ReactOS Runs On The XBox
KJK::Hyperion continues "This port definitely establishes two facts: the XBox is nothing but a broken PC, and the kernel + HAL design that ReactOS inherited from Windows is sound - all of the changes to the core system necessary for the XBox port (namely, the blacklisting of a buggy PCI device and handling the fixed partition table on the built-in hard disk) were limited to the HAL. This is a first, important step towards better portability, as it has already underlined some shortcomings in our build system.
What the port is lacking is hardware support: especially, ReactOS has no USB support at the moment, so it basically just sits there being pretty, because mouse and keyboard won't work. The network and video cards should be mostly identical to their "real" counterparts, so the Windows drivers for them should work (except the video card, a modified GeForce - it's been established we need some HAL trickery to make the Windows driver load). We wouldn't mind some help :-)
To run ReactOS on the XBox you need our custom version of the Cromwell boot loader (not released yet) and the XBox HAL for for ReactOS."
Yes, they will face many of the same challenges the WINE project does, which is why WINE and ReactOS liberally share patches. Why does everyone think they are just some peripheral group reinventing the wheel for no particular reason? The ReactOS project enjoys a symbiotic reliationship with WINE in which both projects benefit from each other's advances.
LRC, the best-read libertarian site on the web
I mean I know it appears to me that its about ReactOS running on the xbox...but then I realized that the existance of ReactOS is the real news. Something running on the xbox is amazing but...where is the slashdot article for reactos?
Bottles.
I must disagree there. NT4, despite lacking support for a few things, is still a modern OS, and highly usable. With the hundreds and hundreds of programs I use, the only one that I can recall not working on NT4 is MPC, and that's not a big problem.
Namely, NT4 is lacking in USB support (oddly enough, I find NT4's lack of USB support better than Windows 98's USB support), only has DirectX6, and doesn't support FAT32 without a 3rd-party add-on. Those limitations can all be fixed easily, making an NT4 clone every bit as useful as, say, XP.
In addition, they are in a very different place than WINE. If programming for ReactOS is vagely similar to recent Windows, and it has just a few thousand users, it would become a supported platform. There are probably less Windows 95 users out there than that, yet just about all modern Windows programs still run on 95. A small bit of extra effort to reach a few thousand more people is a great trade-off for most.
Personally, I'd love to see it improve, as Windows is a constant headache for me. Having an Open Source version would make it far easier to solve problems (like why those dammed ATI drivers won't work).
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant