Portál AbcLinuxu, 30. dubna 2025 10:11
Důvodem proč můj desktop vypadá, tak jak vypadá (zvolené téma v xfce) je, můj oblíbený BeOS. A nějakou dobu už sleduji projekt Haiku OS - komunitou vyvíjený nástupce.
Dual boot už nějaký ten týden nepoužívám. Na vše mi stačí Debian (popřípadě jeho deriváty nebo deriváty derivátů). Ale pokud někdy budu dual boot používat, pak na prvním místě bude stále Debian a hned na druhém Haiku OS. A proč? Když se jen potřebuji rychle mrknout na internet, tak operační systém, který dokáže nastartovat za deset až patnáct sekund a za nějaké tři se vypnout, tak ten se občas hodí.
Na screenshotu je nastartovaný image Haiku OS ve VirtualBoxu (raw image převedený na vdi image). Tento zkušební image určený pro vývojáře a testery obsahuje několik základních aplikací včetně internetového prohlížeče Firefox 2
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BeOS images are ISO images. But not ISO Images in the sense Windows sees them. Those ISO contain FAT32 or FAT16 compliant filesystems. ISO9660 compliant is a FAT32 system. BeOS uses BeFS which is a 64bit journaling filesystem that stores a lot of the file info in different places such as file attributes. If we were to create an installation of BeOS using an ISO9660 image (one that can be read by IsoBuster) it wouldn't Install!!!! The CD would lose all of the extended file attributes that BeFS supports (and needs). Ie, If you copied files from an ISO9660 CD to BeOS, some of them would be useless. Installation of BeOS requires BeFS Images. THAT'S IT. And we won't fix it. It's not a bug, it's a feature.
Got some spare time and an itch to try out the latest Haiku (http://haiku-os.org) snapshot? Karl writes in with an easy install method for anyone wanting to try Haiku, using a BeOS Max Live CD. Assuming you've setup your disk with a partition to install Haiku on, grab a copy of BeOS Max Edition v3.1b (http://www.bebits.com/app/3148) (http://haikunews.org:6969/torrents/torrents/BeOS5PEMaxEditionV31b1.zip.torrent) and burn it. Now download the latest raw disk image of Haiku from http://www.schmidp.com/index.php?option=com_files&path=/haiku/images/ (http://haikunews.org:6969/torrents/torrents/2005_08_08_raw.zip.torrent) and leave it somewhere on your hard drive Boot from the BeOS Max disk now, and run it as a live CD. Once booted, right-click the Desktop and you should see a partition named Haiku (the one you downloaded) that's about 60mb. I downloaded my Haiku image to a Fat32 drive. Anyways, now mount it Click on the Deskbar menu and go to Applications/Development/Installer, Change 'Install from' to 'Haiku', and change 'Onto' to the partition you wish to install Haiku onto. I already had a BeFS partition already. My install took about 3 minutes on a P4 2.2 GHz. After you can even choose to install the bootloader.
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