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HaikuOS Registrar Working

Professor Cool Linux writes "'The registrar, the app server's shy brother, who manages several system-wide application services like the application roster, the MIME types database, the clipboard, and message runners, is now working under HaikuOS.'"

7 of 27 comments (clear)

  1. Significant progress indeed by Blowfishie · · Score: 5, Informative
    Haiku is basically rebilding BeOS from scratch open-source style, so getting one of the fundamental building blocks working in such a way that it allows non-GUI apps to run is a great achievement.

    The status page has more details on the overall system progress. When I first visited that page, I though that it would take forever to finish. I looked again just now and got a most optimistic feeling.

    1. Re:Significant progress indeed by mabhatter654 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      How was BeOS lacking? The only thing lacking was their legal team couldn't break MS monopoly contracts. BeOS is a much cleaner platform for the internet age than just about anything else [except maybe amegia]. The way everything could just "work" together would have completely revolutionized the software industry... Although the BeOS model is much better for OSS development than properitary. It's extremely modular, that's the whole point of the OSS working to recreate it one module at a time!!!

      Seriously though, BeOS had features in 1999 that MS and Apple are braging about "innovating" in their OS NEXT YEAR!!! Of course Apple has hired some of those BeOS programmers to add the feature to tiger...so in a way they are getting their kudos.

  2. Re:Not wanting to sound insensitive... by bersl2 · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's a small part of an unfinished clone of a dead niche operating system.

    What, not even the benefit of a Netcraft announcement?

  3. Re:Not wanting to sound insensitive... by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    *It's a small part of an unfinished clone of a dead niche operating system. Hands up everybody who has actually installed this, let alone uses it often enough to warrant it being newsworthy.

    I respect what these guys are trying to do, but this doesn't belong on Slashdot any more than the 0.1 release of foobar text editor that somebody whipped up on their lunch break. *

    OK, slashdot is NEWS FOR NERDS.

    this definetely is NERDY. much more geeky than all the politics crap.

    filter the beos stuff out if you wish. beos still rocks even if it's not usable for the stuff I do at the moment, but hopefully these projects will bring it to life again.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  4. Re:Not wanting to sound insensitive... by capoccia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    SO?
    RTFA -- "...in principle we should now be able to run most non-graphical applications."

    Hands up everybody who has actually installed this, let alone uses it often...
    Aye.

    ...this doesn't belong on Slashdot...
    Operating system news is about as much nerd as you can get. It's also open-source, so feel free to cannibalize.

  5. HaikuOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    leaves falling softly
    to untouched green expanses
    LET BEOS DIE

  6. One example by no+reason+to+be+here · · Score: 2, Insightful

    compare the BeOS file system to the one that Apple is planning on introducing in tiger, or the fabled WinFS that seems to keep on getting pushed further and further into the future.

    Actually, WinFS is supposed to replace the file system with a database, which is what BeOS had in it's earliest days, before the guys at Be, Inc. decided that it ate too many resources, and then designed the BFS that Apple is now copying (and don't say they aren't, they hired the original designer of Be's file system to write their new one).

    Indeed, the cloned version of the file system has been picked up by another open-source OS (Syllable, I think) for use as their file system.