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Use Mozilla Firefox under WINE to reach those Windows-only sites

Posted by solipsistic on 08 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: linux, wine

Being denied based on operating system

Its long been known that you can use something like the User Agent Switcher to make it appear like you’re using a different operating system than you really are. This can be useful on some websites that insist you need to run Windows – when in fact Linux or practically any other operating system will work fine.

But for those sites that are actually telling the truth, you can often run Firefox under WINE with very good results. Just head over to www.getfirefox.com and download the Windows binary. The site actually does its own OS detection, so you’ll probably want to choose “Other Systems and Languages.” Once you have it, make sure you have WINE installed. I also installed the MS truetype fonts because it looks terrible otherwise.

# apt-get install wine msttcorefonts

And then start the installer

$ wine Firefox\ Setup\ 2.0.0.7.exe

You’ll go through the normal install process, and when you’re finished you’ll see a new Firefox icon on your Linux desktop:

Windows Firefox on my Linux desktop

Double-click it and you should be good to go! If you want to visit a site with audio, you’ll want to run winecfg, visit the Audio tab, choose your settings (I just left the defaults) and click Apply. Otherwise you might run into some issues with Firefox crashing. If its any consolation, Firefox will crash on certain sites powered by Move Networks in Windows, too, if there is no audio driver installed. This is probably related to the Firefox extension you must install to view the site.

Advantages of being a WINE developer

Posted by solipsistic on 16 Sep 2007 | Tagged as: linux, wine

I’ve often thought that it would be neat to contribute to a high-profile open source project. You know, something like Joomla that plans to solve all the world’s problems. I recently learned that contributing to the WINE project is just what I needed.

For the uninformed, WINE is a project that allows Microsoft Windows programs to be run in Linux. It sounds like a lofty goal – and it is – but sometimes its actually quite useful. For example, I once had to contribute changes to a Word document that had all kinds of complex formatting – and OpenOffice couldn’t handle it. To be fair, OpenOffice could open it fine, but the formatting was inconsistent with what is normally displayed in Word and basically corrupted the layout for anyone that viewed the document later. Long story short, I had no choice but to edit the document with Word, running Windows XP. In true Microsoft fashion, Word running on Windows XP did crash several times before I was able to finish my edits to the document. While I wasn’t sure whether to blame Microsoft or my professor for creating that extra-complex document layout, I do know I was yearning to experience those kind of program crashes while running my operating system of choice!

WINE let me do just that. Word 2000 actually runs quite well using WINE on Linux. I don’t think the newer versions have the same success though.

More to the point, WINE can run any Windows executable. It may not be perfect, but you have to thank the WINE developers for trying:

Yes, No, Cancel?

This is a picture of the free product Personal Ancestral File available from familysearch.org. It helps you keep track of your ancestors. What it wants me to do now is anyone’s guess, but it should be clear to you why I want to be a WINE developer. I want the privilege of saying “You won’t believe the fun I had today….”