yellowTAB's Zeta 1.0 Reviewed
Provataki writes "OSNews' Thom Holwerda posted the first in-depth review of the recently released Zeta 1.0. He goes over installation, impressions, usage, application and hardware support, BFS queries and concludes that yellowTAB's Zeta is the deserving future of BeOS; plus, it's the only one based on the original source code by Be, Inc."
it's also old, wait till haiku is done
1999 called, they want their OS back.
However, I noticed a few niggles.. The fact that minor oversights like videos being image/jpeg instead of video/mpeg exist suggest more testing is needed. I would expect more of a major version release, even if it is only Version 1. (Being that it is based off a relatively well aged code base) I really do hope this does succeed - I would hate to see the developers waste their hard work.
Amiga Freaks
Be Nuts
Xbox Clowns
Dreamcast Babies
An elite group of fans of marketplace losers plaguing an Internet near you.
From the Zeta FAQs:
"The Home Edition and Developer Edition don't have all the applications the Deluxe Edition does."
That's fine, I just want to poke about with the OS and see if I want to go further.. Developer edition will be fine thanks.
Pop to the Shop section.. Alas, only the bloated Deluxe edition with 3Gb of apps I'll never look at is for sale.
Back to *nix..
http://twitter.com/onion2k
Comment removed based on user account deletion
The sad part is that you can hardly run it on an old box. To run it properly you need at least a good video card (which I never spent much on).
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur
...of programming energy that could have been put to good use in writing that damn Linux ATIradeonX300 driver for my onboard card or for that Realtek ALC 861 sound chip I can't get to work with intel_hda_codec.
But NO. They have to write a whole new OS (again) where another fvwm-forked WindowManager would have sufficed.
can anyone point me to the edonkey or torrent link?
sometimes, it would partially turn all grey.
come again?
good article though, despite the minor confusing bits.
It looks like quite a nice operating system for 'geek who has everything'. Runs nicely on outdated systems too, and it will have a bucketload of security through obscurity too. reasonable hardware compatability and loads of bundled apps means its pretty functional too. 99 euros seems quite reasonable too (I was looking at RHEL prices for work this morning!).
"Those who cast the votes decide nothing; those who count the votes decide everything." (attrib. Joseph Stalin)
Look, a faint dim spark that still lights the way toward the wondrous land of OSes that are not encumbered with the baggage of Unix and Windows.
The forward thinking population of
* It's old.
* It's not Linux or OSX.
* It's not free.
They will ignore the fact that:
* Much of what OSX has just started to do, in terms of usability, BeOS explored all the way back then.
* It's really easy to develop fast GUI apps for.
* And to develop for in general.
* Diversity is good, and a billion people writing GNU-style apps for Linux is not diversity.
In summary, I -- hey! Get out of my yard! Damn kids these days.
Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
Unfortunately, the price is just too high to justify. The effort required to customize a linux installation is well worth 99 eur in my opinion. If they survive, I may try them in the future but not right now.
When I tell an object to delete this, am I killing it or telling it to kill me?
I thought it was Douglas' Zeta ...
Does the yellowTAB has BeOS source code? If not - how did they made this release and how are they thinkinh continue Zeta? If they have the code - how did they get it?? Any ideas which P2P networks could have Zeta ISO? :)
I have an Abit KT7A-Raid Motherboard with the latest firmware...
First Problem
If I try to install on a Maxtor 120GB harddrive, it says "Could not determine suitable harddisk drive". This happens whether I'm on the UDMA66 channels or the faster HPT370 ATA-100 Channels. But if I drop in a 5GB Maxtor drive, it works but only on the slower channels. There was a replacement IDE driver for BeOS 5 but I haven't tried to see if it'll work with Zeta. With BeOS you could install this on the slower channels and switch to the faster.
http://www.bebits.com/app/2625
But it doesn't help me with installing on the Maxtor 120GB since I can't get installed on any channels to apply the patch.
Second problem
Network card not detected: SMC 1255TX-PF (Accton EN-1216 Chipset).
