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I'm so happy to see it's still up and running. I was a HUGE fan of BeOS and to this day I wish it had won the Apple contract, though Next was obviously an amazing choice. I hope Haiku continues to succeed!
BeOS was ahead of its time, that's for sure. One thing it did exceptionally well was multitasking. Even if you had a intensive task running in the background, you would never notice any lag whatsoever in the GUI. Windows/Linux/etc on the same hardware would lag horribly when doing the exact same tasks. I understand many aspects of the OS and GUI toolkit was multi-threaded (as BeOS was designed to run on, and take advantage of, systems with multiple cores). To this day there is no OS that handles multitasking as gracefully as BeOS did. I still remain disappointed that it did not see much success as it had so much potential.
You mean as threads used to gracefully crash each other?

BeOS was an interesting OS, 20 years ago, its time is due, API frozen and just like Oberon and Amiga, only usefull for nostalgic purposes.

Frozen APIs are a blessing, not a curse. The only way forward is to constrain developers to a well-known standard set of tools and interfaces. We've seen what happens when they just get turned loose.
Yup! Honestly feels like the industry as a whole has lost the plot.
I have a Pentium here to sell, if you feel so inclined.
I know a lot of folks think it looks dated, but I absolutely LOVE the aesthetics and icon art of HaikuOS.
I wish I could use a Linux distro as snappy as BeOS was! Is Haiku the same in that regard?
I tried running it in a VM earlier last year and found the UI to be unusably laggy. It seems there were some issues with virtual mouse drivers or something and this was the "expected" experience in a VM.
No, that's definitely not the expected experience for VM usage. Plenty of people run Haiku in a VM without such problems. QEMU/KVM is the best system to use, with VMware second, and VirtualBox et al. coming in last.
> it looks dated

It's a real desktop OS, with a UI meant for a keyboard and a mouse. A rarity these days.

HaikuOS looks like an OS dedicated for desktop use. I've just gotten myself a Mac mini last week. Big Sur is the ugliest OS I've ever seen. If that's where the future is heading, then I'm not sure I want to continue using computers. I could use some dated UIs, such as the Haiku one.
I'm intrigued by the SPARC support. Not sure if it's for sun4c/m/u, but I've got both 32 and 64 bit SPARC laptops that Haiku would be perfect for.
How usable is this as a general purpose OS? I seldom see people running it outside VMs. How hard is it to find compatible hardware such as wireless cards. Does sleep/suspend work reliably?

Lastly, I just LOVE the aesthetics. Even XFCE could not resist the allure of "improved" themes and also ended up welcoming CSDs.

I know it basically worked out of the box on a Thinkpad x230 Tablet, running off a flash drive.
There is no hardware 3D acceleration at all, but most GPUs supported by FreeBSD and Linux work fine for everyday use. Sleep and suspend are still a work in progress. WiFi and Ethernet support is heavily dependent on FreeBSD drivers, as such not every card is supported but there are a good number of supported devices. In general, a well-supported Linux/BSD machine will likely work well under Haiku (Thinkpads in particular).

For me personally, the biggest thing holding it back from becoming a daily use computer is the lack of a really good web browser. WebPositive has made great strides as the native browser, but it still has a long way to go. There are ports of other mainstream browsers but most are incomplete or unstable.

I sorely miss the era around 2000-2001 where I used BeOS successfully as a daily machine, able to browse the Web, access email, do document management and creation (word processing and spreadsheets), photo editing, music production, and video editing all with native-to-BeOS software. It transformed my Windows 98 machine from a slow, clunky, stuttering mess into a computer that felt like it was from the future. Nothing since has come close to that level of technological Nirvana.

Forget the Web Browser, the biggest barrier is the lack of wireless drivers. I've tried it on a half dozen laptops and couldn't get a single one to work.

At the time I last tried there was no support for USB Wifi, so using a trusty TP-Link wasn't an option.

> Nothing since has come close to that level of technological Nirvana.

Amiga.

It has emacs and a modern browser and a compiler, what else do you need?