Mostly just FYI, but I just came across this.
No idea which revision of Haiku was used though.
Mostly just FYI, but I just came across this.
No idea which revision of Haiku was used though.
Why do people have to test versions of haiku that is far from the standard of x86 versions? 64bit is still in the beginning, unbelievable.
Just did a testrun on current 64 bit Haiku (hrev51519):
http://chunk.io/miqlas/510ae0e91f25402288eee8bf7ef9e661
it’s literally the only way to figure out what works and what still needs to be done. test early and often!
All the other OSes tested were 64-bit, so this one had to be as well, otherwise, the results would be invalid. It would be interesting to see the same test done with all 32-bit systems.
The site was updated for FreeBSD 14.1, Linux 6.11, and Haiku.
I went through OpenPOSIX 1.5. And Haiku passed 99% of the tests I’d marked as required for UNIX 2003 compliance.
This means that Haiku has reached a high level of modern cross-platform software portability from other UNIX-like OSes.
We look at technology of desktop OSes like Win9x/Windows 8.1 - yet, forget Haiku can manage 32 CPU cores and 128 GB memory.
People may think of Haiku as a ‘hobbyist’ OS… but that is how many great things began - as someone’s hobby.