I'm keeping an eye open for my old SMC 1244 with a Realtec chipset to see if it works. I know BeOS 5 worked with the SMC 1244. I thought it did with the SMC1255 as well, but perhaps I'm wrong.
Mugsy
On german teleshopping Zeta has been sold for more than a year - thought only a beta version. Pretty expensive but hailed as virus free. And they always say: "You can do everything with Zeta that you can do with WindowsXP" Yeah sure - tell that your kid when he tries to install any game.
... I am still wondering how an operating system with virtually no native software and no developer and/or user base will survive, let alone compete against Lin/Win/Mac ...
Screw the FSM - Real geeks believe in the Invisible Pink Unicorn
The forward thinking population of /. will now mock it because:
It will mock it because it has the same problems as Linux, BSD, OS X, and Windows, and on top of that isn't even backwards compatible.
Diversity is good, and a billion people writing GNU-style apps for Linux is not diversity.
Diversity is good. Too bad that BeOS and its derivatives don't provide it.
There seems to be some confusion here as to what BeOS actually is - it's not just a hobby OS or a Linux clone, but a full-featured media-centric OS designed for music and video production. It's fundamentally different to Linux and other Unixes: it's designed to be low latency rather than to have a network-aware window system and multi-user capabilities. It was designed from the start to be a desktop OS - when everyone else was going multi-user, Be stayed single user and concentrated on its multimedia specialisation. It's worth a look, and I hope they do a demo live CD the same way that Be did for R4.5. Otherwise most of you non-pirates are never going to see how cool it is.
I admit that I'm totally ignorant of BeOS - all I know about it is the name.
Who is this for and what kind of things are they supposed to do with it? What does it offer that current operating systems with lots of applications don't offer? From the GUI orientation of the article I suppose this is not for some specific server need.
Variety is good, but what (good) variety does this bring?
For the MTV generation maybe, but I didn't see a great deal of depth there: filesystems? 3D support? network stack quality? hardware coverage? It looked a lot more like "I installed some CD and this is what happened" to me.
Not to mention that a review containing "Firefox 1.0.3 requires no introduction, however, a few notes on it are justified: fast & stable. I do not know what the yT guys and girls have done, but they made Firefox on BeOS stable and usable. And that's a great achievement." strikes me as a little suspect. Is Firefox not normally fast and stable, or is the reviewer really stuck for good things to say about Zeta?
Tales from behind the Lagom Curtain
The BeOS clone Haiku also made some nice progress during the last months. Most kits do work and are in alpha or beta stage. There are vmware and vpc images to try out on philipp schmid's blog and also some screenshots.
http://shots.osdir.com/slideshows/slideshow.php?re lease=223&slide=1&title=zeta+os+deluxe+edition+scr eenshots
here are a few screenshots for your viewing enjoyment
TechColumnist.com -- http://www.techcolumnist.com
Looking for avid moderators and posters that want to contribute!
But what is another closed source os for? If you want to attract people away from windows you need something more than a nice GUI, and IMHO opensource is the only thing that may do it. It is very unlikely that peole will abandon windows just to be locked into another proprietary os, provided by a much smaller corporation. BTW kudos to the zetaos people, even if it is quite unlikely i'd be happy to see some competition.
Wondering why i am doing so strange posts? I am trying to get a "+5,Flamebait" or "-1,Insightful" rating.
I would have liked to have seen the review done on modern hardware. Large SATA hard disk, dual core or hyper-threaded CPU, Nforce chipset, PCI express graphics etc..
It's popularity will be severely limited if it doesn't support as much hardware as Linux, never mind Windows.
"For only 99,- Euro, a bargain."
Even compared to FreeBSD or how much a Linux distro would cost me?
Sounds nice, but for 99 euro I would at least want a time limited installation to try out, before taking out my VISA.
I thought OS X was BSD?
this fails it so hard, I am looking at the screenshots, I do not see 3d window animations, I do not see scalable icons, I do not see transparancy effects... this operating system fails it and is dying, for the above mentioned reasons.
