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Operating Systems Software

Syllable 0.5.4 Released 457

AtheOSParrot writes "Version 0.5.4 of the Syllable operating system has been released. The lightweight, BeOS-alike is aimed squarely at finally realising the dream of bringing an easy-to-use, free software desktop to everyday users. 0.5.4 is a significant milestone in this direction with the integration of the new desktop, which is completely unimpeded by any legacy X-Windows foundations or toolkits beneath. This is no tin-pot bootloader with bitmaps snapped on; other features include SMP, networking, ATA/ATAPI, audio & video, 2D acceleration, GCC, USB & a 64-bit journaled FS with attributes. With desktop Linux still not having dented the 1% mark, will Syllable be the one to do to Windows what Firefox has done to IE? Also reported on OSNews.com, Golem.de and Linuxfr.org."
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Syllable 0.5.4 Released

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  • Ok! (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:06PM (#10415584)
    I just installed this under Virtual PC (dont laugh).. Ok first off 5.4 doesnt work you have to use the 5.3 then upgrade to 5.4.. Additionally you need to append the flags
    uspace_end=0xf7ffffff enable_ata_dma=false ata_pci_force_generic=true
    on ther kenel line for grub.

    GCC & the other tool chains have to be downloaded etc etc..

    What do I think?

    Well for starters the web browser doesnt like sourceforge, so downloading the packages is a pain. Secondly it's slow. Thirdly I tried to build UAE under it, and GCC wend Zombie....

    This looks nice, but it's hardly stable... maybe in a few more iterations it'll shape up.
    • Re:Ok! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:10PM (#10415614)
      well, before you say it's slow and unstable maybe you should actually install it on a box instead of under virtual PC

      I'm sure your setup is subpar compared to installing and running it directly.
    • Re:Ok! (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Oh, I forgot, dont let Virtual PC do any nat.. It'll crash. Hard. Setup a loopback adapter, and let XP do the natting, and it'll work fine. If you try to let virtual pc nat, UDP & ICMP work fine, but the moment you xmit over TCP it'll crash.
    • Same here. I wanted to have a look at 0.5.4 under Virtual PC as well (yes, I think it's actually a useful tool for once from Microsoft) and it refused to boot the iso image. Trying to mount it under Deamon tools just gave me a "blank" cd.
      Will have to get back to it at some later time I guess...
      • Re:Ok! (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I wanted to have a look at 0.5.4 under Virtual PC as well (yes, I think it's actually a useful tool for once from Microsoft)

        That's because Microsoft didn't write it, they bought it. It was written by Connectix, and originally for the Mac. I still use Connectix VPC 5.2... haven't seen any compelling reason to upgrade.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    They should begin by changing its name
    • Sounds too much like sybian? (google for it)

      You pervert... ;-)
    • When Syllable was forked from AthOS, a lot of time and effort went into choosing a name. IIRC, a long submission period was conducted, with a voting on all submissions. This narrowed down the pool to a few names, which were voted on again. Syllable was the winner. It is a lot harder than one can imagine to choose a good name that doesnt violate something else's name.
      • by Vanders ( 110092 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @06:15PM (#10416444) Homepage
        Actually, no. You might be thinking of Haiku.

        The real story of the name Syllable is this:

        I hate choosing names for projects. When I decided to fork AtheOS I knew we needed a name, but I did not want to use the old and hackneyed "SomethingOS" formula that so many other small OS's were using. I also quickly realised that all the really good OS's used short names, usually two or three simple syllables E.g. Windows, Unix, BeOS.

        The word syllable is three syllables. So there we go, my search was over and I could get on with more important things.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Any of these grab you?
      • Dipthong
      • Consonant
      • Vowel
      • Semivowel
      • Phoneme
      • Allophone
      • Tripthong

      Or, if they bundle more applications and turn it into a suite rather than just an OS, perhaps Word*, Sentence, or Paragraph.

      * May already be taken

  • waiting... (Score:5, Funny)

    by chipster ( 661352 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:06PM (#10415586)
    ...for the BeOS and Eugenia Loli-Queru flamage to begin.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Alright.

