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Ars Technica on Zeta 1.0

Quantrell writes "Ars Technica has posted an extremely in-depth review of Zeta 1.0 (/. saw another shorter review a month ago, but this new one is worth a look by anyone into things Be). Looking at the state of the OS more closely, it looks like it has a long way to go, maybe too long. Also, the author (rightly, IMO) raises the issue of whether or not Zeta will see success in the face of open source projects like Haiku. Is there anything but a hobby going on here?"

3 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. YellowTab is targeting wrong market s/b embedded by HighOrbit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As I have commented previously, YellowTab is going about this the wrong way. They seem to be trying to market this as a general purpose desktop, but that is a hard market to break in to with incredibly strong established competitors (MS, Apple) and a generally conservative (i.e. not open to drastic change) base of potential desktop customers.

    The low system specs and mulitmedia capabilities scream for this to be put into a TV-set-top box like a DVR or even a game console. The low system requirements might even be good on appliances, medical imaging, kiosks, and ATMs. I think they should be trying to sell their stuff to Sony, Panasonic, Scientific-Atlanta, Deibold, etc instead of trying to break into desktops. The desktop market is just a loosing proposition for them.

  2. Re:Do they have legal access to the BeOS source co by Nahooda · · Score: 5, Informative

    A recent German issue of c't magazine says, that YellowTab already owns _ALL_ rights of the source code.

    Regards,

    Dennis B. Schramm

    --
    Sigs suck!
  3. Re:Sounds good, but... by rmjohnso · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I actually used BeOS 4.5 and BeOS 5.0 for more than a week. I actually used it for over a year as my main OS. I could surf the web with Opera (no real stable Mozilla port back then), an AIM client (BeAIM), and an ICQ client (can't remember the name). I also had an mp3 player very similar to Winamp/XMMS, and it even supported Winamp skins. I never got into using the Gobe office suite. I also had a Hauppauge TV tuner card which I could watch TV with even in BeOS. If you wanted to do multimedia, BeOS could do it.

    This was all while I was in college. I took an intro C programming course, and I did most of my labs in BeOS. I wrote, compiled, tested, debugged, and uploaded all of my work from BeOS.

    BeOS was great. It booted in less than 15 seconds on my P3 500 MHz and 128 MB of RAM. It had services that were much simpler than Windows services. For example, if networking was misbehaving or sound stopped, just restart the sound server. No reason to reboot (as you would Windows 98, which was the standard home desktop OS back during this time).

    So why did I stop using BeOS you ask? Well, my Dell had come with a Riva TNT2 video card, and I eventually upgraded to a GeForce 2. When I did that, there weren't any drivers other than VESA drivers to support the card, and 60 Hz refresh rates on a 17" monitor give me a major headache. Eventually the 2D drivers for GeForce boards were released, and I tried to go back to BeOS, but I had already moved back to Windows and was jumping into Linux more and more. School was picking up for me, and I didn't have as much time as I did during my freshman year.

    Why don't I check out yellowTab or Zeta OS? Well, I'm pretty much Slackware at home and XP at work. I don't have the application choices for the new BeOS variants that I do with Windows and Linux. I also have a gut feeling that I'd have to worry more about hardware compatibility with newer hardware than I would with Windows or Linux.

    BeOS was fun, while it lasted.

    --
    "Extremism in the pursuit of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." --Barry Goldwater