Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 10th Feb 2009 18:31 UTC
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Member since:
2009-02-11
Unfortunately, while the netbooks share "80%" of the same hardware, they also are all "20%" different. And there is a *lot* of models, with new models every month. In particular you want things like ACPI to work flawlessly, which is the kind of part to be typically in these 20% (depends on the motherboard and on the device buttons, and so on, I guess).
The other thing to change from one netbook to the other is the wireless card, which is the key to the "net"-book concept... And there is a lot of work to be done here in Haiku, no wireless stack at all for now. And I understood that the wireless stack wasn't a priority for the Alpha release, so...
To sum up it would be quite difficult to support all of them, especially the newest ones that no Haiku developper already own.
Besides, linux drivers cannot be "borrowed" to be used in Haiku. mmu_man explains in details (among other things) why they cannot (easily) port Linux drivers to Haiku in this very interesting post about the need for "open hardware":
http://www.haiku-os.org/blog/mmu_man/2008-11-03/say_what_you_want_f...
Basically, Haiku is not Linux so you cannot simply "reuse" the drivers; additionnaly, Linux drivers tends to be a big mess for several reasons, meaning that it's hard to port them successfully to another OS.
So what's sure is that hardware is still a big issue, as for any "alternative" OS. Which is sad because yes netbooks would be an interesting target for Haiku because of their limited ressources and because of their eagerness for quick boot and responsiveness.
But who knows... ? For now, my EeePC 701 boots quickly Haiku and has sound and Ethernet. Basically it's wireless and ACPI that lacks. Which are both a big deal of work to implement, but let's be patient.