Haiku Alternative Operating System

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  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
  • Haiku is an open source operating system inspired by BeOS. In this video I download and demonstrate the Haiku R1/beta1 using a live USB drive, as well a VirtualBox install in which I run applications including Libre Office and Krita.
    The Haiku website it at: www.haiku-os.org/
    The Etcher website (used in the video to write Haiku to a USB drive) is at: etcher.io/
    My video on the Krita paint program shown in the video is here: • Krita Free Paint Program
    And if you enjoy this video, you may also like my coverage of other alternative operating systems such as:
    ReactOS: • ReactOS: Free Windows ...
    TrueOS: • TrueOS: Linux or Windo...
    If you want to install Haiku in VirtualBox, you may find useful my video “Setting Up a Virtual Machine”: • Setting Up A Virtual M...
    When creating a new VirtualBox machine for Haiku, set the ‘Type” as “Other” and the “Version” as “Other/Unknown (64-bit)” -- assuming that you have downloaded the 64-bit version of Haiku. Ideally allocate 2GB or more of memory, and create a dynamic virtual hard disk of 4GB or more in size (I used a 6GB virtual drive in the video). Note that before you start you will need to unzip the Haiku download file to extract the ISO needed to set up your VirtualBox install. Note also that there are no Guest Additions for Haiku, which will limit your choice of screen resolutions. Good luck! :)
    More videos on computing-related topics can be found at: / explainingcomputers
    You may also like my ExplainingTheFuture channel at: / explainingthefuture
    #Haiku #OperatingSystems #ExplainingComputer
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @AlexMooreish
    @AlexMooreish 5 лет назад +325

    I believe the reason it is called Haiku is primarily because BeOS' native web browser was known for giving its error messages as a haiku....for example "The web site you seek
    / Lies beyond our perception / But others await."

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier 5 лет назад +9

      Could be the other way around though...

    • @lovetoeatallthefood
      @lovetoeatallthefood 5 лет назад +11

      @@Luredreier eh? How would the "other way around" work - the Netpositive browser used Haiku error messages because the successor to the OS it ran on (which didn't exist yet) would someday be called "Haiku"...?

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 5 лет назад +5

      Yep, when Zeta changed its name to Haiku, the inside joke was immediately obvious to old Net+ users. :-D

    • @lovetoeatallthefood
      @lovetoeatallthefood 5 лет назад +3

      @@nickwallette6201 nitpick: Haiku was originally called "OpenBeOS" - Zeta was something separate, namely an attempt to update/modernize the existing BeOS (which fizzled out for a variety of reasons, not the least of which because the guy behind it - Bernd Korz - allegedly didn't have any rights to the source, or to even distribute the software).

    • @verstrahlt1907
      @verstrahlt1907 3 года назад

      @@lovetoeatallthefood I thought exactly the same, when I read the @Luredreier "Could be the other way around..."

  • @rollmeister
    @rollmeister 5 лет назад +233

    BeOS at the time was ahead of its time. It was very efficient on hardware and much easier to develop software on. It could play multiple videos at the same time when Window 98 could only play one video without dropping frames on my PC when I tested it back then.

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 5 лет назад +10

      BeOS is very aesthetically pleasing for how light weight it is, but aged these days.

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 5 лет назад +5

      ​@Lassi Kinnunen Can't you just add a job that will reset the audio subsystem periodically, like every 24 hours?

    • @antivanti
      @antivanti 5 лет назад +19

      Playing videos as textures on the sides of a 3D cube spinning in a window. Meanwhile Windows, Xwindows for Linux and System 9 for the latest Macs all treated graphics cards like nothing more than a dumb framebuffer...

    • @qallincha
      @qallincha 5 лет назад +4

      @Lassi Kinnunen NeXTSTEP was nice too.

    • @poiseinchaos3182
      @poiseinchaos3182 5 лет назад +15

      People forget how depressing the mid-90s was for computing. Microsoft was dominating more and more but there were quite a number of competitors that were just plain better, sometimes spectacularly so, but couldn't carve off enough of a market to be viable long term. So many 'what might have beens'. BeOS was of course going to be the new Mac OS briefly, which might have been interesting. But at least Apple finally took on neXt and a killer 90s OS finally broke through. Good luck, Haiku.

  • @TomMannCenturia
    @TomMannCenturia 5 лет назад +69

    Choice is great, the more the merrier. The alternative OS overviews and Single Board reviews are my two favourite aspects of the channel, though there's plenty more to enjoy here too.

  • @cicalinarrot
    @cicalinarrot 5 лет назад +707

    I expected the Haiku OS to only have three lines of code.

    • @ipeters61
      @ipeters61 5 лет назад +98

      And the second line was 40% longer than the first and third lines.

    • @gben82
      @gben82 5 лет назад +22

      Ha! Took me a second to get that

    • @spicychad55
      @spicychad55 5 лет назад +4

      Hal is on 17 lines of code and on Linux GNU too. ruclips.net/video/njos57IJf-0/видео.html

    • @cliff_hewitt
      @cliff_hewitt 5 лет назад +39

      10 Print "Hello World"
      20 Entertain User
      30 Goto 10

    • @nextlifeonearth
      @nextlifeonearth 5 лет назад +19

      Background story:
      Haiku is called that because BeOS' error messages were haiku. (fun fact: plural of haiku is haiku)

  • @SoylentSoy
    @SoylentSoy 5 лет назад +6

    I must say, this is the greatest computing channel on RUclips. You are an amazing teacher, without being frilly or ridiculous. I always learn something when I watch your channel. There is something amazing about someone who can just lay out the facts, as it were, and make it stick. You can do that and its amazing. As a teacher, I respect that indefinable quality when I see it.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @rustino666
    @rustino666 5 лет назад +35

    Great to see you covering the Haiku project. I used to be a huge fan of BeOS back in the day and used it as my main OS for a good few years. I've already tried out the Haiku beta and was pleased to see it ran off of USB quite well on my main box. Cool video, hopefully it will help to spread awareness of Haiku.

