Interesting bit of news today, folks, as the teams behind the widely popular PlayOnLinux and PlayOnMac applications have announced their new service, PortMyApps. The website gives a short list of reasons why one would want to port to Mac/Linux as well as a system that also allows you to test out your specific program for free.
Those familiar with WineSkins on Mac OS X may be familiar with the methodology.
Basically, it just wraps your Windows program in a standalone Wine environment which doesn't require any additional configuration or setup on the intended platform (in theory).
This service is obviously geared toward software publishers, but any program can be "ported." There is even an online feature that allows you to upload a Windows program via a zip and see if it will work with their solution (Linux support soon).
Overall, I'm pleased to see this program/service exist. I feel as if this could convince more developers to port their games and programs, even if it's not native. What do you guys think?
Source: http://en.portmyapps.com/
UPDATE: One of the people involved with PortMyApps wrote the following in the article comments:
Those familiar with WineSkins on Mac OS X may be familiar with the methodology.
Basically, it just wraps your Windows program in a standalone Wine environment which doesn't require any additional configuration or setup on the intended platform (in theory).
This service is obviously geared toward software publishers, but any program can be "ported." There is even an online feature that allows you to upload a Windows program via a zip and see if it will work with their solution (Linux support soon).
Overall, I'm pleased to see this program/service exist. I feel as if this could convince more developers to port their games and programs, even if it's not native. What do you guys think?
Source: http://en.portmyapps.com/
UPDATE: One of the people involved with PortMyApps wrote the following in the article comments:
tinouAs a developer of PlayOnLinux, and by reading some comments, I want to make things clearer;
This tool is noway made to discorage use of native ports. In fact, you cannot use it port games because it is limited 50Mo.
It is designed for very specific apps (like the one we ported) that could not and would not be ported in other way, or very old game (in general the source code is lost).
Games that can be natively ported won't be ported with PortMyApps, it is not planed for the moment. (And there are no point for that!)
Anyway, we do not have enough resources to bring profesional support for a game played by million of users, so clearly we won't take this risk ...
Also, you'll notice that the website is called PortMyApps, and not PortMyBrandNewGame ;-) ...
Wine's results are too variable for us to afford the risk to work for very big companies ...
Game editors that are interested in Linux do not want to give a bad image of their brand by bringing a low quality support for a title. Valve has proven it by not using wine for Steam.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
People have said that TW2 runs better through WINE anyways. ^_^
I imagine some will be good and some very poor. Valve's goal should be able to make all of their games playable on SteamOS without having to use the streaming service (which doesn't work with some games).
All I can say is - anything that makes weaning me from Windows is a good thing.
Like I said in the steam hardware survey topic, just release the code for your older and not currently maintained titles and the awesome linux community will likely do most if not all of the leg work for you at little to no charge. Then we can just get the actual game content from our steam catalog or directly from the windows install disc(s). I would like to see steam for linux allow for the downloading of non linux games in my catalog for no other reason than to get the data. As an example, Doom3-BFG.. I needed the data for RBDoom3BFG once I compiled it.
uninstalling POL is 1st on my list same as never buying one title made in this way is 2nd
The way I see this is a tool for games/apps that would never see a linux release to get ported for a lot less than a full on port.
For example, Skyrim. Skyrim will probably never see a native release until the OpenMW team decides to port it 50 years from now, but it works amazingly well in a wineskin on OS X.
This tool is noway made to discorage use of native ports. In fact, you cannot use it port games because it is limited 50Mo.
It is designed for very specific apps (like the one we ported) that could not and would not be ported in other way, or very old game (in general the source code is lost).
Games that can be natively ported won't be ported with PortMyApps, it is not planed for the moment. (And there are no point for that!)
Anyway, we do not have enough resources to bring profesional support for a game played by million of users, so clearly we won't take this risk.
Care to explain further? I understand the Limitation on size due to bandwidth, etc, but why not support for full games?
If a company were to contact you, would you be willing to work with them to port an AA title?
and so it works in wine if you choose so. which is kind of good publicity. you can run skyrim even though there is no skyrim for linux. in this case, running slower doesn't mean much
but, what happens when official skyrim is crappy? in that case, it is better no port at all than deficient port. and if the worst comes and lets say lots of titles get ported like this. what would that say about linux gaming? crappy performance, weak support... yea, definitely good reason why to use linux /*sarcasm*/
i really hope people POL people won't support linux, same way as wineskin doesn't. or at least people keep list of games and apps ported like this, so that list can at least be boycotted in big scale
that is something that makes sense and fixes the meaning twarted by article