Suddenly, I need the skills of a system administrator to resolve the issue—skills I don’t have. Now remember, I’ve been programming computers since 1980; I’ve written code in COBOL, APL, Fortran, BASIC, SNOBOL, LISP, and Perl. I’ve built my own PCs, configured domain names to activate websites, set up dual-boot systems, and hacked the Windows registry. I’ve worked in UNIX and VMS and mainframes, and was one of the first hundred or so users of the World Wide Web, back when it was a command-line program for accessing physics preprints at CERN.
I have half of that experience but have been able to install and run Arch without being defeated. And I installed Mint awhile ago and had an even easier time with that. I understand the underlying complaint that it’s built on the CLI which can be hard to get used to, but still…
BeOS could do things in 1995 that Windows, Linux, and MacOS can’t do in 2024. (Try load-balancing the individual threads of your running programs, or switching processors on or off whenever you want.)
I… guess? Would the average person want to do that? I thought this was supposed to be for the average person who isn’t allowed to poke around and break everything easily.
The OS itself has been rock solid, although it doesn’t recognize my sound card, and some apps have crashed. The experience takes me back to the early days of Linux distros, except that the core desktop functionality is spectacularly well-designed and consistent. Haiku is as easy to use as Windows ever was.
-_-
For that to happen, Haiku has to mature. It needs to become stable enough for daily use (in my experience, it already is) but also be usable on a wide variety of modern systems, and that means more device drivers for, for instance, my sound card. The project needs more than one full-time developer; for this, they need money. This is where we can come in.
So yeah, it sounds like a cool project. I might even try it out. It sounds like porting programs from Linux to Haiku is easy, so I don’t see why they can’t coexist at least. But this article just seems to contradict itself and is promoting an OS that the average person isn’t going to be able to intuitively or easily use for probably a long time.
This article doesn’t really make sense to me.
The author talking about how difficult Linux is
I have half of that experience but have been able to install and run Arch without being defeated. And I installed Mint awhile ago and had an even easier time with that. I understand the underlying complaint that it’s built on the CLI which can be hard to get used to, but still…
I… guess? Would the average person want to do that? I thought this was supposed to be for the average person who isn’t allowed to poke around and break everything easily.
-_-
So yeah, it sounds like a cool project. I might even try it out. It sounds like porting programs from Linux to Haiku is easy, so I don’t see why they can’t coexist at least. But this article just seems to contradict itself and is promoting an OS that the average person isn’t going to be able to intuitively or easily use for probably a long time.