This in from the Gainesville Linux Group:

Ars Technica is reporting that CodeWeavers the company behind the
commercial version of WINE, CrossOver is going to be giving it away for free
Tomorrow Oct. 28th. Head over to their website tomorrow if you want if you
want to get a copy for yourself.

It's been my experience that it works better than WINE and while they do
provide all of their changes to WINE as open source they do not provide their
GUI tools.

John Schember

Views: 29

Comment

You need to be a member of Codetown to add comments!

Join Codetown

Happy 10th year, JCertif!

Notes

Welcome to Codetown!

Codetown is a social network. It's got blogs, forums, groups, personal pages and more! You might think of Codetown as a funky camper van with lots of compartments for your stuff and a great multimedia system, too! Best of all, Codetown has room for all of your friends.

When you create a profile for yourself you get a personal page automatically. That's where you can be creative and do your own thing. People who want to get to know you will click on your name or picture and…
Continue

Created by Michael Levin Dec 18, 2008 at 6:56pm. Last updated by Michael Levin May 4, 2018.

Looking for Jobs or Staff?

Check out the Codetown Jobs group.

 

Enjoy the site? Support Codetown with your donation.



InfoQ Reading List

NVIDIA Dynamo Addresses Multi-Node LLM Inference Challenges

Serving Large Language Models (LLMs) at scale is complex. Modern LLMs now exceed the memory and compute capacity of a single GPU or even a single multi-GPU node. As a result, inference workloads for 70B+, 120B+ parameter models, or pipelines with large context windows, require multi-node, distributed GPU deployments.

By Claudio Masolo

Karrot Improves Conversion Rates by 70% with New Scalable Feature Platform on AWS

Karrot replaced its legacy recommendation system with a scalable architecture that leverages various AWS services. The company sought to address challenges related to tight coupling, limited scalability, and poor reliability in its previous solution, opting instead for a distributed, event-driven architecture built on top of scalable cloud services.

By Rafal Gancarz

Growing Yourself as a Software Engineer, Using AI to Develop Software

Sharing your work as a software engineer inspires others, invites feedback, and fosters personal growth, Suhail Patel said at QCon London. Normalizing and owning incidents builds trust, and it supports understanding the complexities. AI enables automation but needs proper guidance, context, and security guardrails.

By Ben Linders

Article: Scaling Cloud and Distributed Applications: Lessons and Strategies

The article shares goals and strategies for scaling cloud and distributed applications, focusing on lessons learned from cloud migration at Chase.com at JP Morgan Chase. The discussion centers on three primary goals and the strategies addressing the goals, concluding how these approaches were achieved in practice. For those managing large-scale systems, these lessons provide valuable guidance!

By Durai Arasan

Arm Launches AI-Powered Copilot Assistant to Migrate Workflows to Arm Cloud Compute

At the recent GitHub Universe 2025 developer conference, Arm unveiled the Cloud migration assistant custom agent, a tool designed to help developers automate, optimize, and accelerate the migration of their x86 cloud workflows to Arm infrastructure.

By Sergio De Simone

© 2025   Created by Michael Levin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service