Beos Dano
definition - BeOS
definition of Wikipedia
The BeOS Community and some BeOS developers keeps the support for the future. Update: March 2002: The BeOS Online website is a good start to download BeOS software or the BeOS 5.0 private edition which was downloaded world-wide by several sources about 1 million time. Based on the approved source code of the BeOS Personal Edition 5 the BeOS.
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- 하지만 팜 사에 인수되기 전에 개발되고 있었고 Beos Network Environment 네트워크 스택을 내장했던 BeOS R5.1 'Dano' 버전이 회사가 인수된 후 유출되었다. Be 사가 망했지만 BeOS를 쓰는 사람은 아직도 있다.
- USB drivers for both the second- (BeOS 5) and third- (BeOS Dano) generation USB stacks will work, however. In some other aspects, Haiku is already more advanced than BeOS. For example, the interface kit allows the use of a layout system to automatically place widgets in windows, while on BeOS the developer had to specify the exact position of.
phrases
BeOS API • BeOS Networking Environment • BeOS R5 • BeOS R5.1d0 • List of BeOS programs • Open BeOS
Wikipedia
BeOS R4.5 | |
Company / developer | Be Inc. |
---|---|
OS family | BeOS |
Working state | Discontinued/Historic |
Source model | Closed source |
Latest stable release | R5.0.3[±] |
Latest unstable release | PR2(October 1997)[±] |
Supported platforms | IA-32, PowerPC |
Kernel type | |
License | Proprietary |
BeOS was an operating system for personal computers which began development by Be Inc. in 1991. It was first written to run on BeBox hardware. BeOS was optimized for digital media work and was written to take advantage of modern hardware facilities such as symmetric multiprocessing by utilizing modular I/O bandwidth, pervasive multithreading, preemptive multitasking and a 64-bitjournaling file system known as BFS. The BeOS GUI was developed on the principles of clarity and a clean, uncluttered design. It used Unicode as the default encoding in the GUI, yet support for input methods such as bidirectional input was never realized. The API was written in C++ for ease of programming. It has partial POSIX compatibility and access to a command-line interface through Bash, although internally it is not a Unix-derived operating system.
BeOS was positioned as a multimedia platform which could be used by a substantial population of desktop users and a competitor to Mac OS and Microsoft Windows (Linux was not relevant as a desktop OS at the time). However, it was ultimately unable to achieve a significant market share and proved commercially unviable for Be Inc. The company was acquired by Palm Inc. and today BeOS is mainly used and developed by a small population of enthusiasts.
The open-source OS Haiku is designed to start up where BeOS left off. Alpha 3 of Haiku was released in June 2011.[1]
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History
Initially designed to run on AT&T Hobbit-based hardware, BeOS was later modified to run on PowerPC-based processors: first Be's own systems, later Apple Inc.'s PowerPC Reference Platform and Common Hardware Reference Platform, with the hope that Apple would purchase or license BeOS as a replacement for its then aging Mac OS.[2] Apple CEO Gil Amelio started negotiations to buy Be Inc., but negotiations stalled when Be CEO Jean-Louis Gassée wanted $200 million; Apple was unwilling to offer any more than $125 million. Apple's board of directors decided NeXTSTEP was a better choice and purchased NeXT in 1996 for $429 million, bringing back Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.[3]
In 1997, Power Computing began bundling BeOS (on a CD for optional installation) with its line of PowerPC-based Macintosh clones. These systems could dual boot either the Mac OS or BeOS, with a start-up screen offering the choice.
Due to Apple's moves and the mounting debt of Be Inc., BeOS was soon ported to the Intel x86 platform with its R3 release in March 1998. Through the late 1990s, BeOS managed to create a niche of followers, but the company failed to remain viable. As a last-ditch effort to increase interest in the failing operating system, Be Inc. released a stripped-down, but free, copy of BeOS R5 known as BeOS Personal Edition (BeOS PE). BeOS PE could be started from within Microsoft Windows or Linux, and was intended to nurture consumer interest in its product and give developers something to tinker with.
Be Inc. also released a stripped-down version of BeOS for Internet Appliances (BeIA), which soon became the company's business focus in place of BeOS. BeOS PE and BeIA proved to be too little too late, and in 2001 Be's copyrights were sold to Palm, Inc. for some $11 million. BeOS R5 is considered the last official version, but BeOS R5.1 'Dano', which was under development before Be's sale to Palm and included the BeOS Networking Environment (BONE) networking stack, was leaked to the public shortly after the company's demise.
