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New life for dead software

Written By
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Web Webster
Web Webster
Dec 28, 2009

[ Thanks to An Anonymous Reader for
this link. ]

“If you yearn for the operating systems or arcade games
of the past, and are willing to make the effort to bring them back
to life, free and open source software is definitely the way to go.
Green screens and might-have beens, operating systems and games,
BeOS, Amiga OS or DOS can be relived and replayed through a host of
emulators, simulators or rewrites in varying stages of completion.

“Some of the inspiration for a return to the past is curiosity
and amusement, an aimless journey through the archaeology of
computing, and some is pure nostalgia, a search for lost youth and
a time when “programs were small, and they could romp wild and free
over the whole system, unrestrained by memory management police and
big-brother kernel.” Some is due to genuine regret at the loss of
culture and data, and the end of possibilities – BeOS never
realised its potential and deserved a better fate. And some is
‘just because…’.

“So Haiku sets out to recreate BeOS from scratch, AROS reworks
the Amiga OS 3.1 APIs, and ReactOS is an attempt to re-create a
free version of Windows XP – “the XP successor people asked for”
with secure defaults. The Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator (MAME),
which is “easily the best arcade emulator” available anywhere,
revives more than seven thousand arcade games which might have been
lost to history”


Complete Story

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Web Webster

Web Webster

Web Webster has more than 20 years of writing and editorial experience in the tech sector. He’s written and edited news, demand generation, user-focused, and thought leadership content for business software solutions, consumer tech, and Linux Today, he edits and writes for a portfolio of tech industry news and analysis websites including webopedia.com, and DatabaseJournal.com.

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