      She's a gross-looking sub-par writer. I wish she would quit with "osnews" and her pathetic pseudo-journalism. I hate her, her bias, and her claims that such bias does not exist.
  • Well... (Score:5, Funny)

    by HateBreeder ( 656491 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:07PM (#10415594)
    will Syllable be the one to do to Windows what Firefox has done to IE?

    I sure hope not!
    Would be a shame to have all the countless hours spent installing my Gentoo, go to waste... :P

  • Oh no (Score:3, Funny)

    by October_30th ( 531777 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:07PM (#10415596) Homepage Journal
    hich is completely unimpeded by any legacy X-Windows foundations or toolkits beneath.

    All right, everybody. Brace yourselves for a flood of "what's wrong with X-Windows foundations or toolkits?!" posts!

    • Re:Oh no (Score:3, Insightful)

      by caseih ( 160668 )
      I'll help this flood along.

      There is nothing wrong with X-Windows that can't be fixed in an elegant way that provides a path for future flexibility, while still maintaining the key killer features of X11: network transparency (per-window) and backwards compatibility. I think it's pretty cool I can remote login into an ancient unix machine and run an old motif app on my x.org 6.8.1 linux box with translucency and shadows. Sure you can always run an X11 thunk layer on top of the window system de jour, but i
  • Nah (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jmorris42 ( 1458 ) * <jmorris@[ ]u.org ['bea' in gap]> on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:07PM (#10415598)
    Nope, won't be making any real waves. Face it, BeOS is as dead as the Amiga and attempts to revive it are equally doomed.

    Why?

    Because there just isn't any burning need for it. Windows has all the users that money can buy, UNIX has the hearts and minds of all the elite power users and the research crowd while the Mac has the fashion police in it's camp. What demographic wants to be Be compatible? What major software base is unlocked by a Free implementation? None.
    • Re:Nah (Score:2, Insightful)

      by benzapp ( 464105 )
      By your logic then, its forever going to be 95% windows 4% mac, and 1% unix.

      We have been hearing about Linux on the desktop for six years now. There are very specific reasons people don't use it, X-windows being one of those big reasons. The goal here is to make a fully functional OS that will appeal to the average user, when the time comes that OS software is too expensive. We are rapidly approaching the $100 computer. Maybe this OS can succeed in that market.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:Nah (Score:3, Insightful)

        by sonicattack ( 554038 )
        There are very specific reasons people don't use it, X-windows being one of those big reasons.

        If you had said that the lack of functionality in KDE or GNOME is one major reason people aren't brought over, I'd have understood what you meant (even though I wouldn't have agreed), but you seem to point out X as the culprit.

        Would you mind being a bit more specific about why, as you claim, The X Window System is one of the "those big reasons" people don't use Linux on the desktop?
      • I have yet to hear a good argument against the X Window System. It all appears to be of the form "X was originally designed for old machines running applications across a LAN, so it *can't* be used for anything else." Or "X doesn't have a 'standard' widget toolkit," but no geek operating system will *ever* have a standard toolkit since emacs has one, firefox has one, KDE has one, GNOME has one, etc, and when those apps get ported over for the geeks moving to a system without X, the new system will have no s
      • by IGnatius T Foobar ( 4328 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @05:07PM (#10415946) Homepage Journal
        There are very specific reasons people don't use it, X-windows being one of those big reasons.

        I call bullshit.

        Perhaps it's cool for the Slashbots of the world to keep complaining about X. You've been doing it for years. You've been complaining about it while not noticing that X has been improving by leaps and bounds lately -- particularly now that some innovative people are back at the helm of X.Org and FreeDesktop.Org. There's virtually no performance penalty for network transparency, there's all that cool alpha compositing stuff in there now, and some very sophisticated desktops have been built on top of it. X IS NOT A PROBLEM.

        In fact, by building a new operating system that doesn't have the X Window System in it, all you're doing is throwing away the existing pool of applications. The "average user" doesn't care how the window system was built; he only cares whether his applications run. And run they do, every time you boot up one of the millions of desktop Linux systems already in existence.

        The only reason Linux has not yet penetrated the desktop market in double-digit percentages is because of the chicken-and-egg problems surrounding application development vs. end user take-up. It's happening, but it's happening very slowly. And it's not going to happen with a BeOS knockoff, because that reduces your application pool to almost zero.

