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Upcoming OS/2 Release Will Be Called ArcaOS 5.0 (techrepublic.com)

At the annual convention of OS/2 users, Arca Noae announced their new OS/2-OEM distribution will be released in the fourth quarter of 2016, and the project, codenamed "Blue Lion", will officially be called ArcaOS 5.0. "The significance of the version number relates to IBM OS/2 4.52 -- the last maintenance release of the platform released by IBM in 2001," reports TechRepublic. martiniturbide writes: The article discusses the features of ArcaOS like USB bootable installer, USB (1.1 and 2) , ACPI, AHCI, and network card drivers, new OS installer, etc. It will be sold in two editions: ArcaOS Commercial Edition [with 12 months of priority support and updates] and ArcaOS Personal Edition...
Anyone have fond members of OS/2? Are there any Slashdot readers who are still using it?

6 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. My intro to operating systems by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 3, Interesting
    OS/2 was the reason I started reading ./ and learned about it and operating systems.

    It has a funky memory management system and I'm not sure why anyone wold want to use it now over *NIX. The synchronous input que on the GUI basically doomed it (not counting IBM), but otherwise was pretty nice for the time and fun.

    1. Re:My intro to operating systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I enjoyed using IBM OS/2 Warp but honestly Commodore AmigaOS was ahead of IBM OS/2 Warp. It is unfortunate Commodore and the other non-IBM computer manufacturers could not survive the IBM PC and Microsoft Windows onslaught. If Commodore had ported AmigaOS to the IBM PC architecture it might have become the market leader in operating systems.Considering Commodore's history a partnership between Commodore and International Business Machines producing hardware and software would have been preferable to the hellish experience Microsoft put us through over the ensuing decades.

  2. Could have been a contender by Empiric · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Worked on a port of an asset management package written in DOS to Windows 3.1 and OS/2 in the early 90's, coding C++ for both.

    I remember a sales guy wanted to impress with its multitasking capabilities by running installers of 4 applications at once, with another half-dozen running concurrently. It ground to a swapping halt. Still, using it overall, quite impressive capabilities on that front for the time, probably rivaled only by the Amiga in terms the consumer-level arena. Preferred coding for it over Windows MFC, as well.

    Regrettably, by 2005 when working at IBM, I encountered no evidence it had ever existed. Windows and Linux boxes only, and the topic never brought up. Seems that history could have gone quite differently, with the right resources at the right time.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    1. Re: Could have been a contender by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In 1995, a kid in my dorm showed me this new OS called Be. Running on a PowerMac 603 with a single cpu and 16mb of ram, he showed me how Be could play 6 video files simultaneously. Mapped to 6 faces of a cube. And you could spin the cube around via the mouse while all 6 videos were playing. Never any input lag, or dropped frames. It was a thing of beauty.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  3. Re:OS/2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We would all be using it. If only ms fucked up nt 4.

    No,
    I remember spending a week or so trying to get 0S/2 Warp working on allegedly supported hardware, could never get the graphics driver out of 640x480 16 colours, networking was flaky (to say the least), so the guy I was setting it up for asked about Linux, a day or so later produced a Caldera Network Desktop disc, and the rest, as they say, is history (They later switched to Redhat). Asking around at the time, I couldn't get any sensible answers as to why it didn't work, ISTR a lot of other people had hardware issues with OS/2.

    Next job, several years later, two OS/2 machines were the bane of my existence (the Windows team refused to look at them, so they fell within my purview), First one, you so much as looked at it the wrong way, it went into snafu (and took the equipment it was running with it, at a horrendous cost per hour..no choice, the control software was OS/2 only and the company no longer existed). Just firing up the machine to run this equipment was like preparing for a fscking space launch. The other, I'll have to admit wasn't so much the OS itself which caused me grief, more the user..and anyone who has had the misfortune of supporting the sole OS/2 zealot in an organisation will tell you that Windows zealots have nothing on them...maybe VMS zealots come close, just maybe, (especially ones who have the only VAX cluster in the organisation in their office...and they're the sole user)

    So again, no, OS/2 was fucked up in its own right, it would never have been a serious alternative choice if Microsoft had fucked up NT4

  4. Re:Ah the memories by martiniturbide · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If it is possible for you please contact me at martin-os2world.com. I'm trying to consolidate all OS/2 knowledge on some Wikis. If you have some documentation that is not public I can ask formal permission to IBM to release it. Regards.