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Haiku (operating system)

Haiku, originally OpenBeOS, is a free and open-source operating system for personal computers. It is a community-driven continuation of BeOS and aims to be binary-compatible with it, but is largely a reimplementation with the exception of certain components like the Deskbar.[7] The Haiku project began in 2001, supported by the nonprofit Haiku Inc., and the operating system remains in beta.[8]

Haiku
Screenshot of Haiku (Beta 3)
DeveloperCommunity contributors and Haiku, Inc.
Written inC/C++
OS familyBeOS
Working stateBeta
Source modelOpen source
Initial releaseFebruary 15, 2002; 22 years ago (2002-02-15)[1]
Latest previewR1 Beta 4 / December 23, 2022; 15 months ago (2022-12-23)[2]
Repositorygit.haiku-os.org/haiku/
Available inMultilingual
Update methodSoftware Updater and pkgman
Package managerhpkg
PlatformsIA-32, x86-64,[3][4] RISC-V[5][6]
Kernel typeHybrid
Default
user interface
OpenTracker
LicenseMIT License and Be Sample Code License
Official websitehaiku-os.org

History and project edit

The OpenBeOS project began by Michael Phipps[9] on August 18, 2001, after the announcement of Palm, Inc. purchasing Be, Inc. marking the end of BeOS development, to support the BeOS user community by creating an open-source, backward-compatible replacement for BeOS.[10] Palm refused to license the BeOS code to a third-party,[11] meaning that OpenBeOS had to be reverse-engineered.[12] In 2003, Phipps founded the non-profit organization Haiku, Inc. in Rochester, New York, United States, to financially support development.[13]

In 2004, the project held its first North American developers' conference, WalterCon;[14] it was also announced on this day that OpenBeOS was renamed to Haiku[10] to avoid infringing on Palm's trademarks.[15] The BeUnited.org nonprofit organization, which promoted open standards for BeOS-compatible operating system projects,[16] announced that Haiku would be its "reference platform".[17] In February 2007, the project held a Tech Talk at Googleplex, attended by ex-Be engineers as well as Jean-Louis Gassée who voiced his support for the project.[18][14] There is also an annual conference, BeGeistert, held in Germany since 1998 when BeOS was active.[19][20]

Development edit

Apart from the graphical user interface (Tracker and Deskbar, which were open sourced with BeOS 5), Haiku is original software.[21] The modular design[22] of BeOS allowed individual components of Haiku to initially be developed in teams in relative isolation, in many cases developing them as replacements for the BeOS components prior to the completion of other parts of the operating system.[citation needed]

The first project by OpenBeOS was a community-created "stop-gap" update for BeOS 5.0.3 in 2002, featuring open source replacement for some BeOS components.[23] The kernel of NewOS, for x86, Dreamcast (SuperH) and PowerPC,[24] was successfully forked that same year from which Haiku has been based on since.[25] The app_server window manager was completed in 2005.[26] In July 2006 Haiku developer Stephan Aßmus introduced Icon-O-Matic, an icon editor, and a storage format (HVIF) with a rendering engine based on Anti-Grain Geometry.[27] The PackageInstaller was created by Lukasz Zemczak at the 2007 Google Summer of Code.[28]

 
A pre-alpha build of Haiku from 2006, showing its then-codename Walter

Java support was eventually added by a team from BeUnited who had ported it to BeOS,[29][30] followed by WLAN from the FreeBSD stack.[31] Alongside a port to GCC4, the first alpha release finally arrived followed seven years of development.[32] After the initial full BeOS 5 compatibility as target, a community poll was launched to redefine the future of Haiku beyond a free software refactoring of BeOS from the late 1990s, and decided to expand vision to supporting basic contemporary systems and protocols with more ambitious support for modern hardware, web standards and compatibility with FLOSS libraries.[33] On October 27, 2009, Haiku obtained Qt4 support.[34]

The WebPositive browser was first preloaded with Alpha2, replacing BeZillaBrowser.[35] After this, much time was spent on building a package management system, which went live in September 2013.[36] Beta1 arrived in 2018, and one of the most notable new features[37] was the PackageFS and package installation through the HaikuDepot and pkgman; Beta1 was the first official Haiku release to support full package management.[38]

Wine was first ported to Haiku in 2022.[21]

