Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 27th Apr 2009 21:44 UTC, submitted by poundsmack
OSNews, Generic OSes BeRTOS is a real time operating system suitable for embedded platforms. It runs on many microprocessors and microcontrollers, ranging from 8-bit to 32-bit CPUs and even PCs. It's free and open source, licensed under the GPLv2.
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Somehow....
by truckweb on Mon 27th Apr 2009 23:15 UTC
truckweb
Member since:
2005-07-06

My eyes did not see right, but somehow I was under the impression that this was a Real Time BeOS....

Back to drinking...

Reply Score: 3

RE: Somehow....
by poundsmack on Mon 27th Apr 2009 23:26 UTC in reply to "Somehow...."
poundsmack Member since:
2005-07-13

ya, thats how I first mistakenly stumbled upon this OS while on freshmeat.net one day and though (after a few drinks), "OMG! Real time BeOS!!!1?"

I was so disapointed to find out it was not the case that I continued drinking until I could convince myself it was in fact a real time BeOS.... and for a minute I was happy....

...later I sobered up and read what the actual discription of the OS was... Still good, but no BeOS RTOS.

("was any part of that story true?")
No, but it's a slow Monday at work, and I mean real slow. The kind of slow that you are temped to restart the IIS server just to have someone call you on your office phone, you know just to make sure their are still users and I havne't somehow survived the impending zombie apocalypse. I am fairly sure that zombies arn't capable of calling to tell me the web sites are down, but I have been wrong before.

now that I have posted this incredible waist of time I will reward those reading it with things that gives me solice on slow work days. http://thewebsiteisdown.com/ (click on Sales guy VS. Web Dude)

/end rant

Edited 2009-04-27 23:36 UTC

Reply Score: 7

More embedded topics please!
by icasty on Tue 28th Apr 2009 10:33 UTC
icasty
Member since:
2005-08-26

This is quite interesting. I wish osnews talked more about embedded scale stuff, like those smaller microcontrollers (PIC, AVR, cortex m1/m3, etc).

Btw, this BeRTOS runs on AVR too. But the name is misnomer.

Edited 2009-04-28 10:33 UTC

Reply Score: 2

not a misnomer
by silix on Tue 28th Apr 2009 11:30 UTC
silix
Member since:
2006-03-01

the name Bernie Innocenti pops up quite often if one cares to browse browsing code and documentation on the project's wiki
i guess that's the project's founder and main author, then i think BeRTOS is more about "Bernie's RealTime OS", rather than "BeOS RealTime"...

i think those who appear to quickly dismiss this project for the sole reason of not being the latter, should praise the guy's effort a bit more
putting one's name in the project's name may appear a bit lame but arent' many of us using a unix like kernel named like his author for all but an ending letter?

Reply Score: 1

RE: not a misnomer
by Laurence on Tue 28th Apr 2009 14:04 UTC in reply to "not a misnomer"
Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26

the name Bernie Innocenti pops up quite often if one cares to browse browsing code and documentation on the project's wiki i guess that's the project's founder and main author, then i think BeRTOS is more about "Bernie's RealTime OS", rather than "BeOS RealTime"...

...putting one's name in the project's name may appear a bit lame but arent' many of us using a unix like kernel named like his author for all but an ending letter?


I see you're point, however Linus didn't choose the name Linux:

Sept. 1991:
Version 0.01 of Torvald's project is made available via ftp.funet.fi. Ari Lemmke, the systems administrator, gives the directory the name Linux.

http://www.linux.org/info/linux_timeline.html



This is a bit of a moot point though as I don't see a problem with OS / Kernels named after the author. It's their product after all.

Edited 2009-04-28 14:08 UTC

Reply Score: 2

RE: not a misnomer
by batt on Wed 29th Apr 2009 12:46 UTC in reply to "not a misnomer"
batt Member since:
2009-04-29

You guessed right.
Bernie Innocenti was the first developer of the kernel and the basic data structures and he is still the main contributor. Although he continues to contribute today, he doesn't directly work with us any more, so when we decided to release his work we choose to call it BeRTOS as an acknowledgement to him.

Reply Score: 1