The Dawn of Haiku OS

    The Dawn of Haiku OS


    Posted: 28 Apr 2012
    How a volunteer crew brought a crack operating system back

    It was the summer of 2001, and computer programmer Michael Phipps had a problem: His favorite operating system, BeOS, was about to go extinct. Having an emotional attachment to a piece of software may strike you as odd, but to Phipps and many others (including me), BeOS deserved it. It ran amazingly fast on the hardware of its day; it had a clean, intuitive user interface; and it offered a rich, fun, and modern programming environment. In short, we found it vastly superior to every other computer operating system available. But the company that had created BeOS couldn’t cut it in the marketplace, and its assets, including BeOS, were being sold to a competitor.

    Worried that under a new owner BeOS would die a slow, unsupported death, Phipps did the only logical thing he could think of: He decided to re-create BeOS completely from scratch, but as open-source code. An open-source system, he reasoned, isn’t owned by any one company or person, and so it can’t disappear just because a business goes belly-up or key developers leave.
    Warning: It's a looong read :)

    Source

    A Guy
    A Guy's Avatar Posted By: A Guy
    28 Apr 2012



  1. Posts : 12,364
    8 Pro x64
       #1

    Old Operating
    Dying slowly unto death
    New birth to system
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 53,363
    Windows 10 Home x64
    Thread Starter
       #2

    A poet, and you don't know it

    A Guy
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 12,364
    8 Pro x64
       #3

    lol
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 117
    Win 10 Pro
       #4

    Just D/L it....
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 299
    openSUSE 13.1 64bit
       #5

    As an Open Suse user, I think the claims about it being a real challenger to Windows or Mac OS are a little ambitious, open source really doesn't account for a big slice of the home market, and I think it will take a lot more than Haiku to challenge that.

    Yes Linux is based on a server kernel...but that kernel has be modified and re-written many times and the new GUIs, that author claims 'frustrate users when carrying out intensive tasks' simply don't exist in todays Linux driven desktops.

    I like the idea of a 700mb full install, that could breath life into some old hardware I have lying around, but having to (possibly) configure code to get legacy hardware working is not something I want to do.

    Also think that the current OS's will soon be replaced by the likes of a more solid Google / Android platform - I think that's where the prize lies.

    Going to download and have a look at it though.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 10,455
    Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
       #6

    Downloaded the VM. Definitely different.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 3
    windows 7 home premium
       #7

    having many OS around its just to confuse and also fun to all enthusias of computers, having said that they compete on the market share,well, who do you think is way ahead now? though times are changing very fast and every person is looking for a something "new",if you like, but in fact it is not new and from where it started-WINDOWS-would you rather have an OS that will give a headache or an OS that will not.
      My Computer


 

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