The Haiku operating system
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Andrew Lindesay 7a5148b345 HaikuDepot: Remove email
The email on the program listing has never been used.
This change removes this. Closes issue #18274.

Change-Id: I45c679059b334d25c892bfbb6010e0821a84ac38
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/7720
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Commit checker robot <no-reply+buildbot@haiku-os.org>
2024-06-10 16:30:52 +00:00
3rdparty 3rdparty/vagrant: drop vagrant 2024-04-16 20:18:07 +00:00
build L2CAP: Major refactor of the whole component. 2024-05-01 00:25:43 -04:00
data Update translations from Pootle 2024-06-08 08:14:55 +00:00
docs Docs: Document color_which UI colors 2024-05-19 08:55:45 +00:00
headers telnet: Synchronize with FreeBSD 13.3. 2024-05-28 16:23:27 -04:00
src HaikuDepot: Remove email 2024-06-10 16:30:52 +00:00
.editorconfig
.gitignore docs/develop/ide: A quick guide for haiku code completion 2023-12-05 20:02:07 +00:00
.gitreview
configure
Jamfile ffmpeg: update to ffmpeg 6 2024-03-26 21:44:17 +00:00
Jamrules
License.md
ReadMe.Compiling.md
ReadMe.md ReadMe: Add Getting Involved link 2021-06-13 21:06:58 +00:00

Haiku

Homepage | Mailing Lists | IRC Channels | Issue Tracker | API docs

Haiku is an open-source operating system that specifically targets personal computing. Inspired by the BeOS, Haiku is fast, simple to use, easy to learn and yet very powerful.

Goals

  • Sensible defaults with minimal configuration required.
  • Clean, clear, concise code.
  • Unified desktop environment.

Trying Haiku

Haiku provides pre-built nightly images and release images. Haiku is compatible with a large variety of hardware, but in case you don't want to "take the plunge" and install Haiku on bare metal, you can install it on a virtual machine (VM) instead. If you've never used a VM before, you can follow one of the "Emulating Haiku" guides.

Compiling Haiku

See ReadMe.Compiling.

Contributing

Haiku is a meritocratic open source project with a large variety of tasks. Even if you can't write code, you can still help! Haiku needs designers, (technical) writers, translators, testers... Get involved and help out!

Contributing code

If you're submitting a patch to us, please make sure you're following the patch submitting guidelines.

If you're having trouble finding something in the source tree, you can use one of our web-based source code browsers:

Contributing documentation

The main piece of documentation that still needs work are the API docs (found in the tree at docs/user). Just find an undocumented class, write documentation for it, and submit a patch.

Contributing translations

See wiki:i18n.

Contributing software ports

See HaikuPorts.

Contributing to our infrastructure

See Infrastructure.