        True, Linux has a few more technology hurdles to overcome, such as automatic detection and mounting of various types of removable storage, and these problems are currently being addressed by projects like D-Bus. We're just about at the point of pulling past Microsoft in the desktop ease-of-use department. The problems are all people-related now.

        If the marketshare of Windows is going to fall, it's going to fall to Linux and Mac, not to some BeOS knockoff. Stop deluding yourself.
      • Bollocks.

        99% of Windows users have never heard of X, sit them down in front of a Linux box running X and they have no concept that there is this thing called X and they are quite happy to sit using the machine, running Gnome or better, KDE. Installers are good enough these days that X configuration is handled automatically and the performance is more than acceptable (Gnome users quit bitching and switch to KDE).

      • There are very specific reasons people don't use it, X-windows being one of those big reasons.

        I challenge you to name any significant end-user visible difference between up-to-date versions of X11 and up-to-date versions of the Windows and Macintosh graphics subsystems. In fact, all three of them are client-server systems. If anything, the one that is furthest behind technically is the Windows graphics subsystem, which hasn't hindered its acceptance.

        The goal here is to make a fully functional OS that
    • Re:Nah (Score:3, Interesting)

      by tdvaughan ( 582870 )
      How about embedded devices? If it has BeOS's multimedia capabilities it should be fantastic for those sorts of applications.
    • Re:Nah (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:38PM (#10415801)
      This isn't an atempt to revive BeOS. Syllable is a fork of the old AtheOS project (http://atheos.cx/). What is important about this project is that they are just taking everything one step at a time. So often there are projects that talk in such grand terms and then it becomes too big for people to grasp as a project. Syllable just continues to release new versions of their software and that's important.

      The article should probably have said that it seemed similar to the author. It isn't meant to be similar, but it can be seen that way. It isn't meant to be a clone like Haiku or BlueEyedOS or any of the others. It is its own entity. There are similarities which are probably because it is a modern non-UNIX OS design. There aren't many of them. Everything else seems to date from the Windows era or older or be UNIX-like. I'm sure that's an overgeneralization, but comparisons to Be were kinda inevitable if for no other reason than they are both designed for a GUI and not command line, they are both designed to use C++ in a simple way to make application writing easier, they are both meant for the desktop and not the server, they were both designed with journaled filesystems in mind, etc.

      I think the similarities are simply a product of designing something in today's day that is meant only for the desktop.
    • Re:Nah (Score:3, Informative)

      More than that; BeOS hardware and network support was shocking.

      I got a secondhand copy of the last release of BeOS and installed it... and discovered that it had no driver for the network card I had (IIRC an 8139 chipset card) and I had to boot into Linux, scour the internet for a driver, copy it onto a floppy, boot into BeOS and install the driver.

      Then I discovered that BeOS had no support for NFS nor windows filesharing so I couldn't copy anything else onto it from the network shares where I'd downloade
      • Re:Nah (Score:3, Informative)

        by Suppafly ( 179830 )
        You must have not used beos long enough to realize everything you've complained about is able to be downloaded from bebits.
        • uh yeah if I don't mind copying everything to a floppy or CD first because the networking support is so poor.

          I mean its not as if it was an oddball NIC. And its not as if samba or NFS are unusual in a networking environment.
          • Re:Nah (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Suppafly ( 179830 )
            that nic chipset has drivers available at bebits, there are also samba and nfs clients available at bebits.

            i agree that it's annoying to have to download the driver the first time, but i've had to download drivers for common hardware for linux distro's before.
  • by bushboy ( 112290 ) <lttc@lefthandedmonkeys.org> on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:09PM (#10415603) Homepage
    Edmund:
    Yes, another great Christmas tradition: explaining the rules eight times to the Thicky Twins. The round hasn't in fact started yet. It's got to be a specific book. For instance, if it was The Bible, I would go like that [holding up two fingers] to indicate that there are two syllables in it...

    Prince:
    Two what?

    Edmund:
    Two syllables.

    Prince:
    Two silly bulls? I don't think so, Blackadder -- not in The Bible. I can remember a fatted calf, but, as I recall, that was quite a sensible animal. Oh, ah! It's it, um, er, Noah's Ark, with the, er, two pigs, two ants, and two silly bulls? Is that it?