I just don't think that having a Spotlight(c) like functionality in the OS is much of a selling point, neither is "Good video editing" capabilities. For all i(and everybody else) know it's just another video editing application, when in the rest of the OS world there's already plenty to satisfy the budding Spielberg or (god forbid) Uwe Boll. It's just an example to illustrate the lack of REAL tangible selling points this OS has. Any of the real BEos fans want to educate a sceptic with some real advantages instead of that subjective "It's just a better experience for ${APPLICATION}" garbage you hear in every platform discussion?
Will wank off Linus Torvalds for fame.
I just clicked on the link, before I realized it was to OSNews! Gaaaa! I just gave that fat hag some page views. Damn, damn, damn.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
I'm glad BeOS still lives in some form - it deserved to survive. But it will be forever a niche OS.
a) Expensive. Sorry folks, but however nice BeOS was it wasn't enough of a leap ahead to make people want to pay for it instead of make do. DOS taught the world this decades ago - cheap wins in any mass market environment.
b) Driver support. Linux has enough trouble in this regard - how does BeOS (pardon me, Zeta) plan to do it? By becoming like Apple and selling box+hardware? If so they'd better get moving, because Apple has had tha market locked up for years now.
c) The "why should I bother?" effect. Switching OSes is a MAJOR task for all but a very small subset of us. Guess how many people are going to bother with this, without a compelling reason?
I think there is one, and only one, way to get people to switch operating systems on a massive scale - mathematically provable security and quality. A system that can be proven uncrashable and unhackable will change the world, since that is currently the great unmet need. People have good enough, in both commercial (Windows/Mac) and free (Linux/*BSD). It's going to take a leap to the next level, and that's so difficult I doubt we are even training computer scientists in the right tools to attempt it. We need the Final OS - the one where an upgrade means you swap in a new proof that impliments the previous behavior more efficiently, or provides more functionality while still proving out on security and previous functionality. Upgrade bugs need to become not just unheard of but mathematically impossible. Then people will pay attention.
"I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
i heard that pixel image editing package will be distributed by yellowtab to attract users, it's kinda very similar to photoshop and exists on more platforms including linux.
http://www.kanzelsberger.com/
is it true? i cannot find any info on their website.
I also downloaded (pirated, whatever) for evaluation a copy of Zeta 1.0. I was interested in just testing it on a old celeron 700 box with 256meg memory, intel 810 chipset (onboard graphics) and a 20gb hdd.
First, I did a test install inside a pirated VMWare 5.0 Workstation. Installer loaded without a problem, using something that looked like a 8bit vesa graphics mode. No problem, I thought, this is VMWare and it's unlikely they would have a driver for VMWAare's svga adapter. About 5 minutes into the install, the mouse locked up (VMWare mouse), and got stuck in upper left corner of the screen, unmoving.
Here's where my problems started. While installer was fairly usable from a keyboard (usual things like tab, space, enter, etc could be used to navigate the simplistic dialogs), once the install was done and I was presented with what I assume was a control panel for completing setting the system up, I was stuck.
The mouse was still in upper-left corner, not moving, and no amount of pressing tab, ctrltab, alt-tab, or trying to get focus to move off the control panel app into anything else did anything useful. I cursed and powered down the emulator, and put the same zeta cdrom into the celeron 700 i was talking about earlier.
Installation on a real machine was about as fast as inside emulation. Seems like the real bottleneck here is disk access, and not CPU. Some of the small files took forever to copy. Not knowing the filesystem on the cdrom (it looked like a custom 2-session (maybe?) disk, with only a small boot session), I couldn't tell how the install files were stored. Anyway, a bit of improvement could happen there in the installer.
Mouse didn't die on the celeron, so I'm writing off the odd mouse behaviour to something VMWare related. After install, I rebooted the celeron and yes, Zeta takes a 15-30 seconds to boot. Sure, whatever, my Windows 2003 Standard (pirated) install on my 2.2ghz p4m laptop with 1gb ram takes maybe 10 seconds to come out of hibernation.