  • @leepshin
    @leepshin 5 лет назад +70

    Thanks Chris, I think the reason there are so few O.S. choices around is because there just aren't enough professional journalists like yourself covering all the computer world and technology bases with the level of enthusiasm you do. BBC's "Click" programme rarely goes in depth nor is ever long enough and Channel 5's Gadget Show spends more time on midlife crisis toys and expensive waste of money junk while reading a list of between 50 and 70 items you have no hope of winning in their premium rate phone in entry. Between both parties they just display very lazy journalism but doing the bare minimum to fool their audiences into thinking they learned something. I think you're the only guy whom at this time actually produces content of the BBC's "Tomorrow's World" calibre and doing a thorough and worthwhile job to boot. The content in all your videos shows that you take pride in your work and that's a rare thing these days. How many more O.S.'s do you think you might uncover before the end of this decade?

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +12

      Thanks for your kind comments, most appreciated. I hope to find a handful more alternative OS to cover here before 2020 turns! :)

    • @Lucretia9000
      @Lucretia9000 Год назад

      There's osnews.

  • @SamTornado1701
    @SamTornado1701 5 лет назад +170

    I find operating systems fascinating, it's unfortunate there aren't more alternate systems. But I guess we should be grateful we have anything besides windows at all.

    • @420sakura1
      @420sakura1 5 лет назад +35

      If we have multiple operating system. We'll have compatibility nightmare.

    • @MoTown44240
      @MoTown44240 5 лет назад +4

      I agree.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +52

      K 9 Poodle These days compatibility issues are far less significant than they were in, say, the 1980s and 1990s, when getting a file between one word processor and another could be a nightmare. With so many apps having cloud versions/options, exchanging data and accessing resources is possible with any OS that offers a decent browser. So yes, compatibility is an issue, but not the constraint it once was.

    • @SamTornado1701
      @SamTornado1701 5 лет назад +16

      @@420sakura1 @ExplainingComputers
      I realize this is anecdotal, but I am a pretty heavy Linux user and I have yet to come across a Windows application that doesn't run on WINE or some other compatibility layer.
      Also I'm taking computer programming course and every program I've written as homework has been on a Linux computer, yet my professor uses Windows and hasn't had an issue with my assignments (but maybe he has given up and is just giving me A's for the sake of simplicity. JK he is a great teacher)

    • @BFBeast666
      @BFBeast666 5 лет назад +18

      Available software is a huge factor in an OS's life expectancy, as is driver support. What good is LibreOffice running on it when the OS doesn't talk to my printer?
      On that note, on what kind of hardware does it run? Could I put it on a Pi? A ten year old office rig with 1 GB of RAM and a slow dual core CPU? There might be applications for a modern and really light-weight OS.

  • @yethuraj4873
    @yethuraj4873 5 лет назад +3

    I only taught Linux was the only Open source Operating system but I was wrong. There are Many of them, thanks for providing us with your support and knowledge Sir.

  • @jajwarehouse1
    @jajwarehouse1 5 лет назад +25

    I was a big fan of BeOS back in the day and its drive to create a new system designed to take full advantage of the power available in modern computers without all of the legacy bloat that slows other operating systems down. I was disappointed when it was dropped before it had a real chance to gain any traction.

  • @HungryGuyStories
    @HungryGuyStories 5 лет назад +121

    I'm totally happy with Linux Mint, so I won't be changing, but I'm glad that there are alternative operating systems out there that aren't just alternate Linux distros, like Haiku and ReactOS and FreeBSD.

    • @logicalphallusy2364
      @logicalphallusy2364 5 лет назад +10

      ReactOS aims to be a Windows clone, so its debatable whether you could count it as its own OS. Same goes for Haiku, which is aiming to recreate BeOS.

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier 5 лет назад +15

      +@@logicalphallusy2364 And linux was cloning UNIX back in the day.
      What's your point?
      Heck, even Windows was originally a clone of another OS although I don't remember what OS that was...

    • @logicalphallusy2364
      @logicalphallusy2364 5 лет назад +15

      No, Linux was not trying to clone UNIX. Linux is a recursive acronym which means "Linux is not Unix".
      And even if Linux is in a lot of ways similar to UNIX, they are not the same, and sufficiently different enough to count as different OSes. But my point is ReactOS and Haiku (at least for the first release of it) are aiming for 1:1 parity of their respective OSes. They are essentially clones.

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier 5 лет назад +6

      +@@logicalphallusy2364 Linux not being a clone is debatable...

    • @HungryGuyStories
      @HungryGuyStories 5 лет назад +17

      There are lots of videos explaining the history of Linux. This is greatly oversimplified, and I'm not a tech history expert, so please don't burn me at the stake for any errors, but generally, it started with Multics as an OS for big honking mainframes. Then Unics was derived from Multics, but followers started calling it Unix. Minix came from Unix as a hobbyist thing. Then Linux came from Minix as a more stable OS for quasi-serious users. BSD and then Free BSD also got split off from Unix somewhere along there, but is not as popular as Linux, so doesn't have as large a software library as Linux, so is not as popular as Linux, so doesn't have as large a software library as Linux, oh......
      OTOH, Windows started as a GUI application program that ran under MS/DOS. MS/DOS was derived from CP/M (some peeps would say "pirated" but that's open for debate).
      OS/2 was developed by IBM for their PS/2 systems. OS/2 was an awesome OS that was way ahead of its time at the time. But their PS/2 systems used a proprietary hardware bus that their lawyers defended aggressively, so the whole shebang died an ignoble death (big companies will _never_ learn that people will always choose open systems even over superior proprietary alternatives -- corporate executives are just _stupid_ that way).
      React OS claims to be written entirely from scratch, with no Linux code at all, but able to run Windows programs natively. We'll seehow Microft's lawyers react to that...