Release history edit

Version Release date OS name Architecture
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Alpha1 2009-09-14[39] hrev33109 IA-32
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Alpha2 2010-05-10[40] hrev36769
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Alpha3 2011-06-20 hrev42211
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Alpha4 2012-11-11[41] hrev44702 IA-32, X86-64
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Beta1 2018-09-28 hrev52295
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Beta2 2020-06-09[42] hrev54154
Old version, no longer maintained: Haiku R1/Beta3 2021-07-26[43] hrev55182
Latest preview version of a future release: Haiku R1/Beta4 2022-12-23[44] hrev56578 IA-32, X86-64, RISC-V
Legend:
Old version
Older version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release

Architecture edit

 
Haiku Boot Loader (formerly BootMan)

As with BeOS, Haiku is written in C++ and provides an object-oriented API.[45] The Haiku kernel is a modular hybrid kernel which began as a fork of NewOS, a modular monokernel written by former Be Inc. engineer Travis Geiselbrecht.[46] Many features have been implemented, including a virtual file system (VFS) layer and symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) support.[citation needed] It runs on 32-bit and 64-bit x86 processors, and recently has been ported to RISC-V;[47] there is also a port for ARM under development, but is currently far behind the x86 port.[48]

The application program interface (API) is based on that of BeOS, which is divided into a number of "kits" which collect related classes together and bear some relation to the library which contains the supporting code. In 2007, Access Co Ltd, the owners of Be, Inc's intellectual property, released the text of this (BeBook) under a Creative Commons licence.[49][50] The boot loader is filesystem agnostic and can also chainload GRUB, LILO and NTLDR.[citation needed]

Since the Beta1 release, Haiku's memory management includes ASLR, DEP, and SMAP.[51]

 
A KDL (Kernel Debugging Land) screen, displaying a requested halt which causes Haiku to drop into the kernel debugger

Graphics operations and window management is handled by the app_server protocol.[52] VESA is used as a fallback video output mode.[53] Haiku is POSIX compatible and has translation layers for X11 and Wayland.[7]

User interface edit

 
The Deskbar

The graphical user interface is formed of Tracker, a file manager, and the Deskbar, an always-on-top taskbar that is placed in the upper right corner of the screen containing a menu, tray, and a list of running programs. Tracker is an evolution from OpenTracker, which was released under a license with two addenda restricting the use of Be Inc. trademarks;[54] Zeta also modified OpenTracker on their own operating system.[55]

The icons in Haiku are named stippi and were designed by Stephan Aßmus.[56] Aßmus also created the Haiku Vector Icon Format (HVIF), a vector storage format to store icons in Haiku, and is aimed at fast rendering and small file sizes.[57]

Software edit

Package management is done by the graphical application HaikuDepot, and a command-line equivalent called pkgman.[58] Packages can also be activated by installing them from remote repositories with pkgman, or dropping them over a special packages directory.[58] Haiku package management mounts activated packages over a read-only system directory. The Haiku package management system performs dependency solving with libsolv from the openSUSE project.[citation needed]

It comes with a number of preloaded applications, such as a WebKit-based web browser WebPositive, a document reader BePDF, a simple web server PoorMan, text editors Pe and StyledEdit, an IRC client Vision, and a Bash-based terminal emulator Terminal.[59]

Compatibility with BeOS edit

Haiku R1 aims to be compatible with BeOS 5 at both the source and binary level,[60] allowing software written and compiled for BeOS to be compiled and run without modification on Haiku.[61] The 64-bit version of Haiku, however, does not have BeOS compatibility at the binary level, but the API still does.[61] Installation of these PKG format files are done using the PackageInstaller.[62]

Reception edit

In 2013 after the release of Haiku Alpha 4, Ars Technica reviewed the operating system and praised it for being fast, but ultimately stating that it "may not be much more than an interesting diversion, something to play with on a spare bit of hardware".[63] Haiku Beta 4 was reviewed by ZDNET in 2023 where it stated: "Haiku is for those who experienced either NeXT or AfterStep and want an operating system that looks and feels a bit old school but performs faster than any OS they've ever experienced." It further praised Haiku's kernel, file system, and object-oriented API.[45]

