Mac OS X Server 1.x/Developer Release 1: Difference between revisions

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m (SebOno moved page Rhapsody Developer Release 1 to Apple Rhapsody Developer Release 1: Moved so that people can know what "Rhapsody" is and who it was made by.)
m (ToMi moved page Apple Rhapsody Developer Release 1 to Mac OS X Server 1.x/Developer Release 1 without leaving a redirect)
 
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Rhapsody Developer Release 1 is OPENSTEP/Mach with a Copland appearance from Mac OS 8 and support for Java and Apple's own technologies, including ColorSync and QuickTime; it could be regarded as OPENSTEP 5. Two developer versions of Rhapsody were released, known as Developer Preview 1 and 2, these ran on both Intel and PowerPC hardware, though with lacking support for nonstandard hardware. It was available for PowerPC and Intel (works with limited success in VMware, can work well on some PCs from around the time it was made, old IBM ThinkPads work especially well with it).
'''Apple Rhapsody Developer Release 1''' is a pre-release version of [[Mac OS X Server 1.x]]. It was OPENSTEP/Mach with a Copland appearance from Mac OS 8 and support for Java and Apple's own technologies, including ColorSync and QuickTime; it could be regarded as OPENSTEP 5. Two developer versions of Rhapsody were released, known as Developer Preview 1 and 2, these ran on both Intel and PowerPC hardware, though with lacking support for nonstandard hardware. It was available for PowerPC and Intel (works with limited success in VMware, can work well on some PCs from around the time it was made, old IBM ThinkPads work especially well with it).

Latest revision as of 16:58, 14 May 2019

Apple Rhapsody Developer Release 1 is a pre-release version of Mac OS X Server 1.x. It was OPENSTEP/Mach with a Copland appearance from Mac OS 8 and support for Java and Apple's own technologies, including ColorSync and QuickTime; it could be regarded as OPENSTEP 5. Two developer versions of Rhapsody were released, known as Developer Preview 1 and 2, these ran on both Intel and PowerPC hardware, though with lacking support for nonstandard hardware. It was available for PowerPC and Intel (works with limited success in VMware, can work well on some PCs from around the time it was made, old IBM ThinkPads work especially well with it).