Originally posted by allquixotic
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Haiku OS Advances With New Official Release
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Originally posted by cb88 View PostSo you might say that GCC2 support is a good thing as it means the code is portable. Pfft netbsd still buits on GCC2 after all and its gets respect seriously don't diss an OS cause it supports MORE compilers.
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Originally posted by 89c51 View Postits nice to see a hobby os coming together after 10 years in development
i would be glad to give it a try in a VM if my computer could be used as something more than a web browser
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Originally posted by RealNC View PostRunning it in a VM is not fun. There is no sound, no mouse integration with the host, no shared clipboard or shared folders, no graphics driver....
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Originally posted by V!NCENT View PostAccording to a poll asking for what was a requirement for ending R1, was Gallium3D and WPA (and some other things).
I think any OS should now ditch GCC for EkoPath anyway, especially because Linux only needs one tiny patch and EkoPath supports GnuC anyway.
Anything not x86 or Itanium? LLVM for the long run. Gnu gives two fingers to standards. I mean... GNU C? WTF... Non-complience and bugs everywhere...
gcc adheres to standards. Nobody gives 'two fingers to standards'. That is a lie. You should be ashamed.
gcc supports some constructs which are not part of 'the standards' - the gnu extensions. Nobody forces you to use them. You can happily write&compile your project without any non-standard line.
It is the choice of the people to use those extensions. And some people chose to use them. A lot of people actually. Might give you some food for thought.
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Originally posted by RealNC View PostI don't get any sound in VMWare. Is there some tweak I need to perform?
OpenSound 4.x has been ported to Haiku and offers drivers which work under vmware.
PS. you will have to expand the vm disk image, since there is not enough free space to install opensound. On real hardware, though, it works great.
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Originally posted by energyman View Postreally insulting posting there.
gcc adheres to standards. Nobody gives 'two fingers to standards'. That is a lie. You should be ashamed.
gcc supports some constructs which are not part of 'the standards' - the gnu extensions. Nobody forces you to use them. You can happily write&compile your project without any non-standard line.
It is the choice of the people to use those extensions. And some people chose to use them. A lot of people actually. Might give you some food for thought.
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Originally posted by RealNC View PostI don't get any sound in VMWare. Is there some tweak I need to perform?
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Originally posted by energyman View Postreally insulting posting there.
gcc adheres to standards. Nobody gives 'two fingers to standards'. That is a lie. You should be ashamed.
From http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Standards.html
For each language compiled by GCC for which there is a standard, GCC attempts to follow one or more versions of that standard, possibly with some exceptions, and possibly with some extensions.
Don't confuse facts for insults. Many compilers have that problem.
gcc supports some constructs which are not part of 'the standards' - the gnu extensions. Nobody forces you to use them. You can happily write&compile your project without any non-standard line.
It is the choice of the people to use those extensions. And some people chose to use them. A lot of people actually. Might give you some food for thought.
@AC: Stop being so full of shit. There is passion for better stuff (open source), concepts (like an interface and not bloody Windows 8, but fanboys were happy to keep op shitstorming about how Apple rules the world) and there are facts (things not working or breaking). It is well know that I am a FLOSS fanboy and there are countless ATi FLOSS versus nVidia closed source discussions/flamewars to sift through to prove I'm not a fan of proprietary AT ALL.
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