    Edmund:
    Two syllables.

    Prince:
    What?

    Edmund:
    Look, we're getting confused; let's start again, shall we?

    Prince:
    No, let's not, Blackadder. I think the whole game's getting a bit sylla, to be honest. How about a nice Christmas story instead?
  • I hope that'll change in the future.
  • by lakcaj ( 811907 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:09PM (#10415610)
    Why is it that all these "new" operating systems (read skyOS, Syllable, etc) always just look like some crappy KDE theme? I mean, if you're going to write an entirely new operating system, and then just use *nix apps on top of it, why even bother?
    • Because they use the code that is handy to create their display handlers.

      KDE is handy. Gnome is handy. What else would you suggest? (Remember how many years it took both KDE and Gnome to get as good as they currently are.)

      OTOH, I've seen examples that seem based on blackbox, or twm. They haven't interested me, any more than they do most people. (And I suspect that you would accuse OpenStep of looking like KDE, even though it's got an older pedigree, and if anything KDE looks like it.)
    • Why is it that all these "new" operating systems (read skyOS, Syllable, etc) always just look like some crappy KDE theme?

      Did you look at the screenshots? http://syllable.org/screenshots.php

      I dont see it looking like KDE, it has basic features as most os's. Now if you can expand on exactly what features are like KDE, then that would be an insightful post.

      I mean, if you're going to write an entirely new operating system, and then just use *nix apps on top of it, why even bother?

      First, no X-windows that
    • Syllable is a fork of AtheOS, which at the time was a sigh of relief compared to the Linux desktop experience (responsive UI with font smoothing vs. sluggish UI with ugly bitmap fonts). It also had some technical merits such as the 64-bit journaled filesystem, a user-friendly partitioning tool (could it resize partitions?), and an API that many people liked.

      Nowadays, the Syllable advantage is much less pronounced. The API is still there (efforts are underway for implementing similar APIs on Linux), Linux h
    • If they were to show us something truly novel it would be easy for people to get motivated to participate. Syllable is functionally indistinguishable from a moden linux distro.
      • I've been using Linux for over five years now as my primary desktop. I am currently running Mandrake 9.1, which uses KDE 3 and a 2.6 kernel. If Linux is "functionally indistinguishable" from Syllable then I must have been taking some pretty scary sorts of drugs these past few years, because to me Linux still feels like a big bloated lump of an OS that tries to be a desktop OS, but bless it, you know it really wants to run Apache or Oracle instead.

        No matter what I do to try and tweak my Linux desktop, so
    • by Misinformed ( 741937 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:33PM (#10415760)
      Why is it that all these "new" operating systems (read skyOS, Syllable, etc) always just look like some crappy KDE theme?

      Good point. But look on the positive side... it could have looked like GNOME.
    • Why not ? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Alan Cox ( 27532 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @05:22PM (#10416050) Homepage
      Its easy to look at it and pick holes (and I can see a lot of holes to pick from the comments about tar and attributes onwards) but it is still a great way to learn to program and to do stuff.

      What would have happened if everyone told Linus "there's already Windows, Minix, Hurd, OMU.. why bother' ?

      Alan
    • I don't think it looks like "some crappy KDE theme" myself, but perhaps if you read the FAQ you mght understand why it looks like it does:

      The GUI looks like an Amiga. Is Syllable an AmigaOS clone?
      No. In the beginning, AtheOS was actualy meant to be one, but these days there is nothing resembling the AmigaOS in Syllable other than the default window borders. Syllable has over half a dozen different window decorators which are installed by default. For example, you may have noticed that many of the screens

  • by sgant ( 178166 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:09PM (#10415613) Homepage Journal
    Linux on the desktop is here. It's happening as we speak and it's fine.

    This isn't some "far away dream" to "someday" have Linux work as a desktop OS. It's here now. People all around the world use it as their sole OS on the desktop and get along fine with it.

    So the FUD of "Linux isn't "here" yet on the desktop" is just nonsense.

