Someone has some doubts about the man behind CherryOS. Pear PC users are pretty suspicious, too.
mountain, four trees
Yeah, yeah, more than four trees, and I’m standing on the mountain, OK?
Having Mt. St. Helens up in the upper right corner of this page is proving interesting in ways I did not expect. For example, two days ago, I was up before dawn and happened to see dawn break over the mountain. A tiny bright spot in the silhouette of the mountain told me what I heard on the news an hour later. Lava had broken through the dome and was glowing in the night.
The image is also interesting in less volcano-related ways. I work in a garage which is entirely underground, and my house never receives any direct sunlight through its’ windows. My home office area’s windows look out on an alley and high fence. As the shadows swing across the mountain’s flanks I find myself gauging the time of day based on the picture. The image of the mountain is my most regular exposure to the light of day.
Finally, the images, in sequence, (as spottily as I look in upon them) create a long-form pseudo-narrative, akin to both comics and film, to Monet’s Rouen Cathedral or his Haystacks. It’s a rare chance to do some long looking, something I deeply enjoy. It’s unexpected to me that long looking is proving subject, in this case, to time-slicing, miniaturization, and distribution.
CherryOS
CherryOS is a fully-functional Mac OS X hardware emulator for the PC. You’ll still need a copy of Mac OS X, but apparently it otherwise works just fine – at least until Apple brings in the lawyers. I don’t have any hardware to tinker with this on, but sure would love to check it out.
However, the website makes reference to “pre-orders,” so it remains vaporware for now. My understanding is that the site has been hammered since they did some press, and that has prevented me from more thoroughly exploring the site.
Hmm. On further investigation, pinging “cherryos.com” returns “unknown host,” at least from here. Maybe the lawyers are already up and at ’em. A WHOIS records an active record for the site, and the listed nameservers are both up, so I assume they are just down at the moment.
Over at the Cult of Mac, Mr. Kahney has apparently laid hands on a copy, however.