[haiku] Re: Thank you to the Haiku programmers, from an enduser

  • From: Skar Cat <skarmiglione.sk4r@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: haiku@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 1 Dec 2013 22:59:28 -0200

would be great ... but it never would happen and if it happen i dont think
nobody would be angry


2013/12/1 Jeff KP3FT <kp3ft@xxxxxxxxx>

> I think that BeOS would have "wiped the floor" and dominated all other
> OS's if they had continued development.  I also suspect that BeOS's
> continued closed-source status has been (and perhaps still is) influenced
> somehow by competitors.  I love Haiku and use it on a daily basis, but
> imagine how much farther Haiku would be if the BeOS source were open.
>
>   ------------------------------
>  *From:* Skar Cat <skarmiglione.sk4r@xxxxxxxxx>
> *To:* haiku@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> *Sent:* Monday, December 2, 2013 6:53 AM
> *Subject:* [haiku] Re: Thank you to the Haiku programmers, from an enduser
>
> i think haiku can be the best Os ever, but we are waiting for that beta,
> but i really think it is the best option or alternative to linux windows
> ...
>
>
> 2013/12/1 ryanmk54 . <ryanmk54@xxxxxxxxx>
>
> With all the discussion recently on this list about the status of the
> Haiku project and when it will finally go Beta, I just wanted to take the
> time to thank all the Haiku volunteers who are working hard to keep this
> open source project going.
>
> +1 Thanks to the devs for making an open source OS that trumps all others
> in terms of user experience and a small learning curve
>
>
> In addition you can improve your programming skills by just trying to
> track down where bugs are in the code without trying to fix them (and
> then provide those hints in a bug report.) Before you know it you
> might make a few fixes, and then months later you might be a decent
> programmer. Like all skills it just takes a bit of time and
> persistence. Nobody was born a skilled programmer.
>
>
> Is there an easy way to  tell which tickets are entrance / rookie level?
>
>
>
>
>

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