    It's here there and everywhere...all you have to do is open your eyes. But I suppose if it doesn't work exactly like Windows then it can't be "here" yet. Then I guess OS/X isn't "here" yet either.
    • Well, the /. article wasn't implying Linux isn't ready for the desktop... it was noting that it has yet to recieve mass adoption, which is true. I, and thousands of others, use Linux as their desktop. As you said, it works wonderfully. However, the other 6 billion people on earth don't (most of them don't use Windows either, obviously). The point here was that this is a free (OSX isn't) OS aimed at the infamous Joe User.
    • by ShatteredDream ( 636520 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:37PM (#10415792) Homepage
      I have been using Linux off and on as a desktop, but have been using MacOS X as my main desktop for about 2 years now. You can't even compare the two. Linux with KDE or GNOME is, no offense to those projects, barely a 9 year old child's bicycle with training wheels, while OSX is a Harley. Linux is barely at the point that Windows was with Windows 2000, and it isn't showing much signs of competing with XP-SP2 and Longhorn.

      OSX is a very fast desktop oriented OS and it is the only desktop OS capable of really competing in a market whose needs go beyond the strictly utilitarian, like the home market. When a complete novice wants to install something from a CD on OSX all they do is drag the .app bundle to the hard disk, with Linux you either have to use some vendor specific tool to manage the myriad dependencies or run rpm manually. Linux is a great desktop, provided you want to only use the software that you are given by the distributor and/or have someone to maintain it for you. OSX, all that is quite unnecessary.

      I like Linux, but it really isn't there yet. The majority of the people I know at least, would be scared to death of it.
      • Out of curiosity, what distros did you use, and how long did you run them?

        My experience using 7 distros over the past 6 years has been very mixed, to say the least, but that does not mean that there are not some extremelyy good desktop distros out there. My main powerhouse runs Gentoo and I love it. Very desktop ready. "9 year old's bicycle with training wheels" doesn't quite capture it, somehow.

        So Gentoo on the high end (poweruser). I post this from my laptop running SuSe Professionsal 9.1. Again, v
      • by sgant ( 178166 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @05:51PM (#10416252) Homepage Journal
        Sorry, it IS here. Just because it doesn't act like OSX doesn't mean anything. No, it's not OSX...so what?

        Does everything have to behave like everything else? OSX is very elegant...so what? I enjoy KDE...I think it's very elegant. Who's right and who's wrong?

        OSX is right for you. KDE is right for me. But just because OSX is a nice UI doesn't mean everything else is crap.

        And more to the point, Linux is the Harley...where you can tinker with it and customize it totally to become anything you want. While OSX is more like a crotch-rocket Ninja or whatever the kids are riding now adays. Very sleek, very fast...but can't really be totally (and I mean totally) customized to where you want it.

        Thanks for the analogy...you just had it mixed up. Glad I could set you straight.
      • 1) Only small parts of OS X are open source. Most of the high level stuff that matters is proprietary, meaning that you give all control over it to a single company, Apple - including control over copy prevention technology, multimedia formats and the like. Apple is no more good or evil than Microsoft - it is a corporation motivated by profit maximization and will act accordingly. I would rather use software written by the people, for the people to avoid unpleasant surprises.

        2) Linux and all its apps are

      • by jeif1k ( 809151 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @06:26PM (#10416523)
        When a complete novice wants to install something from a CD on OSX all they do is drag the .app bundle to the hard disk,

        Complete novices don't install applications on their machines at all--they use whatever comes preinstalled. That's why both Apple and PC vendors sell machines with entire software suites preinstalled.

        with Linux you either have to use some vendor specific tool to manage the myriad dependencies or run rpm manually.

        There is nothing to "manage": the major Linux distributions handle all the dependencies for you. That's a big advantage Linux has over both Windows and Macintosh.

        Linux is a great desktop, provided you want to only use the software that you are given by the distributor

        Yes, that's quite right. And unlike Macintosh, Linux vendors give their users single-stop solutions for all their software needs.

        OSX, all that is quite unnecessary.

        Installing and maintaing software on OS X is a lot of work: for most third party applications, you have to manually download, install, and update applications. If there are dependencies, you have to track those down manually as well.

        Worse, unlike Windows, Macintosh doesn't even have a single, consistent way of installing or removing packages.
      • I have to use OSX quite a bit during the past few weeks. From listening to the Slashdot blather, I would have assumed it was several orders of magnitudes easier than KDE/GNOME with a correspondingly greater degree of flexibility and power.