After reboot, i was still presented with the same 8-bit vesa video color. This was on a i810 graphics adapter! Even LINUX of all things supports such old equipment. Not Zeta. No 16-bit color or resolution > 640x480 for me.
TO summarize my report here, the following things I'd like to see happen with Zeta before it becomes more usable:
1) Accessibility (keyboard/otherwise) in installer and the main os/apps.
2) DRIVERS! (WTF @ not supporting i810 graphics in 2005)
>ZETA is ideal for use with a digital camera: just connect the camera to get started.
p ?category=45
http://www.yellowtab.com/products/graphics/
lol that sounds like almost all cameras are supported. look:
http://www.yellowtab.com/support/hardware/list.ph
ok there is something called mass-storage, but the hardware support sucks anyway.
It didn't seem very in-depth to me. They hardly covered applications, and I would have liked some more information as to what's changed since r5. There are still rumors that they do not have access to the source code. The biggest changes noted in the article were cosmetic or to new applications (i.e. the new preferences panel).
They have ported Firefox, which is great, but IMO they need Thunderbird and OpenOffice as well.
I am glad there is a new player in the OS market, but I doubt it's going to get much traction. I liked BeOS when I first tried it in 1997, but that was because the 1997 OS's were crap compared to it. The OS world has changed since then, and Zeta needs to keep up. I wish them luck and hope they make it.
-1, Muppet
When did you ever hear of anyone representative of the PC-buying public who gave a crap about the development/business practises of any part of the PC and the OS?
In my experience, it's always been "I want to edit photos, write letters etc, what lets me do that?"
I thought BeOS required programming in C++. Has that changed? Because IMO nothing that requires C++ can possibly be called easy.
You sure pride yourself in pirating everything that is piratable, don't you? And I'm guessing now you're gonna bitch about people commenting on you pirating, rather than on your review. Or smile, knowing that someone noticed.
Another interesting scenario to use BeFS is when you are putting songs on your MP3 player. Want all music from Bruce Springsteen? Or all songs from the Devils & Dust album? All songs from the 'rock' genre? You can do that without ever touching a music player or other specialized applications
Well, I guess we know which company Microsoft's going to purchase next...
I know BeOS was a cool thing (especially BeFS)
Although I've never used BeOS I have followed its progress over the years and the information on the capabilities of BeFS outlined in this article are intriguing to me.
Looking at the filesystems sypported by fdisk on my linux box I see "eb - BeOS fs". Is it possible to use BeOS on Linux? And would you get the searching and other funky goodness?
If they made a movie of your life, would anybody buy a ticket?
Yes I know I can read the puff about them both, but that's just what they want us to believe.
btw, I thought that BeOS was sold to Palm. How come it's Zeta now?
I suggest that we boycott any "reviews" that include boot time in a major way. The only time I'd like to see boot time mentioned is if it is in some way painfully long or if there is a ration boot time / up time that is too far from zero.
Much as I hate to say something nice about Linux, I think you're relying too much on rumor and faulty memory.
BeOS was usable on the desktop when Linux was just a little toy [...]
Word Perfect for Linux, one of the early commercial desktop applications for Linux, came out in 1996.
In 1996 BeOS was still demoware.
They bought the BeOS code when Be went under.
I don't think I've ever seen an authoritative statement from anyone one way or the other on this. I would really appreciate it if you could provide some online references.
...but I would bang her
i thought he did a good job on the review.. Zeta definitely still needs some work.. I personally would like to see them redesign those ugly ass gray menus under the Zeta menu.. make then more beveled or something.. give them a texture.. I sound like a gay GUI interior designer.. that gray just does not match that font at all...
*plays the Apogee theme song music*
The short boottime is something that has always been a huge selling point for the Be to me, as I hate slow-booting operating systems (luckily OS X has good sleep/wake functionality, else it would be such a pain to use).
Boot time can actually be relevant... but you have to know what it means. By itself it's only an issue if it extends into mainframe-class hour-long melodramas, because rebooting the computer is not something you should need to do all that often.
