Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 19th Feb 2008 13:42 UTC, submitted by Karl
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RE[2]: I'm really skeptical about this.
by SReilly on Tue 19th Feb 2008 15:31
in reply to "RE: I'm really skeptical about this."
I'm hoping your right. The only thing is it seems BlueEyedOS, which had/has quite a bit of development behind it, is being used as the basis for the compatibility layer. If the code 'inherited' from BYOS is enough to get this show on the road, we may see Bernd rise again.
I know which of the two I'd rather see.
RE[2]: I'm really skeptical about this.
by yahya on Wed 20th Feb 2008 12:17
in reply to "RE: I'm really skeptical about this."
still, the idea of being able to develop for Haiku/Beos on the linux platform is pretty nice, however my guess is Haiku will be a pretty stable development platform long before this compability layer is done.
Your comment implies that you believe that it will eventually be done. I honestly don't believe so. The one art in which Bernd Korz is a master is that of making colorful announcements. I wouldn't believe anything he announces, before having verified myself that it actually exists.
I would also see little benefits from this compatiblity layer. Compared to Unix or GNU/Linux, there are so few state-of-the-art apps for BeOS that a Linux compatibility layer for BeOS would make much more sense than the other way round. Further, running BeOS apps on top of a Unix desktop like XFCE is exactly the opposite of the consistency and elegance that BeOS stood for.
Finally, the German announcement is full of the same old ugly marketspeak. They hail themselves for the ability of handling MS Office file formats through OpenOffice and further they announce that they are having an Outlook-like application (Kontact), that they have an MS Windows compatiblity layer (wine) and so forth. Well, that's really laughable. I mean, this is what definitely every distro has.
Edited 2008-02-20 12:33 UTC






Member since:
2006-01-24
I thought that if ever Bernd were to dip his fingers in the Beos world again it would be through Haiku, or perhaps more likely 'Zaiku'
still, the idea of being able to develop for Haiku/Beos on the linux platform is pretty nice, however my guess is Haiku will be a pretty stable development platform long before this compability layer is done.