Wine 11.0, the latest stable release of the open-source compatibility layer that allows Windows games and apps to run on Linux and macOS, has been ...
Wine is a compatibility layer for running Windows apps and games on Linux, a major part of Valve's Proton and now Wine 11 is finally here.
Transparently runs 16, 32, and 64-bit Windows apps, but still doesn't use the Microsoft store. The latest version of the Wine Windows app runner arrives a year after version 10. Given its annual ...
Over the course of the three weeks I have been using Ubuntu so far for the 30 Days With Ubuntu Linux series, there have been sporadic comments suggesting that I just run this app or that app in a ...
Linux lacks native versions of industry-grade creative tools like Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, and while open-source ...
All the Linux news you may have missed this week.
CrossOver 12.5 or Wine to Run Windows Apps in Linux? SJVN covers CrossOver 12.5 and Linux over at ZDNet. CrossOver is an interesting piece of software, it lets you run Windows applications in Linux ...
No matter how easy Linux distributions make it for newcomers to install and use a free, open-source operating system, nearly everyone has at least one program that only works in Windows. Wine, a free ...
As free and open source software continues to become more powerful and more prevalent, there’s less and less need to choose anything else. It’s not at all surprising, for example, to see the recent ...
September 4, 2008 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google One helpful Ubuntu hacker blogger posts a guide to getting Google Chrome working as a stand-alone app in ...