% uptime
9:18AM up 702 days...
% uptime
7:18AM up 217 days...
% uptime
9:18AM up 50 days...
% uptime
9:18AM up 73 days...
Windows "boots fast" because it puts up the login dialog as soon as the graphics subsystem has initialised far enough to display it, and because it preloads a lot of the files it uses during boot. These tricks provide an illusion of performance but don't actually do anything to make the system run any better while you're actually using it.
BeOS has a big advantage over Windows NT and UNIX-based systems like Linux and Mac OS X. It doesn't actually have a lot to do during the boot process... there's no multi-user support and very little background processing, most of what it's doing is loading drivers and starting the desktop. And it's a relatively lightweight desktop, more like Windowmaker than Gnome or KDE.
This is laudable, for a dedicated desktop OS, but it does mean that "boot time" isn't really a useful measurement of overall performance. It's more akin to "login time" on Windows or UNIX/OSX.
Umm, 15 seconds might blow away my Windows XP and Ubuntu box, but it is certainly pretty close to my new iMac G5. I haven't timed it, but it is surprisingly fast. This author makes it seem like OS X boots SO slow (I have seen slow-booting Macs: OS 9 and OS X on G3 iBooks, but, um, let's stick to technology from this decade if you're complaining about boot times, because I bet he's not testing on a comparable PC ... though he does mention a PII, but also mentions faster computers) and that using sleep/wake is the only way he can stand it.
R.Mo
This is a microkernel.
-- Erich
Slashdot reader since 1997
Although I like the look and concept of Zeta, where does it fit into the OS ecosystem? Unfortunately it does not. Zeta may be doomed to a novel hobby OS. It has several disadvantages in competing with other operating systems. (Assuming it is competing.)
1. Look and Feel - OSX hands down is better. Dare I say, even Windows XP is better?
2. Drivers, Support, Compatibility - Windows XP
3. Cost - Linux
4. Stability - Linux, OSX
5. Security - I'll give Zeta this category, only because there would only be a few niche virus writers / crackers who would even attempt compromising a specialized system like this.
6. Interoperability - OSX and Linux are better
I am glad to see someone attempting to compete (assuming they are competing) on the desktop, but to succeed they will need a contemporary OS, not a circa 2001 OS.
One ring to bind them - should probably have more fiber and less rings in their diet.
Its a GNAA troll. Duh.
To Be Or Not To Be? (Ducks!)
You have to tell me where you found an R1 ISO. I've only been able to find the release candidates (which yT sold for some reason rather than waiting until they had a stable release ready). Maybe that's your problem, you're using RC3 or Neo?
This poo is cold.
Since I agree with the majority here that Zeta, while surely a nice successor to BeOS, is more or less dead in the water due to the lack of drivers and applications, I should also offer a thought on a way for yT to actually succede in the marketplace: OEM deals.
If Linspire (formerly Lindows) can get Wallmart deals with an easy Linux on Wallmart PC's, then anyone can. If yT were to find a cheap chinese brand PC maker who would sell PC's with Zeta preinstalled, yT could then concentrate on porting Linux apps to the OS and possibly getting some developers to write software for it as well.
It would provide them with a base to start from.
Since Zeta is supposed to be the king of multimedia it would be extremely wise for them to get something like Cubase and Premiere ported or written for the OS in order to show off its strengths. YAOP (Yet Another Office Package) is not going to save yT's ass since OOo is already good enough on Linux and Windows and office stuff doesn't provide anyone with an incentive to fork out 99.- Zeta will succede or fail on the strength of its multimedia features. period.
ed2k://|file|Zeta%20Deluxe%20Edition%20Neo%20Multi lingual-Lcdiso.bin|821642976|6E846FE341358CE0077EF 6A468A73E18|/e o.MULTILINGUAL- LCDiSO.cue|173|5175F3B9D6FEDE4D0537EE4EA9963EDB|/ L - LCDiSO.nfo|11224|D1E4C8C015F29CD170CC93F4DBFF821C| /
s o| 867840000|3C76575A50C142AA24255E0759B6ACF8|/
ed2k://|file|Zeta.Deluxe.Edition.N
ed2k://|file|Zeta.Deluxe.Edition.Neo.MULTILINGUA
Posting them in html fucks up the links. These are for Zeta Neo Deluxe edition. This is an interim release between the beta and final version. Here is the press release. I haven't seen 1.0 anywhere, yet. I suppose it could be on some obscure torrent site, but I haven't seen it. I haven't tested this yet, so I don't know how stable it is or what apps it comes with.
