All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Objectively Old | Coder Radio 365


Listen Later

Wes turns back the clock and explores the message passing mania of writing Objective-C without a Mac, and we wax-poetic about programming language history.

Plus Mike gets real about the Windows Subsystem for Linux, and our take on the new MacBook keyboard leak.

Links:

  • Apple is reportedly giving up on its controversial MacBook keyboard - The Verge — Apple is planning to ditch the controversial butterfly keyboard used in its MacBooks since 2015, according to a new report from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. 9to5Mac notes that Apple will reportedly move to a new scissor-switch design, which will use glass fiber to reinforce its keys. According to Kuo’s report, the first laptop to get the new keyboard will be a new MacBook Air model due out this year, followed by a new MacBook Pro in 2020.
  • Objective-C - History - Wikipedia — After acquiring NeXT in 1996, Apple Computer used OpenStep in its then-new operating system, Mac OS X. This included Objective-C, NeXT's Objective-C-based developer tool, Project Builder, and its interface design tool, Interface Builder, both now merged into one application, Xcode. Most of Apple's current Cocoa API is based on OpenStep interface objects and is the most significant Objective-C environment being used for active development.
  • A Short History of Objective-C — While most programmers discovered Objective-C only during the iPhone app revolution, Objective-C has been around for over 30 years. Objective-C has been the foundation of Apple’s desktop operating system, Mac OS X, since its debut in 2001, and was also the basis for NEXTSTEP — OS X’s immediate ancestor — created by Steve Jobs’ NeXT Computer Inc. However, Objective-C was created neither by Apple nor NeXT. Its origin was a small Connecticut startup in the early 1980s called Stepstone.
  • GNUstep — GNUstep is a mature Framework, suited both for advanced GUI desktop applications as well as server applications. The framework closely follows Apple's Cocoa (formerly NeXT's OpenStep) APIs but is portable to a variety of platforms and architectures.

  • GNUstep: Fun with Objective-C — Objective-C is a language based upon C, with a few additions that make it a complete, object-oriented language. Why do I think Objective-C is fun? Precisely because of this emphasis on simplicity
  • Beginners Guide to Objective-C Programming
  • Installing and Using GNUstep and Objective-C on Linux - Techotopia — The basics of Objective-C are supported by the GNU compiler collection. In order to utilize the full power of Objective-C together with the Cocoa /openStep environments on Linux, and to work with many of the examples covered in this book, it is necessary to install gcc, the gcc Objective-C support package and the GNUstep environment.

  • Objective-C Compiler and Runtime FAQ - GNUstepWiki — The history of Objective-C in GCC is somewhat complicated. Originally, NeXT was forced to release the original Objective-C front end in order to comply with the GPL. This code was not quite compatible with the GNU runtime and so it was modified. NeXT did not adopt these modifications and so each release of GCC by NeXT, and then Apple, contained changes that needed back-porting to the main branch of GCC.

  • For a long time, GCC was the only compiler that worked with GNUstep. Unfortunately, the GCC team has not invested much effort in Objective-C in the last few years and it currently lags behind Apple's version by a significant amount.

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    All Jupiter Broadcasting ShowsBy Jupiter Broadcasting

    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9

    4.9

    89 ratings


    More shows like All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

    View all
    The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source by Changelog Media

    The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source

    288 Listeners

    Coder Radio by The Mad Botter

    Coder Radio

    152 Listeners

    The Vergecast by The Verge

    The Vergecast

    3,712 Listeners

    LINUX Unplugged by Jupiter Broadcasting

    LINUX Unplugged

    268 Listeners

    Talk Python To Me by Michael Kennedy

    Talk Python To Me

    581 Listeners

    Unfilter by Chris Fisher

    Unfilter

    152 Listeners

    Late Night Linux by The Late Night Linux Family

    Late Night Linux

    164 Listeners

    Ask Noah Show by Noah J. Chelliah

    Ask Noah Show

    38 Listeners

    Home Assistant Podcast by HK Media

    Home Assistant Podcast

    69 Listeners

    Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats by Wes Bos & Scott Tolinski - Full Stack JavaScript Web Developers

    Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

    987 Listeners

    Darknet Diaries by Jack Rhysider

    Darknet Diaries

    8,092 Listeners

    Late Night Linux Family All Episodes by The Late Night Linux Family

    Late Night Linux Family All Episodes

    47 Listeners

    Self-Hosted by Jupiter Broadcasting

    Self-Hosted

    142 Listeners

    2.5 Admins by The Late Night Linux Family

    2.5 Admins

    97 Listeners

    Oxide and Friends by Oxide Computer Company

    Oxide and Friends

    67 Listeners

    Diggnation (Rebooted) by Kevin Rose

    Diggnation (Rebooted)

    195 Listeners