        Hah!

        While is was a bit easier than KDE/GNOME, it certainly did not have more flexibility or power. By "a bit easier", I really mean "marginally easier". Some areas of the desktop were actually more complicated than what I was used to.

        Don't mistake me for ragging on OSX.
        • I recognise your post. It is probably what I would have posted the week after I bought my first Mac OS X based machine. That was in december 2001. Quite some time ago.

          You know, I was used to Windows (mostly NT4), and I got a Mac because I heard so much good about OS X. I was lost, angry, disapointed. I hated my Mac. Why did I spend over 2000€ for this piece of crap? No, seriously...after two weeks of usage, I learnt that my mind had been deformed by Micosoft Windows. I let Windows loose, an

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:10PM (#10415616)

    The latest Development Newsletter just arrived too, summarizing recent developments in the community. It's a great way to keep up-to-date with the project -- no need to trawl through the mailing lists.

    See September's issue, and more, here:
    http://msa.section.me.uk/sdn/ [section.me.uk]

    Additionally, a Flash demo can be found on this page [zen.co.uk].

  • Ooooh (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Apreche ( 239272 )
    I just happen to have some unpartitioned space on one of my drives. I think I'll try this out sometime soon. But the screenshots make it seem as if its just like linux with a new, non-revolutionary, desktop environment. Behind the scenes it may be different, but that doesn't matter to non-geeks.
  • Why should it? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by julesh ( 229690 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:11PM (#10415622)
    Can somebody tell me something that this system is better at than, say, Linux + KDE or Gnome? What does it do better than ReactOS? What does it do better than Linux + Y (or any other X11 replacement system) does?
  • Coral cache link (Score:3, Informative)

    by Z-MaxX ( 712880 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:11PM (#10415625) Journal
    http://syllable.org.nyud.net:8090/ [nyud.net] Just in case. I don't suppose their server is running on Syllable yet? That would be cool.
    • by Moth7 ( 699815 )
      Syllable aims to be a usable Desktop OS, so it might be kind of silly to run their site off of it ;-)
  • Hopefully, they have made it work under QEMU and fixed the IDE driver...
  • by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:14PM (#10415650) Homepage Journal
    While on the topic of alternatives for the desktop, what's happening in QNX-land? QNX is a very nice system, POSIX-compliant, based on a microkernel, nice GUI, good scalability, several open-source titles available. I haven't heard any news about it in a while, though. Is anyone working on an open-source clone yet?
  • So let me get this straight: it looks just like a typical gnu/linux desktop (circa 1998), but it has less compatibility with current software and less functionality due to the removal of x-windows?

    The developers should give it their best, but I see no reason to expect this to have better luck than gnu/linux in taking away windows marketshare.

    Of all the typical reasons that gnu/linux is not yet the dominant OS (inertia, user familiarity with windows, games, office software, simplicity), I don't see any
    • Re:Nope (Score:3, Informative)

      by int69h ( 60728 )
      The only thing Syllable has in common with Linux is the fact that they are both computer operating systems. Yes we're using Redhat's Bluecurve icons, and prior to that we were using some KDE icons. If some talented artist steps up to the plate and creates some icons specifically for Syllable, I'm sure they would seriously be considered as replacements.
  • Replace IE like Firefox??? That is only because firefox can basically do all the things IE can (visit all the web pages, same functionality (even more some may argue)). This OS doesn't seem to have that leverage over Windows, and as long as Redmond can keep on putting out software that is mostly self-compatible only and get most of the population addicted to it, there isn't too much chance of this os replacing windows like firefox did to IE.
  • ahh (Score:3, Insightful)

    by nomadic ( 141991 ) <nomadicworld@ g m a i l . com> on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:21PM (#10415680) Homepage
    which is completely unimpeded by any legacy X-Windows foundations

    Or legacy applications or games...

    Nah, I'm just messing, I wish them luck. Maybe I'll try it out, I always had a thing for obscure OSes.

  • The 'LiveCD' download link for Syllable doesn't have any files currently.