Hmmm, after just checking again right now, I found something claiming to be Zeta 1.0.
ed2k://|file|%20ZETA%201.0%20Deluxe%20Edition.i
It's 820+ MB (I think it is sold on a DVD). I'm starting to download it now...
Didn't yellowTAB promise to open-source Zeta this year? I haven't seen it happen yet and until they go opensource there is no reason for me to use it.
You know, not a week goes by where I don't say "Boy I wish we could run XXXX on BeOS". right now, if there was a Java 5 JVM I'd switch my office in a heartbeat. As it is I'll probably spend the money and try it out.
From the looks of their web page, they're quite aware of this and are marketing it as such. To quote from the yellowTAB "Company" web page :
I definitely agree that if they want to become anything other than a niche player, they have some serious work to do. Really, though, I think that's not the goal- if Be, Inc. and NeXT, Inc. couldn't take on Microsoft, and Apple's just starting to claw their way back to the market share they once had... maybe that's not the fight yellowTAB is looking to take on, at least not this decade.
Really, though, there's nothing wrong with being a _successful_ niche player. Aside from the fact that you're going to remain a fairly small company, of course.
Where do we get the torrent file?
May I suggest the readers to read about MY (negative) experiences I had with this Zeta-OS?:
http://tinyurl.com/dx2ol
Thanks
Uwe
-- Watch me working: www.magerquark.de
I really loved BeOS - I still have all of my old
BeOS discs (PR3, all of the subsequent releases
until v5 etc).
I still have an old PowerMac with BeOS V5 on a SCSI
hard drive. I boot it once in a while to enjoy the
Be flavor.
Lots of great multimedia features and it gave me my
appetitive for Linux/Unix operating systems as well
as OS X....
Best thing ever: Be's ridiculous software midi synthesizer allowed you to specify stupefyingly
fast bpm rates.
You'd bust out laughing running some midi sequence
at 32767 beats per minute and it would use so much
of the system resources it would bring it to its
knees but the fusillade of immense note density
would have had Frank Zappa applauding.
You could also do things like have a spinning
cube and each cube face running its own quicktime
movie on it. This was on a 180 mhz PowerPC G3
with 80 megs of ram and a 1.6 gig hard drive and
it ran it respectably.
I went into "System Configuration" and changed the color of those little 'yellow' tabs... to more of a bright pink color.
Has anyone else experienced this?
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
Obligatory BeDoper post.
BeDoper
It doesn't sound like you've even used the OS. You're just unhappy that the company you work for shares "Zeta" in your names, which attracts support contact by people who think you sell it.
Copied it from a friend, and yes, its the R1.
see http://pbx.mine.nu/zeta1.png
Even though Linux, OSX and Windows exist out there and are battling for market&mindshare, BE will have its audience.
I know a guy who is absolutely fanatical about BE since he tried R5 in late-2004. He's used various Linux distros as well as Windows, but the only OS he doesn't wipe out is BE.
What is great about BE is that it has the power and simplicity of UNIX while remaining easy to configure with an included GUI. Consistency is also great. No KDE vs. Gnome battles. However OSX now has nearly everything so valued in BE. And if it does get ported to ordinary x86, legally or not, the only virtue of Zeta will be its speed and the ability to run on old machines. Oh, and BE fans.
I think however that the main problem of Zeta is inconsistency. Does anyone else feel that icons, window headers and buttons are all in different style? The window headers are shiny ala OSX and the buttons look like it's the year 2000 or even older.