Fabry [hidden email] - http://dcc.uchile.cl/~jfabry PLEIAD Lab - Computer Science Department (DCC) - University of Chile _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project |
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