• they/them

plural system in Seattle, WA (b. 1974)
lots of fictives from lots of media, some horses, some dragons, I dunno. the Pnictogen Wing is poorly mapped.

host: Mx. Kris Dreemurr (they/them)

chief messenger and usual front: Mx. Chara or Χαρά (they/them)

other members:
Mx. Frisk, historian (they/them)
Monophylos Fortikos, unicorn (he/him)
Kel the Purple, smol derg (xe/xem)
Pim the Dragon, Kel's sister (she/her)


arjache
@arjache

An actual demo video for BeOS! I remember reading a lot of magazine articles about it, and I tried their x86 downloadable version in the later era of BeOS when they were flailing around for an alternate market, but this is the first time I’ve seen video promotional material for it.

Some thoughts:

  • The intro was weirdly disappointing from a modern perspective. Reading about symmetric multiprocessing in PC Magazine was exciting. Seeing some guys in an office and going oh, it was just another Menlo Park startup is depressing.
  • Half the stuff they tout in the video is so mundane I forgot it used to be an actual issue (playing music while doing literally anything else on the computer without it skipping) and half of it is genuinely impressive (streaming a bunch of audio tracks from disk with various spatial filters being adjusted in real time.)
  • BeOS let you set a different color depth on each virtual desktop so you could easily preview your work at 256 colors vs 64k colors vs millions of colors. This is completely wild. I had no idea it could do that. I’ve never heard of another OS that supported this.

pnictogen-wing
@pnictogen-wing

...most of our residual interest in computers and programming died with it. we are only getting back into things extremely slowly, after a couple decades.

it felt like the last gasp of a certain...I dunno, style of computing where it was expected that your OS would have everything you needed to play with it, including documentation for its own API, all ready to go, with a minimum of muss and fuss. and no, I don't think any Linux experience I've had is even remotely like that.

~Chara


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in reply to @arjache's post:

My favorite BeOS demo was the one with the spinning cube that you could drag Quicktime movies onto the sides of, that then played on the cube while it rotated. I scrubbed through the video and I might've missed it but it looks like they didn't feature that one.

The cube thing sounds familiar but I think you’re right. They showed off a similar one in this video, where they slapped videos onto the pages of a book Myst-style and then they played even as you turned the pages.