  • I don't know (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Stevyn ( 691306 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:27PM (#10415718)
    I feel the biggest reason stopping at least technically inclined people from switching from Windows to Linux is "it looks nice, but I need program XX to work." The gap between mainstream programs in windows and in linux is closing, but that has taken many years and lots of work and commitment by developers. I don't mean to negate their efforts, I just think that Windows, OSX, and Linux are giving developers enough to worry about and they don't have time to worry about another operating system.

    Of course they can do whatever they want, but I wonder if they have considered that their efforts could be directed to Linux development instead. But don't get me wrong, I think they're doing a good job and their efforts should be applauded.
  • by ShatteredDream ( 636520 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:29PM (#10415726) Homepage
    The most common complaint about Syllable I have seen is the one that I also have, it just doesn't boot natively on my hardware. An OS that won't boot on a stock Asus motherboard with a AthlonXP 2400, Radeon9000 and plain ol' IDE drives is not going to make a dent even with Linux users.

    I would love to try my hand at helping to port software over, even if it is nothing more than working on helping to get Python ported over and write native bindings for Syllable. But I don't have the time to hack away at a hobbyist OS that won't even boot on common hardware. If it only works in VMWare, it might as well not work at all for me. Even the hacked new distros of BeOS booted on that hardware for God's sake!

    The syllable guys need to spend more of their time working on getting such basic necessities as actually having it bootable on all common hardware before they even think of challenging Windows. Firefox is a bad project to compare Syllable to because Firefox is built on an incredibly mature foundation that is over 5 years and millions of dollars of corporate R&D money in the making. Correct me if I am wrong, but isn't Mozilla proper actually closing in on 6-7 years old now?

    What would really help is if some of the Linux kernel hackers would take a break from Linux and work on the Syllable kernel. OSS does need a plan B for the desktop, and going from Fedora or Mandrake to Debian sadly doesn't count :-P
  • by erikharrison ( 633719 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:31PM (#10415740)
    I think that Syllable or not, thinking of an alternative OS that has the same relationship to Windows as FireFox has to IE is exactly the right mentality.

    FireFox was the browser that was supposed to be targeted at people knowledgable enough to install it, who we're limited by the IE experience.

    When we talk about Desktop Linux for example, we often talk about "easy enough for my grandma to use" which is precicely the wrong litmus test. I've been idlling on a linux distro at home some, and my goal has always been to make the Linux distro that all the XP power users want to use.

    Think about it. Every windows user I know who ran or runs IE has a popup blocker installed, the google toolbar, AdAware, and has half a dozen windows open most of the time. FireFox is perfect for them, because it was targeted at them. Grandma (well, not mine, she won't touch the computer, and my grandfather is a computer geek) will just click on the three icons she knows how to use - Linux, Windows, SkyOS, Syllable, Macintosh, it's all pretty colors to her. So don't target her!

    I've got an OS here. It's multiuser design makes it hard to get viruses or for your sister to install spyware which screws over everybody else. It comes with a firewall, it comes with antivirus, it comes with a multiprotocol instant messeging client, it comes with a tabbed browser, it comes with a pop up blocker, it comes with a spam filter, it comes with a word processor, it comes with a spreadsheet, it comes with an image editor. It comes with all of the things you pirate to make your pirate copy of WinXP not suck, all nicely polished and working together out of the box. It's legal, it's free, it's simple, it's featureful. It doesn't dumb things down for your Grandma, it doesn't pander you with saturated colors and friendly but unhelpful error messages, it doesn't talk down to you for not already understanding everything about it. It's the OS for people who care what OS they're running.

    Build it and they will come. Be it Syllable, SkyOS, Linux, BSD, or hell, Windows.
  • Q: Is it possible to use Syllable in a text-only mode?
    A: No, you have to use the Terminal. Syllable is designed around its own GUI and cannot support a text-only interface.


    Isn't that the same mistake Microsoft has been making since Windows 95?
  • I just clicked the link to the main page,

    On there is a link to download it, and followed for the live CD.

    The link is dead!!!

    from their site (emphasis mine):

    LiveCD4

    This LiveCD is based on LiveCD3, but makes use of a RAM disk, which makes it stable, without the need for floppy disks, or other obscure things.
    It's as easy as it can get: Download - Burn - Boot!