  • @fuanka1724
    @fuanka1724 5 лет назад +5

    The BeOS hand cursor has not changed after all these years! It's the best cursor across all operating systems!

  • @h.b.5577
    @h.b.5577 5 лет назад +6

    Not quite the main priority with an os naturally, but I have to say I love the haiku gui. The best looking icon style I have seen on a modern os and a pleasantly intuitive interface.

  • @spleniuscervicis1734
    @spleniuscervicis1734 4 года назад +3

    I never leave thank yous on videos, I don't even watch these kind of videos, but today after the end of support for Windows 7 I decided to check alternatives but I was quite sure I could get lost in the way trying to follow the usual kind of IT videos I have seen before when trying to find solutions to the problems or issues I have with devices, or just out of the sudden attack of curiousity. This video was actually great: simple, clear, well elocuted, informative and explanative and answered questions I didn't even know I could have. Thank you, sir, thank you very much.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  4 года назад

      Thanks. A better alternative OS would be Linux Mint: ruclips.net/video/eI7QQqnV1P8/видео.html

    • @pay9011
      @pay9011 4 года назад

      In looking around for an alternative to upgrading Win 7, Linux MX seems very interesting.

  • @aytviewer2421
    @aytviewer2421 5 лет назад +16

    Oh! BeOS! I remember this and trying it out in the 1990s on my PowerMac.

  • @vincenttan8109
    @vincenttan8109 5 лет назад +8

    My first time to hear other OS than window, IOS, Android and Linux.
    Thanks for sharing. I might try it at home

  • @mikesum32
    @mikesum32 5 лет назад +10

    I love your SBC reviews. Years ago they had open submissions and a vote for the name change from OpenBeOS , and Haiku won.

  • @philosoaper
    @philosoaper 5 лет назад +4

    I had a BeBox back in the day and about 18-20 years ago I used to run BeOS.. I gotta say it's the most enjoyable OS I ever used so been paying close attention to Haiku over the years..

  • @mix3k818
    @mix3k818 5 лет назад +44

    We need more Open Source systems. That way we won't be limited to Microsoft's Windows. I mean, anyone who studied economics knows that competition is good for the consumer.

    • @mix3k818
      @mix3k818 5 лет назад

      Also 1000th video like

    • @webosm6494
      @webosm6494 5 лет назад

      It might be good for the consumer, but what about the manufacturer and their employees. You are already not limited as there is lots of choice.

    • @Bigbadwhitecracker
      @Bigbadwhitecracker 5 лет назад +3

      People limit themselves to MS or whatever else there is in life. "Me change? I can't change! Change is scary!"

    • @nothing9220
      @nothing9220 5 лет назад +1

      You don't need to study economic for that as long as you have working logical brain

    • @johnnyappleseed6823
      @johnnyappleseed6823 4 года назад

      Not just Microsoft but also the shitty Mac OS also

  • @AutodidactEngineer
    @AutodidactEngineer 5 лет назад +25

    Your haircut is the most British thing in this channel,Besides your accent of course!

  • @SkepticalCaveman
    @SkepticalCaveman 2 года назад +3

    Beta 3 is available now. At this speed there will for sure be a stable release avaivable in just a couple of years. If you want to speed up development, please consider to donate. Haiku don't have much resources unlike other bigger open source projects, so every little bit counts.
    Keep in mind that Haiku runs professional quality software like: Blender (3D creation software), Libreoffice (open source office suit), Krita (open source painting program), Godot (open source game engine); so Haiku has great potential.

  • @nickwallette6201
    @nickwallette6201 5 лет назад +3

    Oh man, I really miss BeOS. 😪
    I switched to it almost 100% for a while at the turn of the century. It was lean mean and clean, and beautiful. And so agile. I remember showing friends how you could read audio from a CD like the tracks were just wav files by opening a Tracker window - and then pass them through an MP3 encoder - into one of the media players that could stream its audio via http - to another media player that could play the audio from the http stream. All in real time, on a Pentium II. It was a pointless Rube Goldberg machine, but it showed how smooth the multitasking was, and how all the modular components of the OS could be chained to do really cool stuff.

  • @srtcsb
    @srtcsb 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for this video Chris. I wasn't sure if some version of the BeOS was still around, but I'm glad to see it is. I'll be installing it soon!

  • @70humdinger94
    @70humdinger94 5 лет назад +4

    I remember using BeOS on a Power Computing Macintosh clone (when Apple had authorized clone machines to be sold) that had a G3 (PowerPC 603 processor) in it. The MacOS was the Mac Classic System 7 at that time. I had BeOS installed on an Iomega Jaz drive (the zip drive's big brother) that had a whopping (at the time) 1GB storage. I could boot from it if the cartridge was in the machine at boot time.
    I had to admit how amazed I was at the speed of BeOS. Compared to MacOS, BeOS ran like an Indy race car vs Mac Classic that was more in line with maybe a Model T (or maybe a model A).
    Unfortunately, it was very much beta at the time I had it and there were not many apps available to try on it. Even the web browser (same NetPositive used in Haiku) was very rudimentary in its operations.
    There were many people who wanted BeOS to become the next Mac OS (post Mac Classic) but Steve Jobs would have none of it and went with the NextStep system he brought over from Next.
    I've seen occasional references to Haiku, which went out into the world pretty much in an orphaned state because the company that backed it went away, AFAIK.
    Its unusual desktop took a bit of trial and error to understand, but it was always blazingly fast.

