![]() Newman has been the IT Director, Systems Administrator, and Webmaster for CodeWeavers since 2000. I'll be posting more videos in the near future as long as they don't interfere with my other duties too much. I posted these to my own LaXDragon channel. This seems to be a bug in Rosetta 2 itself, since I was able to verify that by installing RetroArch and trying to get controllers to work, no joy there I'm afraid. The first thing I noticed is that since these 3 games work best with a controller, in Rosetta 2 controllers do not work. Rocket League, Dead Cells, and Untitled Goose Game. In this video I ran 3 different Windows games. My new video, which you can watch right here: However, it at least ran and did show that CrossOver was able to work on the new M1. There are legacy Wine bugs that prevent it from reaching the frame rate you would get on Windows. This was not the best choice as it even on native Mac and Linux it does not run very well. In Jeremy White's blog post, I ran Team Fortress 2. Since Wine requires X86 instructions to be able to translate the Windows software over. This is how CrossOver is still able to work. Once again, we have an emulation layer included: Rosetta 2. Apple has put plenty of their own special sauce into the mixture. Granted, they are based on the established Arm core. This time for the first time, they are making their own chips. Now here we are in 2020 and Apple is at it again. Then during the Intel switch, it was named Rosetta. Each time Apple made a switch, they also included an emulation layer so old software would still work. ![]() At this time CrossOver was also first released for the Mac. ![]() Then in 2006 Apple did the what many thought impossible and switched again to the Intel X86 chip. ![]() invented while he was away from Apple doing his own thing. macOS X was largely based on the NeXT core that Steve Jobs and Co. It was also during this timeframe that the largest macOS release X came out. This chip was interesting because it was the first mainstream RISC based CPU. They chugged happily along on these until 1994 when Apple wanted to make the jump to the IBM PowerPC chip. Originally back in the 80's the Macintosh used a Motorola 68000 chip. What is new and fascinating about this new toy is that it is the 3rd time Apple has switched to a new CPU architecture. Recently I was tasked with making some videos of running CrossOver on the new Apple M1 (Apple Silicon) MacBook.
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