Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 12th Nov 2012 15:56 UTC
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"Those of us who have used BeOS/ZETA in the past know the goodness of how extended attributes are for certain file types. The approach of having emails messages and contact information in individual files with attributes makes your data very portable and accessible even at the file manager (Tracker) level. You can, for example, switch your email client, and still have access to all your emails and contacts, as the data remains always the same."
You can read the rest at http://www.haiku-os.org/blog/koki/2007-05-08/settings_beos_style.
You can read the rest at http://www.haiku-os.org/blog/koki/2007-05-08/settings_beos_style.
I wrote that, back in my Haiku days. :-) My geek days are over, but I still have a sweet spot for BeOS and Haiku. Congrats to all the Haiku folks for their latest release!




Member since:
2006-04-11
Beauty is more than skin deep. The UI is rather plain looking by today's standards. But, the UI is not the most compelling feature for using Haiku. To quote from Haiku's site,
"Those of us who have used BeOS/ZETA in the past know the goodness of how extended attributes are for certain file types. The approach of having emails messages and contact information in individual files with attributes makes your data very portable and accessible even at the file manager (Tracker) level. You can, for example, switch your email client, and still have access to all your emails and contacts, as the data remains always the same."
You can read the rest at http://www.haiku-os.org/blog/koki/2007-05-08/settings_beos_style.
Many of the OS's capabilities are due to the 64bit journaling filesystem, which is capable of automatically indexing data and cataloging metadata.