  • @franklinpierce2854
    @franklinpierce2854 5 лет назад +3

    Just outstanding job Chris. Very interesting and informative. You are such an excellent teacher. THANKS for all you do. Much appreciated.

  • @ZaCaptain1229
    @ZaCaptain1229 5 лет назад +5

    I LOVE THAT YOU MENTIONED REACTOS IN THE DESCRIPTION!!!!!

  • @tomoneill8892
    @tomoneill8892 3 года назад +1

    Thanks again for another great insight on a alternative OS. Because of this considerable resource of OS breakdowns and 'shout outs', I have become the proud user of many options you've put forward!!! Cheers buddy 🍺

  • @goofypotatoe
    @goofypotatoe 5 лет назад +2

    Thank You . Downloading Haiku right now . Will be following their progress as they grow .

  •  5 лет назад +3

    I remember when I was running Be on an 166Mhz Pentium1 with 64Mb of ram... damn, I could actually browse the internet with that and listen to music files...
    Haven't used Be or Haiku since early 2000s but it's so nice to see the project keeping up and going strong!

    • @Swanicorn
      @Swanicorn 5 лет назад

      The first computer I used was a pentium 2 200MHz 128MB RAM. I was 5 years old and I used it to play roadrash without a GPU.

  • @llothar68
    @llothar68 5 лет назад +7

    Don't know what you say, i only saw Haiku/BeOS in the title and had to press like.

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад +2

      I saw your comment and had to like it. Your attitude is awesome.

  • @vtx24alpha
    @vtx24alpha 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for posting this. I remember when the Be Machine was launched I was a college student and didn't had the money for one but the OS looked great. I'll give this a run on my virtualbox.

  • @chriholt
    @chriholt 5 лет назад

    Thanks for keeping up on these alternative OSes Chris, I’m always interested to know what else is out there!

  • @igorzkoppt
    @igorzkoppt 5 лет назад +3

    Glad to see that Haiku development hasn't stalled! For info, BeOS was considered for a while as a replacement for the old Mac OS, but was abandoned in favor of Mac OSX.
    Even further back in time, BeOS was actually designed as the successor of... the Atari TOS!
    Apart from Haiku, it's a pity that QNX has never grown as a desktop OS, that would have been an awesome alternative OS - it is a UNIX, but way more efficient than Linux in terms of performance and simplicity.

  • @ThatFellowOnline
    @ThatFellowOnline 5 лет назад +10

    That was a beautiful story.

  • @zygmushurlecki7040
    @zygmushurlecki7040 5 лет назад

    I'm really happy that You present Haiku which appeared among alternative systems. It is very good that there is continuation of BeOS idea.

  • @deleatur
    @deleatur 5 лет назад +1

    Wow! I tried BeOS once and although I very much liked it, it was still
    quite "young", but now Haiku (despite being beta yet) looks quite grown
    up! Thank you!

  • @elviraeloramilosic9813
    @elviraeloramilosic9813 5 лет назад +61

    It is really nice Haiku!
    Hello my VMs, your poetry time has come! Rejoice!
    Haiku OS - Haiku code.
    Excellent choice Chris! And great video as expected!
    Yes Mr. Scissors, you are king of your scissordom.

  • @hermanshire
    @hermanshire 5 лет назад +3

    Loved using BeOs. I had it to start up instead of Windows. A cool thing you could do, was that you could make it look like Windows, MacOS or AmigaOS.

  • @Tallefer
    @Tallefer 5 лет назад +2

    A very nice short video. Good coverage of features. And not a single thing was cringey from a BeOS/Haiku fan's point of v.iew. Thank you! :)
    Basically, for a wider adoption this OS needs just a port of any "modern" browser. Everything else is more or less portable from other systems and will come with growing population.

  • @michaelfox6820
    @michaelfox6820 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for reviewing Haiku. I had been curious about it, and now I want to explore it more and will install it on VirtualBox.

  • @lobitome
    @lobitome 5 лет назад +3

    I dl'd this and hoping to try it this weekend on a desktop. Thanks always for all the great info.

  • @5argetech56
    @5argetech56 5 лет назад +3

    Thanks sir! Haiku is on Distrowatch- I will be trying it out in 2019.

  • @Damaniel3
    @Damaniel3 5 лет назад

    I played around with BeOS a very long time ago (as in, back in the R3 days when it first got ported to x86) and I still have a copy of R5 laying around somewhere. Some day I'd still like to find and restore a BeBox (but I doubt I'll ever see one). I'm glad to see that people are keeping the BeOS dream alive even now.

  • @dreammfyre
    @dreammfyre 4 года назад +2

    OMG. I remember using BeOS from a demo disc in the 90s. Was very impressed at the time.

  • @4.0.4
    @4.0.4 5 лет назад +18

    WebPositive sounds like the OS gets a medical condition of the internets, transmitted via packet exchanges when your ports are wide open.

  • @PearComputingDevices
    @PearComputingDevices 5 лет назад +6

    I used to be a BeOS programmer, I had written on many projects within the OS itself. I even created BeMachines, an X86 version of the BeBox. IT was extremely fast for the time.

  • @laurensdehaan2202
    @laurensdehaan2202 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks much for the demonstration. It looks like a slick system and I'm definitely going to throw it into a VM and kick it around. Thought there were surprisingly many applications for it, and was quite taken that Libre Office is an available application.

  • @rickytorres9089
    @rickytorres9089 5 лет назад +1

    Wow I didn't even know that sole OSes exists such as this and others. Nice to see even more competition beyond barely known Linux distros.

