Nobody did, but if you want to run the best chess engines you are forced to use Windows.cyberfish wrote:But who said a computer can only run one OS?
Windows 7 speedup
Moderator: Ras
Re: Windows 7 speedup
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Re: Windows 7 speedup
Best engines? Can you be a bit more specific? Because in my experience pretty much every engine runs under wine.trojanfoe wrote:Nobody did, but if you want to run the best chess engines you are forced to use Windows.cyberfish wrote:But who said a computer can only run one OS?
Re: Windows 7 speedup
Oh I see - well I've never used Wine so I have no idea what does and doesn't run. I simply meant natively without things like Wine, VMWare or Virtual PC.ilari wrote:Best engines? Can you be a bit more specific? Because in my experience pretty much every engine runs under wine.trojanfoe wrote:Nobody did, but if you want to run the best chess engines you are forced to use Windows.cyberfish wrote:But who said a computer can only run one OS?
Re: Windows 7 speedup
Wine Is Not an Emulator. It is a translation layer. "Windows programs running in Wine act as native programs would, running without the performance or memory usage penalties of an emulator" (from the wine website).trojanfoe wrote:I simply meant natively without things like Wine, VMWare or Virtual PC.
The problem is that is runs only 32-bit applications, so for computer chess you might be losing speed, but in the case of Rybka someone has created "microwine" through which you can run the 64-bit version. So I would say that if you want the best engine (which is Rybka 64-bit MP) you can run it in on a Linux system as I am running it without any problems. Edit: I should add that using an engine with wine is as simple as replacing e.g. thinker.exe with 'wine thinker.exe' when adding a new engine in your GUI.
And if you want games, you should check the wine application database http://appdb.winehq.org/ and see if and how well your windows game can run with wine.