    BurningShadow - 21/8-04 18:15:15

    This LiveCD does not include the possibility to install Syllable.

    By downloading InstCD1 you can get a Syllable i
  • by cpuffer_hammer ( 31542 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:40PM (#10415814) Homepage
    It was once suggested that DEC by Apple. Use their Vax Servers and Mac as the desktop. (Vax as a big Mac?)

    Could a Syllable desktop world with Linux Servers become a working combo.

    Since applications in the FOSS world can be recompiled/ported/developed to run on both, for those applications it makes sense to have on both.

    For those how want both on the same system there can use VM applications to run .
    Syllable on Linux or Linux on Syllable. Or they could be even more closely integrated.
  • BitTorrent? (Score:2, Redundant)

    by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 )
    Anybody have a .torrent for it?
  • No it won't (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ridgelift ( 228977 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:58PM (#10415902)
    With desktop Linux still not having dented the 1% mark, will Syllable be the one to do to Windows what Firefox has done to IE?

    No it won't, because Linux has something that took it a lot of time to achieve: mindshare. At best, Syllable can be a training OS that is unencumbered by Unix's long history to develop things that haven't been done before. Then those ideas can be ported to Windows and/or Linux.

    Having said all that, I hope the Syllable team can prove me wrong.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 02, 2004 @04:59PM (#10415912)
    No doubt this project was fun and instructive.

    But the best thing to do with it now is abandon it.

    To make an OS useful requires a ton of device drivers. These guys have barely scratched the surface of what's needed. Even today, after thousands of man-years of effort, GNU/Linux hasn't achieved the level of driver support that Windows has.

    Abandoning X has the consequence that lots of apps will not run on Syllable. Seems a giant leap backwards. Presumably, Syllable is aimed only at home users who just have one PC? Somebody who has a LAN is going to want X. I couldn't work without it.

    The free-software community has barely enough resources to support one OS really well. GNU/Linux needs all the work we can put into it. Trying to promote a competitor will, if successful, divide our resources and make it much harder to establish any free operating system as a serious competitor to Windows on the desktop.

  • I still see bash (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    If you can't do everything, and I mean everything without the command line then FORGET IT. I still see .profile and bash. too bad, but the next desktop should be designed by folks that HATE LINUX.
  • I think that in order to have a really innovative OS, new tools are required. After all, productivity is limited by the toolchain, and this is using essentially the same toolchain as the various free UNIXes. Won't it end up having more or less the same features and limitations as current systems (assuming that hundreds of thousands of developer hours get devoted to developing and porting)? * Make 3.79.1 * AutoConf 2.13 * AutoMake 1.4-p6 * BinUtils 2.15 * GCC 3.3.4 * M4 1.4.1 * FL
  • anachronism (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jeif1k ( 809151 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @05:46PM (#10416204)
    which is completely unimpeded by any legacy X-Windows foundations or toolkits beneath.

    It is Syllable that is the "legacy design" here. The entire industry is finally moving to more dynamic languages (Java, C#, Python, VB.NET, Objective C), dynamic GUI configuration (XUL, Glade, Avalon), vector graphics (SVG, Render, DisplayPDF), and client-server GUI models (XP-GDI, DisplayPDF, X11).

    While one can discuss the relative merits of those technologies, relative to any of them, an OS with a GUI based on a huge C++ GUI library [other-space.com] is an anachronism. Except for Syllable's nifty graphics, Smalltalk-80 looks like it was more advanced and flexible technology a quarter of a century ago.
  • by GreenKiwi ( 221281 ) on Saturday October 02, 2004 @06:18PM (#10416470)
    I wish that more of these small os groups would get together and create 1 independant OS from MS and Unix. They all seem to follow the same general ideas the Syllable or BeOS have... give the user lots of power, a new non-X display core and make it quick. But this all seems like a country divided. Nothing is ever going to take off with all of these small groups.

    If the leaders of a few of these groups would get together and work on one project, there's a slim chance that it might get somewhere. If I were going to try to organize something, I'd be looking seriously at OpenBeOS, as it has all the API documentation nicely created for it. But hey, it's never going to happen, and MS will continue to rule the desktop, with Linux being a lowly contenter waiting in the wings, never to really get a chance.

    kiwi

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