  • @NOTLeavingLV
    @NOTLeavingLV 5 лет назад +8

    You could run BeOS off a CD which was novel at the time.
    BeOS was nearly chosen as the successor for the old Mac operating system until Jobs came back and they went with Unix based OS X.

    • @pplfthftr7526
      @pplfthftr7526 4 года назад

      They low balled the offer.

    • @glootfrootswoot
      @glootfrootswoot 4 года назад

      Imagine what the world would look like now is Jean Louis got this chosen

  • @ericartman0
    @ericartman0 5 лет назад +41

    TYVM you are making my retirement a lot more interesting.

  • @call_me_stan5887
    @call_me_stan5887 5 лет назад

    Great video as always! You are filling a virtually unoccupied niche there with these reviews/highlights and thank you for that!

  • @RockstarBruski
    @RockstarBruski 5 лет назад +4

    Wow this looks like a fun OS to try out. I have an older 5 year old testing laptop that runs windows 10 super slow so i think I'll try installing and running the Haiku OS on it! Thank you very much for making your great instructional video and the tip on the USB boot drive software as I'll try that out as well. Cheers! 😎

  • @kquote03
    @kquote03 5 лет назад +8

    Actually, haiku got its name because BeOS had little haikus on some error messages, most notable one is 404 on BeOS' native browser

  • @billfusionenterprise
    @billfusionenterprise 5 лет назад +3

    The OS which be the best (If not for shortage of aps) is back. If it got backing back when Linux was taking off who know where it would have been. I liked the fact that it worked where linux was just a pain to get FULLY running.

  • @Anton-dl7me
    @Anton-dl7me 5 лет назад +1

    15 years ago when installed new OS there was a tonn of desktop apps to install (took up to half a day long). Now you can count them on one hand. Everything else went into the phone or to the web. Thus OSs like Haiku being lightweight and easy to use have a very good chance to find their spot.

  • @williamjames9466
    @williamjames9466 5 лет назад +2

    Interesting and compulsive viewing; inspires me to download and try Haiku. It is good to see there is an alternative being developed that provides an alternative to the well known systems, as Linux did in the early days. Thanks for covering it.

  • @OutbacksurveyPerth
    @OutbacksurveyPerth 5 лет назад +3

    Hi, Love the range of micro/mini computers you have covered. Enjoyed this one on using a different OS. Because of MS & Apples treatment of users, I’m sure many people will be looking for an alternative OS. Personally, I would like to see a Mac OSX alternative. Competition is needed to shake these companies up.
    Like what Louis Rossmann is doing with the Apple repair shake up. Hope you have seen his RUclips rants.
    Cheers
    Trevor in West Australia

    • @SavageArms357
      @SavageArms357 5 лет назад +1

      Elementary OS is a fairly good Mac OSX alternative. :)

  • @majorextrasun8880
    @majorextrasun8880 5 лет назад +7

    I Like this operating system.

  • @NPrescott
    @NPrescott 5 лет назад

    I'm really excited about this project! I hadn't heard of it before so, thank you for this video and walkthrough. I have an older HP ProBook that I am going to install this and Linux Creator on. I also saw your video on that and it was great. Thank you again for the outstanding quality videos :)

  • @paulwalker427
    @paulwalker427 5 лет назад +2

    Love these videos reminds me of the OU vids on BBC2 back in the 80's

  • @thumbwarriordx
    @thumbwarriordx 5 лет назад +5

    The nifty thing about Haiku is that it's somehow still a single-user operating system in the modern day. And for most personal computing tasks there's actually nothing wrong with that.

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад +2

      Exactly.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +2

      I totally agree.

    • @waddlesplash
      @waddlesplash 5 лет назад +2

      Well, there is already POSIX multiuser, so you can "useradd", "chown", "su", etc. But the GUI is still single-user, yes.

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад

      @@waddlesplash I'm a fan of OpenBSD's 'doas' as an alternative to sudo. It might be worth discussion on Glass Elevator.

  • @Giblet535
    @Giblet535 5 лет назад +3

    Haiku worked from YUMI when last I tried. YUMI provides a GUI that allows you to build a multiboot USB drive. That drive can then be used to boot many different OSes and utilities from that one USB drive (instead of installing just one live image on one USB drive). Check pendrivelinux.com as a good place to grab YUMI builds for linux and windows, or the source code.

  • @delmonti
    @delmonti 5 лет назад +1

    Another great video, and another OS I was unaware of . Cheers Christopher

  • @Abdulla79
    @Abdulla79 5 лет назад +2

    Glad to see Haiku in this channel, and it is amazing how fast it boots up even from USB key, i have to try it, it is so close to being good enough for serious use.

  • @erikengheim1106
    @erikengheim1106 5 лет назад +3

    This gets me nostalgic. I used BeOS back in the day. I kind of miss the day when they kept operating systems simple, before the crazy with flat design, combining touch interface with mouse and keyboard interfaces etc. Windows IMHO is the worst mess now. But Linux is also getting rather cluttered. I think the fundamental style established by macOS used by AmigaOS, Windows95, BeOS and earlier Ubuntu worked well. It was refined over many years.

    • @kimnach
      @kimnach 5 лет назад

      While I was primarily an amiga user through the 90s (still use my A4k/Toaster/Flyer and my 2k/Blizz060 occassionally), on the x86 I really liked OS/2.

  • @AmyraCarter
    @AmyraCarter 5 лет назад +3

    Looks like an OS that I'd have an interest in trying out.

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад +1

      I had much fun working with and exploring BeOS. Once you get past it's quirks, it's an amazing system to use. Haiku has come along way since the early days.

  •  5 лет назад

    Thanks Teatcher, for many years making great and importants videos!

  • @stealthbanana
    @stealthbanana 5 лет назад +2

    I had forgotten about Haiku, last tried it many years ago, used to love playing in BeOS. Good to see a lot of KDE apps there.

