Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 23rd Oct 2008 19:58 UTC, submitted by FreeGamer
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Member since:
2005-07-06
Looking at only the number intervening years doesn't paint the most accurate picture. For one, it doesn't tell you anything about the current rate of development. For another, it misses the fact that 3rd party developers have been able to keep even plain 'ol R5 reasonably up-to-date, because the OS makes it (relatively) simple to provide drop-in replacements for major components even without access to the source.
But in that time, what new indispensable OS technologies were introduced - but are missing from Haiku? To me, at least, that's much more significant than the number of years that have passed.
It's also not as cut-and-dry as "BeOS was not developed for 7 years, therefore it must have 7 years worth of catching-up to do." Especially since it's taken that long for most OSes to catch up to things that were already present in BeOS circa 2001.
But that's assuming, in turn, that's there is a monumental amount of work that will be needed order to bring Haiku up-to-date. I don't think that's the case, at least not without interpreting "up-do-date" to mean "identical to Linux."
In a nutshell? I think it boils down to perception - most advocates of BeOS / Haiku don't necessarily perceive Linux as "like Haiku, but better," but rather view them as two fundamentally different OSes.
To resort to an analogy: if you're someone who prefers road bikes, you're not going to see a mountain bike as an interchangeable substitute - no matter how awesome it is.