As of 2018, the Free Software Foundation has included Haiku in a list of non-endorsed operating systems because: "Haiku includes some software that you're not allowed to modify. It also includes nonfree firmware blobs."[64]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "OpenBeOS Milestone: First Test Release – OSnews". www.osnews.com.
  2. ^ "Haiku R1/beta4 has been released!". Haiku Project. December 23, 2022. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  3. ^ "x86_64 port: final report". August 28, 2012.
  4. ^ "Haiku OS Ported To 64-bit, Picks Up OpenJDK Support". Phoronix.
  5. ^ "Booting our RISC-V images". Haiku Project. November 7, 2021. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  6. ^ "Haiku Port Status". Haiku Project. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Proven, Liam (January 11, 2023). "Fourth beta of BeOS rebuild Haiku is out". The Register. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
  8. ^ "Haiku R1 Beta 3 Released As Spiritual Successor To BeOS". www.phoronix.com. July 26, 2021. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
  9. ^ "The History Channel: 2003 Interview with Michael Phipps". Haiku Project. November 28, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  10. ^ a b "Haiku Operating System". www.operating-system.org. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  11. ^ Orlowski, Andrew. "Palm scuppers BeOS co-op hopes". The Register. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
  12. ^ Thibodeau, Patrick (September 15, 2003). "Microsoft Agrees to Settle Suit by Former Rival Be". Computerworld. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  13. ^ "About Haiku, Inc. - Haiku, Inc". www.haiku-inc.org. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  14. ^ a b "Project History". Haiku Project. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  15. ^ "OpenBeOS Becomes Haiku – OSnews". www.osnews.com.
  16. ^ "yellowTAB and beunited.org co-operate on Java Port – OSnews". www.osnews.com. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  17. ^ . July 11, 2004. Archived from the original on July 11, 2004. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  18. ^ "'Haiku Tech Talk At Google a Success' – OSnews". www.osnews.com. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  19. ^ Haiku Support Association (2014). "BeGeistert". Retrieved on October 24, 2014.
  20. ^ HPS (2000-10-06). "BeOS Fans machen Dampf" (BeOS fans go for it). Heise online. (in German)
  21. ^ a b Proven, Liam (January 10, 2022). "BeOS rebuild Haiku has a new feature that runs Windows apps". The Register. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  22. ^ Chapnik, Ruji (December 31, 2012). "Haiku: BeOS for the 21st Century". Make Tech Easier. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  23. ^ Ryan (May 11, 2006). . BeGroovy. Archived from the original on May 11, 2006. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  24. ^ pavroo (May 2, 2023). "NewOS". ArchiveOS. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  25. ^ "OpenBeOS-NewOS Fork Complete – OSnews". www.osnews.com. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  26. ^ . July 27, 2005. Archived from the original on July 27, 2005. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  27. ^ "[openbeos] Icon Artwork - openbeos - FreeLists".
  28. ^ . October 3, 2007. Archived from the original on October 3, 2007. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  29. ^ "beunited.org - Open Standards BeOS-compatible Operating Systems - how the system developed". www.beunited.org. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  30. ^ "New Java for Haiku Team Formed". Haiku Project. January 3, 2008. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  31. ^ . July 14, 2009. Archived from the original on February 21, 2010. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  32. ^ "Haiku Alpha 1 available now: BeOS lovers of the world rejoice". Engadget. September 16, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  33. ^ Pearce, Rohan (September 7, 2018). "Beta release nears for BeOS-inspired open source OS Haiku". Computerworld. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