In 2002, Be Inc. sued[4] Microsoft claiming that Hitachi had been dissuaded from selling PCs loaded with BeOS, and that Compaq had been pressured not to market an Internet appliance in partnership with Be. Be also claimed that Microsoft acted to artificially depress Be Inc.'s initial public offering (IPO). The case was eventually settled out of court[5] for $23.25 million with no admission of liability on Microsoft's part.
After the split from Palm, PalmSource used parts of BeOS's multimedia framework for its failed Palm OS Cobalt product.[6] With the takeover of PalmSource, the BeOS rights now belong to Access Co.
Continuation
Despite the end of Be Inc., BeOS has devoted followers. The BeOS community still develops free software and has even released patches, drivers and various updates to BeOS. The main source of BeOS-related software can be found at BeBits.[7]
The BeOS user interface was notable at the time for being almost completely unthemeable, even with third party hacks. The BeOS theme of yellow, changing length tabs on the top of windows, and relatively plain grey interface widgets was enforced. This UI remained relatively unchanged from 1995, but had been completely overhauled by the time of the leaked Dano release. An Easter egg in the OS allowed changing the title bar look-and-feel to a few others (Mac OS 8, Amiga Workbench, and Windows 98 appearances) and in Dano, this had been extended to be a feature allowing changing of the title bar and scroll bars. No other interface widgets could be changed. There is a pre-Dano third party program WindowShade that allows the colors of the title bar and window frame to be changed, but the appearance remained the same.
The plain BeOS R5 GUI is commonly cloned, for example with themes for the GNOME or KDE desktop environment.
Version history
Release | Date | Hardware |
---|---|---|
DR1–DR5 | October 1995 | AT&T Hobbit |
DR6 (developer release) | January 1996 | PowerPC |
DR7 | April 1996 | |
DR8 | September 1996 | |
Advanced Access Preview Release | May 1997 | |
PR1 (preview release) | June 1997 | |
PR2 | October 1997 | |
R3 | March 1998 | PowerPC and Intel x86 |
R3.1 | June 1998 | |
R3.2 | July 1998 | |
R4 | November 4, 1998 | |
R4.5 ('Genki') | June 1999 | |
R5 PE/Pro ('Maui') | March 2000 | |
R5.1 ('Dano') | November 2001 | Intel x86 |
Projects to recreate BeOS
BeOS was well respected by a small but loyal user base, which was disappointed when Be Inc. failed commercially and no further enhancement of the operating system would be possible. In the years that followed a handful of projects formed to recreate BeOS or key elements of the OS with the eventual goal of then continuing where Be Inc. left off. To ensure that the OS could not be 'taken away' from the Be community again, and to attract the efforts of volunteer programmers, these projects were all free and open source software. The modular nature of the original BeOS facilitated recreating the operating system a piece at a time, inserting the newly coded modules into a working BeOS system to test compatibility. Eventually, all of the 'servers' (interworking modules of code) were to be replaced with original, freely licensed code.
Within a few years, some of these projects lost momentum and were discontinued. The Blue Eyed Os website is back online after being missing for 2 years but hasn't had a release since 2003, the most recent release available on the Cosmoe web site is from 2004 and active development on E/OS ended in July 2008, BeOS Workstation picked up where Be. Inc left off but that too seems to be dead as well. Development however continues on Haiku, a complete reimplementation of BeOS. The first alpha release, 'Haiku R1 / Alpha 1', was released on September 14, 2009.[8] The second alpha release, 'Haiku R1 / Alpha 2', was made available on May 9, 2010.[9] The third alpha release, 'Haiku R1 / Alpha 3', was released on June 18, 2011.[10]
Projects to continue BeOS
ZETA was a commercially available operating system based on the BeOS R5.1 codebase. Originally developed by YellowTAB, the operating system was then distributed by magnussoft. During development by YellowTAB, the company received criticism from the BeOS community for refusing to discuss its legal position with regard to the BeOS codebase (perhaps for contractual reasons). Access Co. (which bought PalmSource, until then the holder of the intellectual property associated with BeOS) has since declared that YellowTAB had no right to distribute a modified version of BeOS, and magnussoft has ceased distribution of the operating system.
Products using BeOS
BeOS (and now Zeta) continue to be used in media appliances such as the Edirol DV-7 video editors from Roland corporation which run on top of a modified BeOS[11] and the TuneTracker radio automation software that runs on BeOS and Zeta, but is also sold as a 'Station-in-a-Box' with the Zeta operating system included.[12]
The Tascam SX-1 digital audio recorder runs a heavily modified version of BeOS that will only launch the recording interface software.
iZ Technology sells the RADAR 24 and RADAR V, hard disk-based, 24-track professional audio recorders based on BeOS 5.[13]
Magicbox, a manufacturer of signage and broadcast display machines, uses BeOS to power their Aavelin product line.[14]
Final Scratch, the 12″ vinyl timecode record-driven DJ software/hardware system, was first developed on BeOS. The 'ProFS' version was sold to a few dozen DJs prior to the 1.0 release, which ran on a Linux virtual partition.
