Originally Posted by: lgrijalva Thanks for clarify this Jason, i did not knew this, (i am most a mac user)
Luis G.
Am i correct in thinking that Aero is the Vista/W7 Aero? I recall people (not here) poo-pooing Compiz/KDE graphics effects. I know that back in Dec 2006 i was using a cheap 32MB ATI graphics card in my old 800 MHz Celery (umm, Celeron) computer which i bought in Sept 2001. This lowly 2001 computer ran the 2006 ATI card and almost beautifully (tho inconsistently sometimes) ran Compiz.
See some here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y4wB3GUemVwNow, on my 2 GHz HP Pavillion, with an integrated ATI chip, maxing out under 254 MB shared RAM, I get some pretty decent Compiz 3d graphics (desktop becomes a cube, each side being one of my desktops; alternately it can be a sphere, and has Mac-like presentation stuff).
I'm fairly pleased that I can in 3D watch a DVD in Linux and run W7 inside Oracle/Sun XVm (Virtual Box) and run VCP inside W7 (too bad there's not a Linux-friendly version considering that Mac is running a variant of Unix/Linux/FreeBSD), and as long as my VCP file doesn't go past 40 or 60 MB, i can do all that which Vista/W7 Aero demands a high performance graphics card.
If only VCP/Shark were recompiled to work natively in Linux, my only tether to windoze would be Lotus SmartSuite (Lotus Approach, WordPro, particularly, but OpenOffice.org's "Calc" is supplanting Lotus 1-2-3). I wish i could win a post-tax $200 million lotto -- I'd dangle $75,000,000 of it in front of Punch! JUST to tempt it to finally crossing over the line and rapidly porting to Linux and sustaining a independent team on an independent payroll/budget without regard to "market size". Some things should be done for existing business, others for creating new business...
Anyway, i digress.
Careful on looking at Compiz/KDE on Youtube -- some of it's addictive visuals, some funny, some boring, but definitely most are pre-dating whatever vista could do, tho 3rd party devs endowed xp with some Mac/Linux-like GUI capabilities around 2005/6.