An acronym for WINE Is Not an Emulator, the software is an open source effort to make Linux-based computers run Windows application, not through emulation but through a translation layer that handles Windows-specific application code dynamically.Īpple is infamous among game developers for significantly changing OpenGL and other APIs needed for games during maintenance upgrades to operating systems. In fact, CrossOver, Cider and Cedega all have their roots in WINE. Instead, Cider is conceptually similar to CrossOver, CodeWeavers’ recently announced software that will enable Macs to run Windows applications on Mac OS X.
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It’s also very different from Parallels Desktop, which uses virtual machine technology built into the Intel chips Apple uses in its new Macs to enable users to run Windows and Windows applications inside of a window on their Mac OS X desktop-that doesn’t provide graphics acceleration and other things needed to run Windows games on the Mac.
This is significantly different than Apple’s Boot Camp software, which requires Intel Mac users to restart their systems in order to work with Windows XP applications. Cider, meanwhile, translates on the fly the Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that the game needs to call in order to work. But instead of Mac OS X, the game remains a Windows application. Users pop in a disc, install the game, and run it just as they would a standard Mac OS X application. One thing that makes Cider different is that the game is effectively “wrapped” with TransGaming’s technology.