Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 21st Feb 2012 13:50 UTC, submitted by Ducky Johnson
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But Cosmoe was a radical project. The developer (Bill was it?) was trying to get Atheos running on a Linux kernel to begin with...
Funny, that's where Syllable eventually landed
Then he decided to converge with BeOS.
Well, yes - and IIRC, he did even commit some code to Haiku.
It was never very linear nor was it very organised.
And this is probably the leading cause of alt-os death... which isn't necessarily a bad thing.
Sometimes people just want to scratch an itch and try something new - if it works out, great! if it doesn't, oh well, at least they (and others following the progress) may have learned something, right?
Edited 2012-02-21 23:28 UTC
"But Cosmoe was a radical project. The developer (Bill was it?) was trying to get Atheos running on a Linux kernel to begin with...
Funny, that's where Syllable eventually landed
" Not quite. I did have a quick hack up of the appserver and AEdit running on Linux under SDL, and then subsequently produced https://bitbucket.org/Vanders/libs/overview, but the plan was never to move from the Syllable OS as a whole to Linux: the Linux stack was going to be a complement to Syllable Desktop.




Member since:
2006-05-30
But Cosmoe was a radical project. The developer (Bill was it?) was trying to get Atheos running on a Linux kernel to begin with... Then he decided to converge with BeOS. It was never very linear nor was it very organised.