Suggestion Box

Suggestions about something related to Haiku? Post here.

[IMPORTANT] Dell Social Innovation Challenge

Forum thread started by forart.it on Fri, 2013-01-04 23:13

Just discovered that ReactOS it's on it (http://www.dellchallenge.org/projects/reactos
)... what about Haiku ?

Note that the first place brings a grant of $60k, the second $40k, the third $20, 4th and 5th place each brings $10k !

About challenge: http://www.dellchallenge.org/learn/what-dsic

Sign-up: http://www.dellchallenge.org/user/register

Entries are due by January 28, 2013.

Hope that helps.

Install and software Sections

Forum thread started by Greensleeves92 on Tue, 2012-12-25 22:39

Greetings everyone,

Just a suggestions but maybe a section on Installations and software would be good. In these sections everyone could detail the hardware/systems they have installed Haiku on and what components work and what doesn't or if you had to do things outside of the box to get things to work or if it was a complete fail. On the software side it would be similar. What works, what doesn't etc etc. I have already posted my results here and on Haikuware under hardware.

Non-hierarchical file system (tags+attributes?)

Forum thread started by Beefeater on Tue, 2012-12-25 15:49

Hey all,

So I was wondering if any of the Haiku devs have considered a tag based approach to the file system. I was just thinking that, since Haiku already uses a database-like file system, why not take it all the way?

The folder based approach that we're used to is a leftover from the days of physical filing cabinets, and it's restrictive in many aspects. It's also very cumbersome to browse through, forcing you to crawl through endlessly nested folders to reach what you're looking for. (Of course Search… helps, but only when you know what you're looking for)

Basically, what I propose is to replace ALL folder based navigation with a tag based equivalent. Such a file system, I think, would be surprisingly easy to get used to, and infinitely more convenient both for organization and browsing.

If anyone is confused, I can elaborate why I think a tag based file system could accomplish anything a traditional file system can do, and more, even better. But I don't want to poop out a wall of text for the OP, lol. Also, I'm aware this discussion is very hypothetical until R1 is finished.

a keyboard-controlled/mouseless haiku

Forum thread started by rayyu on Tue, 2012-11-20 16:06

Forgive me if this sounds silly U^_^

Okay, so the reason I'm bringing it up is because I have a strong preference for tiling WMs in BSD
and I'm wondering if it's possible to have a similar mechanism in haiku (or if it's possible to tweak
it to behave in a similar manner)

Generally speaking, tilling WMs are quite keyboard heavy, sometimes even not needing a mouse at all.
I rather like that setup. . . What I mean is, if it's possible to have more keyboard shortcuts, for
example, a shortcut to stack or tile windows like normal, or shortcuts to tile windows vertically or
horizontally, taking up the whole screen, similar to xmonad. And of course, the ability to resize and get in and out of floating mode.
Another one I'd find useful is to be able to call up the deskbar (if it's on autohide) or make it active (if it's not). Normally I'd have to put my mouse in the deskbar to use it, so I think it'd be useful if, for example, you could call it up and navigate through it with keyboard alone.

tl;dr version: I think it'd be neat if there was an option to do everything or at least most things that normally needs input from the mouse or trackpad just a keyboard

Believe it or not, I (sort of) have a rationale for suggesting it (. . . if I even sound rational at all :)) Honestly, before haiku is ready for truly being a great desktop, I think it has a great place on netbooks or notebooks because it's very easy on resources, it installs and starts up with no fuss (who wants to create and edit elaborate config files for a 10-inch screen that you'll only use for simple things like web surfing and word processing XD) and it's still very robust.

Because of the size, going from trackpad to keyboard can be distracting and fiddly less fast than if you could just keep your hands on the keyboard (I can't really explain this part well, sorry. . . ) I suppose this is true for laptops in general as well?

Anyway, I know Haiku is NOT a netbook OS, so I'm sorry if it sounds silly and impractical. (Although I just realized that netbooks are nothing if not something for personal computing, another reason I think haiku fits in well with it) I'm new to haiku and non-windows things in general, but I've been using one of the nightly isos from alpha 3 for a while (currently downloading alpha 4.1) and these are just my observations about it :)

R programming language for Haiku

Forum thread started by xvinnie on Wed, 2012-11-14 23:18

I would like to suggest the porting of R to Haiku, if possible.

R (www.r-project.org) is a free software environment for statistical computing and graphics. It compiles and runs on a wide variety of UNIX platforms, Windows and MacOS.

If you don't know the importance of R, a list of members and supporters is provided here: http://www.r-project.org/foundation/memberlist.html

How about performance?

Forum thread started by xvinnie on Wed, 2012-11-14 23:07

Hello developers. Sorry for my English. I just started to learn a week ago.

It is usual to use some softwares to compare the performance of different operating systems. One set of tools is the Phoronix Test suite. How about porting it to Haiku? Or at least some/other benchmarking tools? Maybe start with LINPACK? If Haiku achieves good results I think it may gain some attention from non-users and developers.

Regards.

Some observations

Forum thread started by vidrep on Wed, 2012-11-14 18:56

- Applications such as "TV" and "Soundrecorder" should not be a part of the Haiku release until such time as they are in a useful state - nonfunctional apps should never be included.
- Any future release should include a functional native CD/DVD burning application similar to what was included in BeOS R5. (Helios was my burning app of choice back when).
- BeOS was often described as the "Media Operating System". If Haiku is striving to be a BEOS clone, then perhaps the focus needs to be on multimedia, rather than trying to be all things to all people. A Haiku HTPC would be just such a niche.

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