  34. ^ "Qt4 Ported to Haiku, Developer Preview Release Available". October 27, 2009.
  35. ^ . July 16, 2010. Archived from the original on July 16, 2010. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  36. ^ "Package Management Goes Live". Haiku Project. September 27, 2013. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  37. ^ "R1/beta1 – Release Notes". Haiku Project. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  38. ^ "Haiku R1/beta1 review - revisiting BeOS, 18 years after its latest official release". The No Title® Tech Blog. October 17, 2018. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  39. ^ "Haiku Project Announces Availability of Haiku R1/Alpha 1". September 14, 2009.
  40. ^ . May 10, 2010. Archived from the original on March 14, 2014.
  41. ^ "Haiku Release 1 Alpha 4". Haiku Project. November 12, 2012.
  42. ^ Larabel, Michael (June 9, 2020). "Haiku R1 Beta 2 "Open-Source BeOS" Operating System Released". Phoronix. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  43. ^ Larabel, Michael (July 26, 2021). "Haiku R1 Beta 3 Released As Spiritual Successor To BeOS". Phoronix. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  44. ^ "Haiku R1/beta4 has been released!". December 23, 2022. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  45. ^ a b "Haiku is an open-source operating system for those who miss NeXTStep". ZDNET. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  46. ^ "Google Fuchsia | Operating system projects". os-projects.eu. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  47. ^ Lunduke, Bryan (May 8, 2023). "Haiku makes huge progress on RISC-V support". The Lunduke Journal of Technology. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  48. ^ "Compiling Haiku for Arm". Haiku Project. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  49. ^ "ACCESS Co. Releases BeBook and Be Newsletters". Haiku Project. April 3, 2007. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  50. ^ "The Be Book". www.haiku-os.org. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  51. ^ "Haiku R1/beta1". Tweakers (in Dutch). Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  52. ^ "Division of Labor: Kits, Libraries, Servers, and Teams". Haiku Project. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  53. ^ "Screen". www.haiku-os.org. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  54. ^ "Open Tracker License, revision 1.1.1.1". Be Inc. September 21, 2001. Retrieved August 10, 2011.
  55. ^ "WORLD EXCLUSIVE: First Look at YellowTAB's Zeta – OSnews". www.osnews.com. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  56. ^ "Haiku®'s Icons - Haiku, Inc". www.haiku-inc.org. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  57. ^ "Why Haiku Vector Icons are So Small".
  58. ^ a b "Package Management Infrastructure — Haiku internals documentation". www.haiku-os.org. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  59. ^ Wallen, Jack (October 19, 2018). "To BeOS or not to BeOS, that is the Haiku". Linux.com. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  60. ^ "The Haiku Book: Application Level API Incompatibilities with BeOS". www.haiku-os.org. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  61. ^ a b "General FAQ". Haiku Project. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  62. ^ "LegacyPackageInstaller". www.haiku-os.org. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  63. ^ Reimer, Jeremy (January 8, 2013). "1998's most intriguing OS, 15 years later: Hands-on with Haiku alpha 4". Ars Technica. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  64. ^ "Explaining Why We Don't Endorse Other Systems". Free Software Foundation. from the original on April 2, 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Haiku Inc. company website
  • Haiku at DistroWatch
  • Haiku Tech Talk at Google (February 13, 2007) on YouTube
  • Ryan Leavengood (May 2012). . IEEE Spectrum. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
  • Hardware List, hardware compatible with Haiku (at Besly)