See also
- Haiku — an open source continuation of BeOS
- Hitachi Flora Prius — a computer that shipped with an installation of BeOS, but with Windows as the only boot option
- NetPositive — Default web browser of BeOS
- OpenTracker — File manager from BeOS, officially and freely licensed
References
- ^'Haiku Release 1 Alpha 3', Haiku-OS.org, June 18, 2011, http://www.haiku-os.org/news/2011-06-18_haiku_release_1_alpha_3.
- ^Tom (2004-11-24). 'BeOS @ MaCreate'. Archived from the original on 2005-03-24. http://web.archive.org/web/20050324220739/http://macreate.net/reloaded/?q=node/view/149. Retrieved 2006-11-16.
- ^Apple Confidential: The Day They Almost Decided To Put Windows NT On The Mac Instead Of OS X!
- ^Andrew Orlowski (2002-02-20). 'Be Inc. sues Microsoft'. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2002/02/20/be_inc_sues_microsoft/. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
- ^Mark Berniker (2003-09-08). 'Microsoft Settles Anti-Trust Charges with Be'. http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/print.php/3073811/. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
- ^PalmSource Introduces Palm OS Cobalt, PalmSource press release, 10 February 2004.
- ^'BeBits — The Best Source of BeOS Software'. http://www.bebits.com. Retrieved 2006-11-16.
- ^'Haiku Project Announces Availability of Haiku R1/Alpha 1'. 2009-09-14. http://www.haiku-os.org/news/2009-09-13_haiku_project_announces_availability_haiku_r1alpha_1.
- ^'Haiku Project Announces Availability of Haiku R1/Alpha 2'. 2010-05-09. http://www.haiku-os.org/news/2010-05-10_haiku_project_announces_availability_haiku_r1alpha_2.
- ^'Haiku Release 1 Alpha 3', Haiku-OS.org, June 18, 2011, http://www.haiku-os.org/news/2011-06-18_haiku_release_1_alpha_3.
- ^'EDIROL by Roland DV-7DL Series Digital Video Workstations'. Archived from the original on 2006-11-10. http://web.archive.org/web/20061110070209/http://www.edirol.com/products/dv7dl/index.html. Retrieved 2006-11-16.
- ^'TuneTracker Radio Automation Software'. http://www.tunetrackersystems.com/products.html. Retrieved 2006-12-09.
- ^'iZ RADAR 24'. http://mixonline.com/mag/audio_iz_radar/. Retrieved 2006-12-27.
- ^Jay Ankeney (2006-05-01). 'Technology Showcase: Digital Signage Hardware'. Digital Content Producer. http://digitalcontentproducer.com/digitalsign/depth/digital_signage_hardware_05012006/. Retrieved 2006-12-09.
External links
- The Dawn of Haiku, by Ryan Leavengood, IEEE Spectrum May 2012, p 40-43,51-54.
- BeOS 5.0 (Personal Edition) as a free download (Most likely to be documented for early 2000-01 hardware.)
- BeOS Celebrating Ten Years
- BeGroovy A blog dedicated to all things BeOS
- BeOS: The Mac OS X might-have-been, reghardware.co.uk
- YouTube videos A brief overview of BeOS's features
- Programming the Be Operating System — An O'Reilly Open Book (out of print)
- BeOS 5 Max Edition (OSvirtual) — BeOS 5 Max Edition, installed in VMWare virtual machine
- U.S. Trademark 78,558,039 (BeOS)
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BeOS
BeOS was originally developed by the company Be with the former Apple coworker Jean-Louis Gasseè for its own type of computer, the BeBox. It contains 2 power PC CPUs and was equipped with maximally with 256 Mbyte of RAM. BeOS is written from scratch and does not contain obsolete operating system design concepts. Designed as a single user operating system BeOS unfolds his optimal efficiency on multi-processor systems with several parallel running programs through it modern multi-thread based structure. BeOS basically does not run other applications that are not developed for this operating system. This operating system is only available in English, French and Japanese languages.With the new version 5.0 BeOS is at the first time free of charge for private use and was named 'Personal Edition'. This version can be used exactly the same as the 'Pro Edition' as single OS or started from any Windows partition. However the free variant is limited to a 512 MByte virtual partition in one image file for the operating system installation and further files. For network employment are a large amount of applications available.
