I lack success in getting the original yellow labeled Datacad 10 disk and V 9.5 parallel hardlock to work in Ubuntu. Here's what I've done so far:
Obtained the aksparlnx hardlock device driver source code from Alladin. Able to compile it into a machine specific loadable device driver to load with modprobe aksparlnx.
Obtained the aksusbd harlock installer from Alladin. Converted the .RPM package installer to .DEB with Alien. Can get aksusbd daemon to load.
Obtained winehasp.zip from Alladin. It contains winehasp.exe. This is supposed to allow protected programs to run under Wine. Can load winehasp.exe with Wine. It also contains the WIN32 HASP HL API. This would presumably replace the API that Datacad uses and supplies. I think they would have to link it in to be able access it. It is supposedly universal for Wine or Windows and automatically detects which. Otherwise, I don't know how to implement it.
The versions of software that I've been working with on this are: Ubuntu 7.04, Wine 0.9.50 and Windoors 0.9
A place to discuss Architecture WITHOUT Windows. We explore the use of Ubuntu Linux as a replacement for the Windows operating system in architectural practice.
Monday, December 17, 2007
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
What's the hardware?
The test bed is a 2GB Intel Core 2 Duo based Apple Mac Mini running OS X Tiger with Vmware's Fusion to allow virtual Linux and Windows machines. I currently have Ubuntu Ultimate V7.10, Kubuntu V7.04, and Windows XP running concurrently with OS X Tiger. Yes, on the same machine, at the same times! Fusion is the ultimate have your cake and eat it too software. No messing with Bootcamp and no need to set up as a dual boot machine. The virtual "partitions" are simply large files that I store on an external hard drive. I can literally command+tab between Linux or Windows and OS X. The first time I had Internet Explorer running in an OS X window on the OS X desktop was a wild experience. Soon I expect to have IE running with Wine under Linux without the need of Windows. Free is the word.

I have another machine setup specifically with Ubuntu Ultimate. It is a 733Mhz Pentium based machine called a Micron ClientPro. It was destined for the scrap pile but got a last minute reprieve for this series of tests. It runs surprisingly well and runs most applications as if it were a much more powerful machine running Windows. Before tossing out one of those old machines, load it up with Ubuntu and take it out for a spin.

I have another machine setup specifically with Ubuntu Ultimate. It is a 733Mhz Pentium based machine called a Micron ClientPro. It was destined for the scrap pile but got a last minute reprieve for this series of tests. It runs surprisingly well and runs most applications as if it were a much more powerful machine running Windows. Before tossing out one of those old machines, load it up with Ubuntu and take it out for a spin.
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Google Sketchup
Friday, November 9, 2007
The beginning.
How can you have architecture without windows? That's crazy you say. How do you see out of a building without windows? Why use windows when you can use Linux instead! This blog will deal with my adventures into using Linux instead of Windows in my architectural practice. The particular flavour will be Ubuntu which is based on Debian. So join me in sharing your experiences in practising architecture WITHOUT using Windows. As an added bonus we will try to do it for free.
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Doing buildings without Windows
A place to explore architecture without windows. Windows the OS that is. We explore the world of architecture (or any like minded venture) through the mostly free world of Ubuntu Linux.