haiku, operating, system, haiku, originally, openbeos, free, open, source, operating, system, personal, computers, community, driven, continuation, beos, aims, binary, compatible, with, largely, reimplementation, with, exception, certain, components, like, des. Haiku originally OpenBeOS is a free and open source operating system for personal computers It is a community driven continuation of BeOS and aims to be binary compatible with it but is largely a reimplementation with the exception of certain components like the Deskbar 7 The Haiku project began in 2001 supported by the nonprofit Haiku Inc and the operating system remains in beta 8 HaikuScreenshot of Haiku Beta 3 DeveloperCommunity contributors and Haiku Inc Written inC C OS familyBeOSWorking stateBetaSource modelOpen sourceInitial releaseFebruary 15 2002 22 years ago 2002 02 15 1 Latest previewR1 Beta 4 December 23 2022 15 months ago 2022 12 23 2 Repositorygit wbr haiku os wbr org wbr haiku wbr Available inMultilingualUpdate methodSoftware Updater and pkgmanPackage managerhpkgPlatformsIA 32 x86 64 3 4 RISC V 5 6 Kernel typeHybridDefaultuser interfaceOpenTrackerLicenseMIT License and Be Sample Code LicenseOfficial websitehaiku os wbr org Contents 1 History and project 2 Development 2 1 Release history 3 Architecture 4 User interface 5 Software 5 1 Compatibility with BeOS 6 Reception 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory and project editThe OpenBeOS project began by Michael Phipps 9 on August 18 2001 after the announcement of Palm Inc purchasing Be Inc marking the end of BeOS development to support the BeOS user community by creating an open source backward compatible replacement for BeOS 10 Palm refused to license the BeOS code to a third party 11 meaning that OpenBeOS had to be reverse engineered 12 In 2003 Phipps founded the non profit organization Haiku Inc in Rochester New York United States to financially support development 13 In 2004 the project held its first North American developers conference WalterCon 14 it was also announced on this day that OpenBeOS was renamed to Haiku 10 to avoid infringing on Palm s trademarks 15 The BeUnited org nonprofit organization which promoted open standards for BeOS compatible operating system projects 16 announced that Haiku would be its reference platform 17 In February 2007 the project held a Tech Talk at Googleplex attended by ex Be engineers as well as Jean Louis Gassee who voiced his support for the project 18 14 There is also an annual conference BeGeistert held in Germany since 1998 when BeOS was active 19 20 Development editApart from the graphical user interface Tracker and Deskbar which were open sourced with BeOS 5 Haiku is original software 21 The modular design 22 of BeOS allowed individual components of Haiku to initially be developed in teams in relative isolation in many cases developing them as replacements for the BeOS components prior to the completion of other parts of the operating system citation needed The first project by OpenBeOS was a community created stop gap update for BeOS 5 0 3 in 2002 featuring open source replacement for some BeOS components 23 The kernel of NewOS for x86 Dreamcast SuperH and PowerPC 24 was successfully forked that same year from which Haiku has been based on since 25 The app server window manager was completed in 2005 26 In July 2006 Haiku developer Stephan Assmus introduced Icon O Matic an icon editor and a storage format HVIF with a rendering engine based on Anti Grain Geometry 27 The PackageInstaller was created by Lukasz Zemczak at the 2007 Google Summer of Code 28 nbsp A pre alpha build of Haiku from 2006 showing its then codename WalterJava support was eventually added by a team from BeUnited who had ported it to BeOS 29 30 followed by WLAN from the FreeBSD stack 31 Alongside a port to GCC4 the first alpha release finally arrived followed seven years of development 32 After the initial full BeOS 5 compatibility as target a community poll was launched to redefine the future of Haiku beyond a free software refactoring of BeOS from the late 1990s and decided to expand vision to supporting basic contemporary systems and protocols with more ambitious support for modern hardware web standards and compatibility with FLOSS libraries 33 On October 27 2009 Haiku obtained Qt4 support 34 The WebPositive browser was first preloaded with Alpha2 replacing BeZillaBrowser 35 After this much time was spent on building a package management system which went live in September 2013 36 Beta1 arrived in 2018 and one of the most notable new features 37 was the PackageFS and package installation through the HaikuDepot and pkgman Beta1 was the first official Haiku release to support full package management 38 Wine was first ported to Haiku in 2022 21 Release history edit Version Release date OS name ArchitectureOld version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Alpha1 2009 09 14 39 hrev33109 IA 32Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Alpha2 2010 05 10 40 hrev36769Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Alpha3 2011 06 20 hrev42211Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Alpha4 2012 11 11 41 hrev44702 IA 32 X86 64Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Beta1 2018 09 28 hrev52295Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Beta2 2020 06 09 42 hrev54154Old version no longer maintained Haiku R1 Beta3 2021 07 26 43 hrev55182Latest