Update: August 2001: By the assumption of Palm Inc. for 11 million dollar BeOS is not any longer commercially developed. The BeOS Community and some BeOS developers keeps the support for the future.
Update: March 2002: The BeOS Online website is a good start to download BeOS software or the BeOS 5.0 private edition which was downloaded world-wide by several sources about 1 million time. Based on the approved source code of the BeOS Personal Edition 5 the BeOS Developer edition 1.0 was developed, which contains current drivers and is further maintained by the BeOS Online team. In December 2002 the BeOS Developer Edition 1.1 was published.
OpenBeOS (OBOS) has been founded in 2001 as the official successor of BeOS as open source project. Since 2004, the operating system is continued under the name Haiku.
Another project is the commercial Zeta distribution from the company yellowTAB, later magnussoft. It is an evolved version of BeOS PE with source code from the OpenBeOS project. This operating system has not been continued since April 2007.
BlueEyedOS copies the features and the user interface from open source software. BeOS APIs were written again, so the BeOS programs remains to be executable. This operating system is based on the Linux Kernel and the XFree86 server for graphic functions. You can download on www.blueeyedos.com the demo version as an ISO image.
The Beos derivative eB-OS (Extender Beos Operating System) is based on the latest BeOS Personal Edition 5.0.3, current Haiku code, parts of BeOSMax 3.1, BeOS Developer edition 2.1 as well as drivers and applications from www.bebits.com. The last version is eB-OS 1.1 beta on bootable CD-ROM.
BeOS Field of Application
BeOS is designed for handling large amounts of data. Therefore it is suitable outstanding for Multimedia applications such as video and audio processing as well as Raytracing. By its structural short response time of 250 microseconds between individual Threads it is particularly suitable for time-critical tasks like the recording of videos in real time. The access to files takes under 10 milliseconds, depending on the used hardware. BeOS is capably to use Plug&Play devices, after the installation of new hardware the appropriate driver must be copied only in '/boot/home/config/' and the device is now useable. The object-oriented Design allows it to activate new drivers without complete restart. During the loading only the depending media module is restarted in few seconds.BeOS Area of application
support POSIXCLI: bash Shell, GUI: Tracker
JFS support
Read/Write FAT16/32, Read ext2fs and NTFS/5, HFS, UDF(DVD) and ISO-9660(CD)
optimized for the web, integrated GNU compiler
OpenGL is supported
Microkernel
preemptive multitasking
Internal Client-Server architecture
Server: Services of the oeprating system
Clients: applications, which use the oepratign system services
protected memory areas
virtual memory
Object-oriented Design
Max. file size 18 million TByte
Pervasive multi-threading architecture (operating system is divided into small threads which profit optimally from several CPUs)
BeOS System Environment
x86 CPUs or PowerPC (up to release 5.03)needs at least 32MByte RAM
64-Bit operating system
befs 64-Bit JFS file system, R/W HFS, VFAT, FAT
Symmetrical multi-processing (SMP)
Multi-processor support (up to 16 CPUs)
not designed as network server or multi-user support
BeOS 4.5 | BeOS 4.5 boot process | 5.0 - BeOS Copyright and system info | 5.0 - multi-threading for optimized performance |
5.0 - BeOS NetPostive Browser and eMail client | 5.0 - fast file copy through a modern filesystem | 5.0 - with the Tracker (top-right corner) you can open the program directory and system preferences | 5.0 - harddrive manager with various options |
BeOS 5.03- Copyright and Trademark | modern system structure without old relics garants high performance of BeOS |
Beos Dano Que
Versions
1996, April - BeOS Dr 7 (Developer Release)
1996, Sept. - BeOS Dr 8 (Developer Release)
1997, May - BeOS preview Release
1998, March - BeOS 3.0 version for x86
1998, April - BeOS 3.0 version for PowerPC
1998, June - BeOS 3.1,
1998, July - BeOS 3.2, improved hardware support (SCSI), about 800 software products available
1998 Nov. - BeOS 4.0 read/write support for FAT 16/32, for x86 and PowerPC, optimized performance and better hardware compatibility
1999 - BeOS 4.1 integration of the Pentium III instructions SIMD
1999 June - BeOS 4.5
2000, March - BeOS 5.0, free of charge for private users, needs at least mbyte storage space; support for NTFS, Firewire and PCMCIA
(was) planned - BeOS 6.0 with network environment BONE, Office GoBe