[haiku] Re: AW: Article about Haiku in a spanish magazine

  • From: Oscar Carballal <oscar.carballal@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: haiku@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2011 23:05:06 +0100

Wow, you have pretty good knowledge of spanish (I'm from spain, one of
the Haiku translators, spanish team)

It resumes very well in what Ronny said, the rest is just babbling.
The things that didn't like from PC Actual:

- No native Flash support.
- No package manager (haikuware instead)
- No real multiuser environment (although partially supported)
- Limitations on quality and features because of the early stage of the project.

Things that they did like:

- Clear and stylish interface, imitating BeOS
- Web browser based on WebKit, fast and efficient.
- Some basic tools included for working with different contents.
- Easy installation process.

Saludos :-)

2011/3/10 Ronny Wisor <RonnyWisor@xxxxxx>:
>
>>and was kind enough to scan it, I made a mirror here:
>>http://revolf.free.fr/beos/Articulo%20PCActual%20Haiku%20R1%20Alpha%202.pdf
>
>>Now, I don't read spanish, so if anyone can tell us what it says...
>
>>François.
>
> Thanks Francois,
>
> The article says: (That´s all I could understand):
>
> Haiku is similar to BeOS in its elegance and has an interesting evolution.
> There are VMware Images and iso-images available.
> You can boot into the live CD or install it on real hardware. Haiku is still
> in alpha stage. You can access several file systems and install it on a bfs
> - partition. There is a GNU compiler available for Haiku. There are
> different useful application installed by default. Haiku owns a browser
> called WebPositive with flash support via gnash. Haikuware.com offers
> different applications, KDE Software and even a QT-port.
>
> Haikus future: Haiku R1 will include a local kit for localization and a
> search like MacOS spotlight. The projekt for Haiku R2 is called Glass
> Elevator.
>
> PS: I´m not a spanish guy.
> Saludos ;)
> Ronny
>
>
>

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