Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 14th Sep 2009 06:04 UTC
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Not only that, but the hard disk footprint is small as well. Haiku really shines at stuff like this: small, fast, running so well especially on old hardware. I always chuckle when someone says "look at how fast they made X". Yeah yeah, Haiku can still boot in 10 seconds (if it boots, that is :-).
Not only that, but the hard disk footprint is small as well. Haiku really shines at stuff like this: small, fast, running so well especially on old hardware. I always chuckle when someone says "look at how fast they made X". Yeah yeah, Haiku can still boot in 10 seconds (if it boots, that is :-).
The cool thing is that alot of the hardware support can be added using open source components; CUPS and Gutenprint. I'm surprised though that they didn't port the OpenBSD networking stack across given the massive array of network devices which it supports.
I honestly believe that if they got Haiku-OS to UNIX 2003/POSIX compliance, improved the hardware support - it would be an unbeatable system for the desktop. Sure, there are issues like multi-user but they can be sorted out in time - but alot of the big lifting like interface design, standards and consistency have already been worked out.
Maybe I'm dreamy but I'd love to see an x86 vendor create a business model on it akin to the Macintosh world
"Haiku is the perfect operating system for a constrained environment such as a Netbook; I hope some of the big name vendors wise up and see the potential in it.
They won't. Look how they react to Linux and Linux (incl. X.org) has development support by Intel itself. "
Never say never. Haiku's license is not as infective as Linux's, so I expect to see growing corporate support in the following years.





Member since:
2005-07-06
I was having a look at the screenshot - am I the only one who went 'wow' when I saw how little memory is used? Haiku is the perfect operating system for a constrained environment such as a Netbook; I hope some of the big name vendors wise up and see the potential in it.