eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Apple may be moving away from IBMs PowerPC chips, but ...
Although Intel provides the greatest user base for Linux, many other architectures are supported. These include ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, Alpha, SPARC and Hitachi. The availability of cheap x86 hardware ...
SuSE Linux 7.3 PowerPC Edition is now in circulation. The Linux operating system has been developed to run on Macs equipped with PowerPC processors. The collection includes 8 CDs that contain both the ...
A software development kit for the company's SVME/DMV-182 PowerPC SBC line, SDK is a certified Linux development environment that includes TimeStorm IDE, certified GNU tool chains, and support for ...
Two 1-GHz G4 MPC7455 processors, comprehensive hardware features, and PPC Boot and Linux—that's what comes with the A7400-PCI dual PowerPC PCI card. The A7400-PCI features 8 Mbytes of flash ROM, two ...
Windows Vista gets a bad rap for its hefty hardware requirements, but it's not alone. Apple's MacOS X platform has left a lot of Macs with PowerPC G3, G4 and G5 chips out in the cold. However, Linux ...
Although Linux was born on PC machines, it is widely used on different hardware platforms. And one of those platforms is the Macintosh. Apple’s hardware is usually considered more reliable and ...
Firm's next product for Linux enthusiasts will support IBM's Power processor and allow users to run multiple OSes simultaneously. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about ...
Increasing numbers of embedded developers are turning to Linux as the preferred software platform to support compute-intensive applications in networking, wireless infrastructure, storage and imaging.
BOSTON--Red Hat's next product for Linux enthusiasts is slated to support two significant new features, the first for IBM's Power processor and the second for software that lets the same computer run ...
Increasing numbers of embedded developers are turning to Linux as the preferred software platform to support compute-intensive applications in networking, wireless infrastructure, storage and imaging.