Fedora 6 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux Bible

Overview

In This Chapter

In the old days (like, a couple of years ago), you had to make Linux look like a file and printer server on an AppleTalk network in order to use a Linux server from an Apple Mac. While that is still true with an older Mac (OS 8 or 9), if you have an iMac with OS X, the whole world changes. That's because Mac OS X is a lot like Linux on the inside.

This chapter is for people who have (or want to have) Macs on their desktops and Linux as their servers. It covers a variety of server types that you can set up in Linux, then access from a Mac OS 8, OS 9, or OS X operating system. In particular:

The latest Mac computers have moved to Intel-based architectures. So now Apple operating systems are like Linux on the inside and the computer hardware is like the PCs that Windows and a majority of Linux systems run on. Because of this change, you can actually install Fedora on new iMac and Mac Mini computers. Procedures for installing Fedora Core on a Mac Mini are included at the end of this chapter.

I wrote this chapter in response to several readers of earlier editions of this book who wanted to replace their Windows servers with Linux servers. I hope this chapter will help start them, and you, on the road to taking full advantage of powerful networked Linux features from your easy-to-use Mac desktops.

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