
Every hard-core OS aficionado has done it: Laid out a grand scheme for creating the perfect OS. Taking all the best features and attributes from the OSes we love, and making sure to assiduously avoid the pitfalls of the OSes we don't. Maybe our goals were modest, and we just wanted a slightly tweaked version of an existing OS. But sometimes we're feeling ambitious, and we have large, creative ideas for revolutionizing computing. Long-time OSNews reader and contributor J. Scott Edwards just couldn't help himself, and he has set about to not only plan, but to try to build his dream OS.
About AmigaOS, doesn't a big part of the performance came from *not* having memory protection?
If so, thanks but no thanks!
Note that I didn't say that it was the only part, I know that DragonFly uses some ideas coming from AmigaOS such as doing some system call in the context of the caller..