preview version of a future release Haiku R1 Beta4 2022 12 23 44 hrev56578 IA 32 X86 64 RISC VLegend Old versionOlder version still maintainedLatest versionLatest preview versionFuture releaseArchitecture edit nbsp Haiku Boot Loader formerly BootMan This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2023 As with BeOS Haiku is written in C and provides an object oriented API 45 The Haiku kernel is a modular hybrid kernel which began as a fork of NewOS a modular monokernel written by former Be Inc engineer Travis Geiselbrecht 46 Many features have been implemented including a virtual file system VFS layer and symmetric multiprocessing SMP support citation needed It runs on 32 bit and 64 bit x86 processors and recently has been ported to RISC V 47 there is also a port for ARM under development but is currently far behind the x86 port 48 The application program interface API is based on that of BeOS which is divided into a number of kits which collect related classes together and bear some relation to the library which contains the supporting code In 2007 Access Co Ltd the owners of Be Inc s intellectual property released the text of this BeBook under a Creative Commons licence 49 50 The boot loader is filesystem agnostic and can also chainload GRUB LILO and NTLDR citation needed Since the Beta1 release Haiku s memory management includes ASLR DEP and SMAP 51 nbsp A KDL Kernel Debugging Land screen displaying a requested halt which causes Haiku to drop into the kernel debuggerGraphics operations and window management is handled by the app server protocol 52 VESA is used as a fallback video output mode 53 Haiku is POSIX compatible and has translation layers for X11 and Wayland 7 User interface edit nbsp The DeskbarThe graphical user interface is formed of Tracker a file manager and the Deskbar an always on top taskbar that is placed in the upper right corner of the screen containing a menu tray and a list of running programs Tracker is an evolution from OpenTracker which was released under a license with two addenda restricting the use of Be Inc trademarks 54 Zeta also modified OpenTracker on their own operating system 55 The icons in Haiku are named stippi and were designed by Stephan Assmus 56 Assmus also created the Haiku Vector Icon Format HVIF a vector storage format to store icons in Haiku and is aimed at fast rendering and small file sizes 57 Software editPackage management is done by the graphical application HaikuDepot and a command line equivalent called pkgman 58 Packages can also be activated by installing them from remote repositories with pkgman or dropping them over a special packages directory 58 Haiku package management mounts activated packages over a read only system directory The Haiku package management system performs dependency solving with libsolv from the openSUSE project citation needed It comes with a number of preloaded applications such as a WebKit based web browser WebPositive a document reader BePDF a simple web server PoorMan text editors Pe and StyledEdit an IRC client Vision and a Bash based terminal emulator Terminal 59 Compatibility with BeOS edit Haiku R1 aims to be compatible with BeOS 5 at both the source and binary level 60 allowing software written and compiled for BeOS to be compiled and run without modification on Haiku 61 The 64 bit version of Haiku however does not have BeOS compatibility at the binary level but the API still does 61 Installation of these PKG format files are done using the PackageInstaller 62 Reception editIn 2013 after the release of Haiku Alpha 4 Ars Technica reviewed the operating system and praised it for being fast but ultimately stating that it may not be much more than an interesting diversion something to play with on a spare bit of hardware 63 Haiku Beta 4 was reviewed by ZDNET in 2023 where it stated Haiku is for those who experienced either NeXT or AfterStep and want an operating system that looks and feels a bit old school but performs faster than any OS they ve ever experienced It further praised Haiku s kernel file system and object oriented API 45 As of 2018 the Free Software Foundation has included Haiku in a list of non endorsed operating systems because Haiku includes some software that you re not allowed to modify It also includes nonfree firmware blobs 64 See also edit nbsp Free and open source software portalComparison of operating systems List of BeOS applications ZETA Syllable DesktopReferences edit OpenBeOS Milestone First Test Release OSnews www osnews com Haiku R1 beta4 has been released Haiku Project December 23 2022 Retrieved December 23 2022 x86 64 port final report August 28 2012 Haiku OS Ported To 64 bit Picks Up OpenJDK Support Phoronix Booting our RISC V images Haiku Project November 7 2021 Retrieved March 4 2023 Haiku Port Status Haiku Project Retrieved March 4 2023 a b Proven Liam January 11 2023 Fourth beta of BeOS rebuild Haiku is out The Register Retrieved November 24 2023 Haiku R1 Beta 3 Released As Spiritual Successor To BeOS www phoronix com July 26 2021 Retrieved November 24 2023 The History Channel 2003 Interview with Michael Phipps Haiku Project November 28 2009 Retrieved November 26 2023 a b Haiku Operating System www operating system org Retrieved November 26 2023 Orlowski Andrew Palm scuppers BeOS co op hopes The Register Retrieved November 24 2023 Thibodeau Patrick September 15 2003 Microsoft Agrees to Settle Suit by Former Rival