  • @kbhasi
    @kbhasi 5 лет назад +3

    3:17 WHAT THE FUR IS "Firefox ETF"?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?
    Also, I kinda like how the Haiku icons are basically modernised (but not too modern!) BeOS icons, with a little maple leaf in place of the Be logo.
    10:11 I just noticed Haiku has A LOT of KDE Applications stuff available for it, because, as far as I know, Qt 5 had already been ported to Haiku, and doing a little bit of research right now, it seems that it was actually an official port! Great to see Haiku has some recognition.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад

      I have a lot of Google accounts and RUclips channels -- "Firefox ETF" is a copy of Firefox where the default login is to my ExplainingTheFuture (ETF) channel/account. :)

  • @parrotraiser6541
    @parrotraiser6541 5 лет назад +3

    Looks rather competent, and it's another defence against monoculture. Exactly how different from others is hard to tell from this, but it appears to use Unix
    filesystem concepts, including directory separators the right way round.
    There seems to be an adequate supply of application software, which is the weakness of any "new" OS. Users want applications, which won't be written unless there are users.

    • @SavageArms357
      @SavageArms357 5 лет назад +1

      Haiku is a direct continuation of the BeOS operating system, which many feel didn't get a fair shake back in the late 90's/early 2000's.

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад +1

      Haiku, like BeOS, is a mostly POSIX compliant, original scratch made from the ground up OS.

  • @tobytobacco1733
    @tobytobacco1733 5 лет назад +2

    Great OS. Been following it for a few years now and am glad the beta is finally out. Not quite usable as an every day system yet but its getting there for sure.

  • @WarrenGarabrandt
    @WarrenGarabrandt 5 лет назад

    I remember in the late 90's I ran BeOS as a dual boot with Windows 98 SE as my main OS. I remember it running very well on my K6-2 CPU with 256 MB of Ram. Back then, it created a large file on your HDD, and I used a floppy disk to book up into BeOS. I would reboot the computer, pop the floppy in, and the floppy would boot into that BeOS image file. BeOS ran just fine inside there. I really enjoyed using it, and was enamored with how easy it was to get dual booting working.

  • @RetroBerner
    @RetroBerner 5 лет назад +4

    Interesting OS. You could probably have resized the flash drive partition with gparted, unless it was using a proprietary file system. Thank you for the overview.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +4

      Sadly the file system is their own. I did investigate trying to expand with other tools in another OS.

    • @RetroBerner
      @RetroBerner 5 лет назад +1

      @@ExplainingComputers I should have known better 😀 Cheers mate

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 5 лет назад +3

    From what I understand BeOS, as a program, was a pretty user friendly alternative to Windows in its day. If I am correct, it was really the business model that the company who owned it tried to impliment that lead to its downfall. While I never used it myself, it strikes me as the alternative to Windows 95/98 that should have won out but didn't because of a lack of 3rd party support and customer awareness. A lot of peolple, myself included, didn't even know BeOS existed until long after Be Inc. went bust.
    Haiku is one system that I would like to see come into being as a true Windows/Mac alternative. Unfortunately I see that as unlikely, at least in the short to mid term. Linux is too complex and difficult to maintain for most people, Microsoft keep farming our data and Apple is just form over function with sky high prices and limited choice for out of date hardware. Right now, we could use a viable alternative that is actually user friendly. The only other OS that could be like that is Android but Google is not interested in porting that to the desktop.

    • @jbatic8094
      @jbatic8094 5 лет назад

      If this could run games I'd probably switch, I also have an old linux machine I should try this on, I can't get much to work on it

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino 5 лет назад +1

    egad chris.. I forgot to press the bell icon and this one snuck up on me.. I am gonna stick this in vb and play with it a bit looks interesting.. i am almost through all of your old videos now just a few more to go.. even though I had to watch a few of them twice because I found them so interesting.. thank you for all of your hard work over the years Chris.. it is a real help and enjoyment for me ..

  • @jameswalker199
    @jameswalker199 4 года назад

    I've played with Haiku before and I really loved the way you could tab two programmes together in one window.
    Replicants (basically Widgets/Screenlets/Gadgets from other systems) are also cool.

  • @MicrobyteAlan
    @MicrobyteAlan 5 лет назад +61

    I’m here again. This is the only channel I actually wait for the drop. Did the UK do a time change?

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +16

      Hi Alan. And yes, our clocks went back last night from British Summer Time to GMT.

    • @grandmastergyorogyoro532
      @grandmastergyorogyoro532 5 лет назад +1

      Is this about daylight saving time??

    • @SuperiorModel
      @SuperiorModel 5 лет назад +3

      @@grandmastergyorogyoro532 Yes

    • @grandmastergyorogyoro532
      @grandmastergyorogyoro532 5 лет назад +2

      @@SuperiorModel
      Wow thank you!

    • @komkwam
      @komkwam 5 лет назад +10

      @Alan Eiserman The summer/wintertime might be at its end, the EU is thinking about to end this whole foolishness about changing time every half year. It seems a lot of people have health issues due to the timechanging each year.
      I think it is a good idea to let go of it and keep only the original time, which is the wintertime, i am all for it.

  • @mike_vahemoubayed8099
    @mike_vahemoubayed8099 5 лет назад +7

    This is the weirdest os i have ever seen but it's kind of good

    • @wildmanfujiami5870
      @wildmanfujiami5870 5 лет назад +3

      the deskbar can be drug to the bottom of the screen and it becomes about like using win9x. if you want to see weird shit go look at NeXTStep

    • @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic1636
      @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic1636 5 лет назад +1

      Mike_Vahe Moubayed have you seen templeos?

