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| Re: [e4-dev] The ideal Eclipse developer computer | 
I'm a huge Mac fan. For me Macs have always been "linux boxes usable by mortals". I run my home server off of an old G5 PowerMac and use a one-generation-behind MacBook Pro for all my development. Both have served me well. :-)
McQ.
![Inactive hide details for Hallvard Trætteberg ---07/01/2009 13:13:29---Hi all and Happy New Year! I hope it's not considered ab]() Hallvard Trætteberg ---07/01/2009 13:13:29---Hi all and Happy New Year! I hope it's not considered abuse of the list to ask a question of the pro
Hallvard Trætteberg ---07/01/2009 13:13:29---Hi all and Happy New Year! I hope it's not considered abuse of the list to ask a question of the pro
| ![]() From:
 | ![]() Hallvard Trætteberg <hal@xxxxxxxxxxx>
 | 
| ![]() To:
 | ![]() E4 Project developer mailing list <e4-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx>
 | 
| ![]() Date:
 | ![]() 07/01/2009 13:13
 | 
| ![]() Subject:
 | ![]() [e4-dev] The ideal Eclipse developer computer
 | 
Hi all and Happy New Year!
I hope it's not considered abuse of the list to ask a question of the proper 
equipment to do Eclipse development. If so, I apologize and you just ignore the 
rest.
I'm looking for a replacement for my 3 year old 14-inch (wide format) ThinkPad. 
I noticed that many of you had a ThinkPad (not strange considering IBM's 
dominance) at ESE, but I also noticed that many also had a MacBook (Pro I 
guess). I've read several comments that the MacBook has become one of the best 
Eclipse development machines:
- the usability is in general great
- SWT is becoming better on MacOSX
- the Unix foundation makes it a good server (SVN, Tomcat, Geronimo, Axis...) 
and allows old-fashioned scripting
- it handles memory-intensive applications better than Windows
- runs Windows programs well in BootCamp or using virtualization software like 
Fusion of Parallel.
While I don't hate Windows (although Vista has made it easier), it has served me 
well for many years, I've concluded that I'd rather have a Unix-based laptop due 
to better scaling, robustness, scripting etc. What I don't know is how MacOSX 
compares to Linux when it comes to hosting Eclipse and web server-based 
applications. After having seen the announcement of the new 17-inch MacBook Pro 
(I think I can afford it), I know what my heart wants, but the experience of 
others count a lot. E.g. how important is the screen size, how does MacOSX 
compare to Linux (Unix foundation, administration/installation and Window 
Management), Java support etc.
Hallvard
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