Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 10th May 2010 10:03 UTC, submitted by robertson
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RE[2]: At the risk of pissing off the fanbois...
by bornagainenguin on Mon 10th May 2010 18:39
in reply to "RE: At the risk of pissing off the fanbois..."
drcouzelis pointed out...
As far as I can tell, besides the Haiku developers, not many people have been writing native Haiku software. That makes sense to me, because there isn't really a "finished" operating system yet to program for.
Fair enough.
drcouzelis pointed out...
Even so, I am an open source software developer myself, and have started working on some small Haiku projects simply because I find the API is SO AMAZINGLY BEAUTIFUL.
So we could see this changing pretty quickly then? Great!
RE[3]: At the risk of pissing off the fanbois...
by drcouzelis on Mon 10th May 2010 18:50
in reply to "RE[2]: At the risk of pissing off the fanbois..."




Member since:
2010-01-11
Haiku comes with a collection of software packages. They are either installed by default or you can install them with the "installoptionalpackage" command. You can read the list of optional software packages here:
http://git.newos.org/?p=haiku.git;a=blob;f=build/jam/OptionalPackag...
Haiku comes with "Media Player". It has playlist support. It can play every audio format I know of and most video formats I've tried. Although it is a native Haiku application, I THINK it is based on ffmpeg, but I might be remembering incorrectly. I don't know about feed readers since I don't use them.
As for native applications that I use, WebPositive is a great web browser, Media Player I already mentioned, WonderBrush is great for graphics, the Terminal is very comfortable (BASH), there is a nice text editor, and there is the Pe editor for editing source code. The only program I really want that is missing is a native instant messenger program, but there is a very nice IRC program. As far as I have seen, there aren't any games worth mentioning, but I haven't been looking for any.
A lot of work has been put into porting open source software to Haiku. For example, many many Qt4 applications work on Haiku. I haven't been interested in using them, but if you're interested, you can find more information by searching for "TiltOS".
I don't think you will upset anyone with your question. As far as I can tell, besides the Haiku developers, not many people have been writing native Haiku software. That makes sense to me, because there isn't really a "finished" operating system yet to program for.
Even so, I am an open source software developer myself, and have started working on some small Haiku projects simply because I find the API is SO AMAZINGLY BEAUTIFUL.