  • @leeoliver2969
    @leeoliver2969 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks, your video gave me an idea to try on my old laptop.

  • @jessedavis7819
    @jessedavis7819 3 года назад

    Thanks for the review. I always look forward to your reviews. You have a knack for explaining thing really well, and in layman's terms which people like me can understand.

  • @freesaxon6835
    @freesaxon6835 5 лет назад +35

    Internet down, increased my mobile data allowance, tethered ....... Watching explaining computers 😎

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +7

      Glad you've got the important stuff sorted out! :)

    • @freesaxon6835
      @freesaxon6835 5 лет назад +2

      @@ExplainingComputers 😁

    • @DaxtonAnderson
      @DaxtonAnderson 5 лет назад +2

      If you live in the US/Canada, you can likely get your ISP to refund you what you spent on mobile data due to the outage. Bell Canada does it here for their Fibe because they claim it's "That reliable"

    • @freesaxon6835
      @freesaxon6835 5 лет назад +2

      @@DaxtonAnderson I live in a remote place in North Wales Britain, for the last 17 years we have had to put up with twisted pair copper wire running through trees on the mountainside, rubbing and destroying cable after cable. Then they ( BT ) put in ............... Fibre to the door yes to the door !! It's worked well, for the last 3 years, but yesterday it died 😵 and has been out all weekend 😱🤕

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier 5 лет назад

      +Free Saxon Try using Opera (or that new thing they've made) on your phone. They compress data before sending it to your browser in one of their modes, saves you a lot of bandwidth.

  • @ahuman9860
    @ahuman9860 5 лет назад +69

    You should review templeOS dude

    • @thearchiveable
      @thearchiveable 5 лет назад +20

      Yes, as a tribute to Terry. RIP.

    • @kquote03
      @kquote03 5 лет назад +16

      RIP Terry

    • @thearchiveable
      @thearchiveable 5 лет назад

      @McTurbo1300 Terry has died.

    • @Inaflap
      @Inaflap 5 лет назад +11

      I like elephants and God likes elephants. That's why he gave them a trunk. If God likes you then he gave you a trunk too. Boop boop bedo.

    • @thearchiveable
      @thearchiveable 5 лет назад +3

      @McTurbo1300 yes, i did not read carefully enough..

  • @The_Temple
    @The_Temple 5 лет назад +2

    little historical tidbit ... Haiku started as project in 2001 to produce an open-source version of BeOS which had just been purchased by Palm and had its development ceased
    the initial alpha version was released in 2009 and just last year (2018) a beta version
    and BeOS itself has an interesting backstory -- its developers likely had in mind licensing it to Apple , as did NextStep separately (which did essentially get morphed into being Mac OS X)

  • @resrussia
    @resrussia 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for an excellent overview of Haiku operating and continued coverage of alternative operating systems. The Be0S has an interesting connection to Apple Computer. The company that developed was founded by Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassée in the early 1990's (along with new computer to compete with Apple). If I remember correctly Haiku was a code name for one of Apple Operating Systems as well. Please keep up the excellent presentations you provide the computer enthusiast community.

    • @rager1969
      @rager1969 5 лет назад

      I believe Apple was thinking of buying BeOS to replace MacOS, but instead they bought Steve Jobs' NeXT as part of the deal to bring him back.

    • @resrussia
      @resrussia 5 лет назад

      Thank you for taking time to respond to my comments. I think you are correct. However, I remember at the time Gassée was forced to resign from Apple and he was going to develop a computer to compete with Macintosh, but there was evolution in Apple thinking about next generation of operating system and BeOS was contender with NextStep. I am thankful your willingness to share your knowledge.

  • @CasperLabuschagne
    @CasperLabuschagne 5 лет назад +13

    WIth Microsoft about to hijack Linux (by encouraging Linux developers to use Microsoft software patents, Microsoft will eventually own most of the Linux system due to Linux consisting of Microsoft patents), I am paying particular attention to BEOS. Hopefully enough apps will be developed for this platform that will enable one to use BEOS as the primary OS.

    • @qallincha
      @qallincha 5 лет назад +3

      @@StrawberryKitten They won't use licences but certificates, preventing "unauthorized" softwares to run.

    • @betsybarnicle8016
      @betsybarnicle8016 5 лет назад +1

      @@qallincha I've seen that done before. Lots of small print licensing agreements to run software.

    • @qallincha
      @qallincha 5 лет назад +1

      @@StrawberryKitten I was talking about Microsoft (and associates). About the "why", look at what is a Tivoization. This would restrict the user to a limited list of softwares, the hidden goal being no Free (freedom) software at all.
      Moreover, this has a cost. As many Linux distributions don't get high revenues, they cannot afford it.

    • @nathanlewis42
      @nathanlewis42 5 лет назад

      MS may well hijack several prominent Linux distributions but as long as there are distributions dedicated to pure free and patent unencumbered software Linux will be ok.

    • @skaruts
      @skaruts 5 лет назад

      I'm not that worried. My prediction is if MS ever takes over, many devs will fork linux into it's own thing elsewhere, and continue the work as normal, and in the end MS-Linux will only end up being a branch in linux history.

  • @trilobyte3851
    @trilobyte3851 5 лет назад +4

    My Linux Haiku:
    Many Light Strong Threads
    Crontab has gone bananas
    Touch the Raspberries

  • @xholix9388
    @xholix9388 5 лет назад +2

    Honestly never heard of haiku, great at least now i learn something

  • @lemagreengreen
    @lemagreengreen 5 лет назад

    Really interesting this is still going. I remember playing with the free release of BeOS back in the late 90s.

  • @pirateman1966
    @pirateman1966 5 лет назад +3

    Looks like an OS for "lefty"!

