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Re: The basics of beginning
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Re: The basics of beginning


  • Subject: Re: The basics of beginning
  • From: Haroon Sheikh <email@hidden>
  • Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2003 09:52:59 -0800

You could also read the FAQ for X11 for Mac OS X in the archives. It has some useful links.

	http://lists.apple.com/mhonarc/x11-users/msg01319.html

haroon

On Friday, February 14, 2003, at 08:59  AM, Bryan Oakley wrote:

On Friday, February 14, 2003, at 08:29  AM, Robert Poland wrote:

Hi,

Forgive me if I don't know nuttin.

Everybody has to start somewhere.


I need to get into Unix at a low level. I have installed X11 0.2.1. (iMac 800 512M ram, OS 10.2.4).... What is the point of X11? What does it allow me to do?

I find it interesting you would download and install software for which you have no idea what it does. For the record, you don't need X11 to learn Unix "at a low level" (or at any level, for that matter). While X11 has it's roots on unix systems, they are two different technologies. X11 works on windows and macintosh and a few other platforms as well. It is true, though, that most *nix systems use X11 as their display technology of choice (NeXT was one high profile exception, in that it used display postscript), and a large percentage of open source software requires X11.


X11 is a technology for managing graphical output. It allows you to write programs that will run on any hardware that supports the X11 protocol. (X11 is a protocol, X11.app is a display server that implements that protocol). The cool thing about X11 is that you can run a program on one machine and have it display it's GUI on some other machine or a smart terminal connected only by a network.

Installing and running X11.app allows you to run programs that were built to use X11 as it's display technology. If you don't have applications like that you don't need X11.

For the definitive answer on all things X11, see x.org: http://www.x.org/X11.html
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Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.

References: 
 >Re: The basics of beginning (From: Bryan Oakley <email@hidden>)

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