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It's the chicken & egg dilema. The more developers, the faster it's developper and the more attractive to users and to developers.
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Thinking about Wine, I'm not sure I agree with that. While implementing Win32 under POSIX OSes may not be exactly sexy, the first organization which does it really well has attained a Holy Grail of sorts.
One oft-quoted reason for the slow progress has been the "fact" that Win32 is a moving target. However, Wine developers have explicitely noted that the Win32 is, as a practical matter, not fast-moving. Most developers still want their apps to work on Win98, even today. And they will still want their apps to work on XP several years from now.
I believe the Wine devs are more critical of the poor to nonexistent documentation and the "secret" api's.
Sometimes people try to deny that the secret calls exist. But, hey, when your Microsoft app, running under Wine, complains that some call does not exist, and try as you might, you can't find any documentation that even suggests the existence of that call, well...
Edited 2007-06-07 17:45







Member since:
2007-03-24
It's the chicken & egg dilema. The more developers, the faster it's developper and the more attractive to users and to developers.
Few developers -> Slow -> Unattractive -> Less developers