  • @Tall_Order
    @Tall_Order 5 лет назад +3

    I love this OS. It just doesn't work on my asus laptop. Stalls on startup. Has to be ran in VM.

  • @prisonpapers765
    @prisonpapers765 5 лет назад +1

    Looks like fun! Thanks to you ive built 3 comps.My Home Recording studio now looks. Like a comp.lab for sure. Since ive gotten into the video editing prgrams you've reveiwed as well..They call me the "computer Nurse at work" lol.Another fine Video Chris will give it a a try.So many programs to install.......wheeeeee

  • @samyojeetdey3889
    @samyojeetdey3889 5 лет назад +1

    Wonderful sir 👏👏👏, nobody could have explained better. Thank you. 🙂

  • @annoloki
    @annoloki 5 лет назад +3

    You missed maximising two windows at the same time, which is the point of the tabs instead of full window title bars, as then you get a tabbed interface for window switching as the tabs move to share the top line :-)

  • @wclifton968gameplaystutorials
    @wclifton968gameplaystutorials 5 лет назад +4

    the description is wrong because HaikuOS isnt inspired by BeOS but is compatible with BeOS and was only made when Palm Technologies purchased Be Inc. and discontinued BeOS

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +1

      The wording I used in the video was taken from the Haiku website.

    • @sbrazenor2
      @sbrazenor2 5 лет назад +1

      Having run both, I can tell you it is very much inspired by BeOS. The visual and functional aspects of the two are identical.

    • @wclifton968gameplaystutorials
      @wclifton968gameplaystutorials 5 лет назад +1

      ok

    • @jjbailey01
      @jjbailey01 5 лет назад

      @@wclifton968gameplaystutorials I was running R5.03/BONE the day Palm bought Be. I was also in the room at WalterCon 1 when Michael Phipps announced the Haiku name. Inspired is very accurate. If Haiku wasn't inspired, we'd be lacking source and binary compatibility. Good job, Haiku!

    • @wclifton968gameplaystutorials
      @wclifton968gameplaystutorials 5 лет назад

      @@jjbailey01 ok.

  • @fCauneau
    @fCauneau 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing !
    Of course, the 3 lines of the Haiku OS are written in the only language that allows this : Forth ;-)

  • @rvndmnmt1
    @rvndmnmt1 4 года назад +1

    Used this back in the late 90's after I found out there were other OS's other than Windows and Mac. Was impressed with it but was primarily using computers for gaming and such.
    Got into Linux shortly after the Xwindow system was implemented. Paid for SUSE and Mandrake, now Mandriva.
    Hey, it was the late 90's and we were still blessed with 56k dial up internet. That may sound bad but my first computer, a TRS-80, had something like a 400 baud modem that used the receiver on a dial phone back when the interwebz were about a dozen servers on college campuses and you had to pay long distance rates on your phone bill to use it. I was a kid then and god am I getting old.
    That put Haiku on the back burner. Happy to see it's still around but probably going to stick with Linux.

  • @jba2048
    @jba2048 5 лет назад +18

    Be OS!

  • @DancesWithRobots
    @DancesWithRobots 5 лет назад +5

    A lot of people start up their computers and go straight to the internet. There are web apps on the internet that hold up well compared to typical software installed on a PC. Certainly not everything on every OS, but, I can envision the day when most users will simply go right to their browser and then to an online application.
    Funny--when I first got into computing, I fired up the terminal and logged in to my account to access a computer somewhere on the network, where all my files lived. Now with cloud computing getting so pervasive, It's getting to the point where that's how I work now.

    • @ExplainingComputers
      @ExplainingComputers  5 лет назад +2

      This is a really important point -- we are getting towards the point where all many people, some of the time at least, need from as OS is a decent browser and file management tools, plus a media player.

    • @freesaxon6835
      @freesaxon6835 5 лет назад +4

      Chromebook?

    • @DancesWithRobots
      @DancesWithRobots 5 лет назад

      @@freesaxon6835 My main computer is a 10yo desktop running Cinnamon Mint Linux. I don't play games on it and there's nothing wrong with it, so it's serving its purpose. I have quite a bit of software on it, but probably 95% of the time I'm on it--I'm in a browser.

    • @freesaxon6835
      @freesaxon6835 5 лет назад +1

      @@DancesWithRobots yes Linux Mint , a great distro, I use that with a hard drive pre select button on my p.c. Agreed most usage as far as I'am concerned is browser, RUclips, and a bit of video editing. Gone are the heady days of computer fairs, and upgrades every 18 months ! . In fact this Lenovo tab 3 tablet probably gets more use than my p.c.

    • @GrankFarrett
      @GrankFarrett 5 лет назад +2

      Haiku have several popular Open source apps already ported to it like: Libreoffice, Blender, Krita, Gimp, Calligra etc.. Casual users could do completely fine with Haiku as their only OS when the the stable realese is available. The project needs just money to accelerate development. Most if not all developers work on Haiku on their free time only, without any pay.

  • @tigurr
    @tigurr 5 лет назад +2

    thanks for the tip about Etcher, looks like great software!

  • @bitley
    @bitley 4 года назад +2

    Very well done! I can't wait to install it as I had lots of fun trying out BeOS back in the day and loved it. I actually thought it was gone forever so this has been great news to me. Dan Wood opened my eyes with his 12 alternative OSes video. As a synth musician I am curious if anything at all exists for Haiku or if I can run apps from Mac or PC on it but I will surely dig in and have a proper look. Ubuntu is running on the test machine and while I certainly was impressed by how Ubuntu has developed over the years it still leaves me with a lot of question marks. I actually mostly enjoyed for Amiga emulation but that is surely a diversion from my normal routes usually pointing towards Mac and Atari. Windows 10 was on the testing machine but I finally erased it completely as I think it's entirely horrible.