VitruvianOS – Desktop Linux Inspired by the BeOS

302 points - today at 3:17 AM

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yason today at 7:59 AM
I bought an Amiga in the early 90's and enjoyed it immensely. Commodore went under and Amiga died.

I bought BeOS in the late 90's and enjoyed it immensely like a breath of fresh air in a sewage pipe. BeOS died.

With my track record I really, really should've bought Windows. Twice, to make sure.

rebolek today at 5:36 AM
If you like BeOS, take a look at Haiku https://www.haiku-os.org/ , it's very nice and very usable system based directly on BeOS.
carlesfe today at 10:11 AM
I ran BeOS as a daily driver for a few months in the early 2000s. I had a winmodem and Linux couldn't connect to the internet for me, but for some reason, BeOS had drivers, so I used it. It was faster and the desktop environment felt more polished than KDE/Gnome.

Of course, at that time, it was impossible to know which OS would win the wars, so BeOS became my favorite. However, Linux developed very quickly during those years, I got into college and started using UNIX there, winmodem drivers appeared, and that's what I ended up using.

But BeOS still holds a very dear place in my heart. It really was superior to anything else during that era.

watersb today at 4:32 AM
25 years ago, I configured GNOME to run a BeOS-like tabbed window manager. On a sun workstation.

But that's not what this is. Or not only:

Nexus Kernel Bridge

Nexus is Vitruvian's custom Linux kernel subsystem that brings BeOS-style node monitoring, device tracking, and messaging to Linux — making it possible to run Haiku applications on a standard Linux kernel.

It claims to run apps from Haiku, the current open-source implementation of a modern BeOS.

donatj today at 5:53 AM
The important question becomes can you stack the window decoration "tabs" of different apps into a single stack of tabs like in BeOS?

Demonstrated here (animated):

https://www.haiku-os.org/docs/userguide/en/images/gui-images...

nathell today at 2:29 PM
I almost overlooked this, and then when I didn’t, I almost dismissed this as Yet Another Linux Distro with a custom skin. But no, there’s novelty and exploration in here. There’s attempt to venture off the local maximum. This is a breath of fresh air.
WD-42 today at 6:21 AM
UI elements that have depth look so mouth-wateringly good now. So over the minimalism and bouncing back hard.
kriro today at 2:12 PM
My favorite part of BeOS is the file system. The book can be found freely here: https://www.nobius.org/dbg/
thisislife2 today at 5:19 AM
This is interesting - a Linux distro that really differentiates itself technically, instead of just having a different GUI / desktop environment.
nico today at 5:49 AM
BeOS was such an amazing experience back in the day. It really felt magical. Too bad it got shutdown. I wonder what the evolution of it would be like today
prmoustache today at 11:48 AM
Anyone remember BlueEyedOS? It had exactly the main goal, building a beos compatible OS on top of the Linux kernel.
Redster today at 6:57 PM
I'm not getting enough sleep. I read this as ViltrumiteOS. I haven't even watched Invincibles.
vanderZwan today at 10:05 AM
Sort-of unrelated (but very on-brand for people into BeOS I think), it's so satisfying when a webpage is so free of bloat that navigation and latency to clicking on things in general feels instant.
aaronbrethorst today at 5:20 AM
Vitruvian asks a different question: what would I actually want to do with my computer that I currently can’t?

Only be able to drag a window around the screen from the top left corner

vibbix today at 2:31 PM
Pleasant surprise to hear about this. I've had a fascination with BeOS & Haiku for decades. I am now actually developing a custom website layout themed after BeOS (good excuse to learn Figma!)
mac3n today at 5:14 PM
My favorite thing about the early BeBox was the Pulse CPU meter, which shows the load on each of the two CPU chips. Clicking on a CPU stopped it. Clicking on the second stopped it as well, which took me a moment to realize.
rcarmo today at 7:31 AM
I hope it’s not just the look. The ability to group tabs from various apps into a single window was the best UX feature it had, and I still miss it sometimes.
aryonoco today at 11:57 AM
Little known fact, a small piece of BeOS survives to this day and is an integral part of Android

BeOS came up with “Binder” for doing inter process communication. Just before Be Inc. was acquired by Palm, some Be engineers somehow convinced management to release Binder as open source, which came to be known as OpenBinder.

After the Palm acquisition many Be engineers moved to a startup called Android Inc, and adopted OpenBinder for IPC. And the rest as they say, is history.

_spduchamp today at 12:56 PM
BeOS had the BEST icons.
unixhero today at 6:13 AM
Why should users not instead go for Haiku
ofrzeta today at 5:38 AM
"Real-time patched Linux kernel for low-latency desktop use" - does this really make sense? I think there have been various efforts like this over the decades but as far as I remember none of them really made a huge difference for the end user.
tecleandor today at 11:14 AM
clayhacks today at 7:21 AM
Ok maybe I’m too young, but what is BeOS? Everyone here is linking other alternatives, but no one’s linked to the original BeOS. Or is it gone now?
egorfine today at 5:32 PM
With age verification built in, right? right?
weli today at 1:40 PM
Is this using haiku as a kernel or is it a complete re-implementation of BeOs/Haiku API's? I can't tell by their website or github.
jazzyjackson today at 6:25 AM
I’ll try this out with my eink display, interface might look good in grayscale. So far my favorite desktop for this is the Chicago95 theme for xfce
arm today at 4:26 AM
rubymamis today at 12:29 PM
Can someone list what are some cool/novel BeOS features that other OSes didn’t have at the time and maybe still don’t have?
s1mn today at 9:40 AM
I was never cool enough to run BeOS but I coveted it. It looked so cool and futuristic compared with Windows.

I'm not cool enough to run VitruvianOS either, but i'm glad it exists.

numerio today at 12:06 PM
Thank you everyone for commenting! We are going to pubblish small articles on the website to clarify some of the common questions that are popping around. We will also do our best to improve our wording and marketing, thanks everyone for the suggestions and stay tuned!
deleted today at 5:57 AM
flippyhead today at 1:04 PM
Even if the cheaps are weak... is the code strong?
add2 today at 9:09 AM
How about making Haiku frameworks OS independent?
jonhohle today at 6:29 AM
Is this a new window manager and tracker or something skinned for this use case? Wayland, X11? There’s a screenshots section but the details are sparse.
asadm today at 4:54 AM
is there a debian distro that is close to win98. Sorta like ReactOS but can be daily-driven.
KnuthIsGod today at 6:07 AM
Why does the marketing read like slop ?

"VitruvianOS is an alternative Linux desktop with a singular philosophy: the human at the center."

https://v-os.dev/news/vitruvian-0.3.0-available/

leke today at 4:52 AM
So this is a lighter weight alternative to other Linux desktops?
lnxg33k1 today at 8:12 AM
> It’s very easy to use. It features an intuitive desktop

> and adopts KISS principles. Anyone can rapidly feel at

>home and use V\OS. User experience, workflow and comfort

> is key.

What is more intuitive than a button to close a window without a X, in order to make people from every other OSes feel at home https://v-os.dev/img/photogrid.png

-- When words have no meaning

shevy-java today at 7:56 AM
It's been a pain to try to get ruby to work on Haiku, so I expect that this will be like linux - but worse, in that barely anything works. I like the design choices made by BeOS, but we have 2026 now. Linux kind of showed that practical considerations beat theoretical superiority (except for the desktop segment, where Linux keeps on failing hard; see GTK5 not supporting xorg, it is now the all corporate-dictated wayland era).
create_accounts today at 6:26 PM
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