Be Computerworld Retrieved November 26 2023 About Haiku Inc Haiku Inc www haiku inc org Retrieved November 26 2023 a b Project History Haiku Project Retrieved November 26 2023 OpenBeOS Becomes Haiku OSnews www osnews com yellowTAB and beunited org co operate on Java Port OSnews www osnews com Retrieved November 26 2023 beunited org Open Standards BeOS compatible Operating Systems July 11 2004 Archived from the original on July 11 2004 Retrieved November 26 2023 Haiku Tech Talk At Google a Success OSnews www osnews com Retrieved November 26 2023 Haiku Support Association 2014 BeGeistert Retrieved on October 24 2014 HPS 2000 10 06 BeOS Fans machen Dampf BeOS fans go for it Heise online in German a b Proven Liam January 10 2022 BeOS rebuild Haiku has a new feature that runs Windows apps The Register Retrieved November 26 2023 Chapnik Ruji December 31 2012 Haiku BeOS for the 21st Century Make Tech Easier Retrieved September 29 2015 Ryan May 11 2006 Blog Archive OpenBeOS First Release BeGroovy Archived from the original on May 11 2006 Retrieved November 27 2023 pavroo May 2 2023 NewOS ArchiveOS Retrieved November 26 2023 OpenBeOS NewOS Fork Complete OSnews www osnews com Retrieved November 26 2023 beunited org Open Standards BeOS compatible Operating Systems July 27 2005 Archived from the original on July 27 2005 Retrieved November 26 2023 openbeos Icon Artwork openbeos FreeLists IsComputerOn Another Haiku Student Blogs Package Installer October 3 2007 Archived from the original on October 3 2007 Retrieved November 27 2023 beunited org Open Standards BeOS compatible Operating Systems how the system developed www beunited org Retrieved November 26 2023 New Java for Haiku Team Formed Haiku Project January 3 2008 Retrieved November 26 2023 WiFi stack prototype works July 14 2009 Archived from the original on February 21 2010 Retrieved February 20 2010 Haiku Alpha 1 available now BeOS lovers of the world rejoice Engadget September 16 2009 Retrieved November 26 2023 Pearce Rohan September 7 2018 Beta release nears for BeOS inspired open source OS Haiku Computerworld Retrieved October 21 2020 Qt4 Ported to Haiku Developer Preview Release Available October 27 2009 Release Notes Haiku Project July 16 2010 Archived from the original on July 16 2010 Retrieved November 27 2023 Package Management Goes Live Haiku Project September 27 2013 Retrieved November 26 2023 R1 beta1 Release Notes Haiku Project Retrieved May 22 2021 Haiku R1 beta1 review revisiting BeOS 18 years after its latest official release The No Title Tech Blog October 17 2018 Retrieved November 27 2023 Haiku Project Announces Availability of Haiku R1 Alpha 1 September 14 2009 Haiku Project Announces Availability of Haiku R1 Alpha 2 May 10 2010 Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Haiku Release 1 Alpha 4 Haiku Project November 12 2012 Larabel Michael June 9 2020 Haiku R1 Beta 2 Open Source BeOS Operating System Released Phoronix Retrieved November 15 2021 Larabel Michael July 26 2021 Haiku R1 Beta 3 Released As Spiritual Successor To BeOS Phoronix Retrieved November 15 2021 Haiku R1 beta4 has been released December 23 2022 Retrieved December 23 2022 a b Haiku is an open source operating system for those who miss NeXTStep ZDNET Retrieved November 26 2023 Google Fuchsia Operating system projects os projects eu Retrieved November 26 2023 Lunduke Bryan May 8 2023 Haiku makes huge progress on RISC V support The Lunduke Journal of Technology Retrieved November 26 2023 Compiling Haiku for Arm Haiku Project Retrieved November 26 2023 ACCESS Co Releases BeBook and Be Newsletters Haiku Project April 3 2007 Retrieved November 27 2023 The Be Book www haiku os org Retrieved November 27 2023 Haiku R1 beta1 Tweakers in Dutch Retrieved November 27 2023 Division of Labor Kits Libraries Servers and Teams Haiku Project Retrieved November 27 2023 Screen www haiku os org Retrieved November 27 2023 Open Tracker License revision 1 1 1 1 Be Inc September 21 2001 Retrieved August 10 2011 WORLD EXCLUSIVE First Look at YellowTAB s Zeta OSnews www osnews com Retrieved November 27 2023 Haiku s Icons Haiku Inc www haiku inc org Retrieved November 27 2023 Why Haiku Vector Icons are So Small a b Package Management Infrastructure Haiku internals documentation www haiku os org Retrieved November 26 2023 Wallen Jack October 19 2018 To BeOS or not to BeOS that is the Haiku Linux com Retrieved November 26 2023 The Haiku Book Application Level API Incompatibilities with BeOS www haiku os org Retrieved November 26 2023 a b General FAQ Haiku Project Retrieved November 26 2023 LegacyPackageInstaller www haiku os org Retrieved November 27 2023 Reimer Jeremy January 8 2013 1998 s most intriguing OS 15 years later Hands on with Haiku alpha 4 Ars Technica Retrieved November 26 2023 Explaining Why We Don t Endorse Other Systems Free Software Foundation Archived from the original on April 2 2018 External links editHaiku at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Data from Wikidata Official website nbsp Haiku Inc company website Haiku at DistroWatch Haiku Tech Talk at Google February 13 2007 on YouTube Ryan Leavengood May 2012 The Dawn of Haiku OS IEEE Spectrum Archived from the original on February 3 2013 Retrieved April 30 2012 Hardware List hardware compatible with Haiku at Besly Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haiku operating system amp 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