Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 10th Feb 2009 18:31 UTC
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I think we're talking about slightly different things. I'm primarily talking about the way that Haiku / BeOS lets individual apps work in concert, as if they were a single unified piece of software.
While it seems that you're referring more to the higher-level system architecture.




Member since:
2007-01-22
"Personally, I see the main appeal being that Haiku is the only (relatively) modern OS I've used that extends the whole "UNIX philosophy" to GUI."
actually I think the appeal is the opposite: that Haiku is one unified system and not a collection of different parts cobbled together from different places with different agendas (kernel from here, X from there, Gnome from somewhere else, a zillion distros...) to make up a system. There is one bug tree, one vision, one point of contact for developers and users.
But it's open source so you can still do anything you want with it. Haiku is special because it is an OS that is open-source AND unified.