Scion of obscure operating system that could have replaced Mac OS gets rare update, nearly 22 years after launch β€” Haiku continues minimalist philosophy of BeOS, pet project of one of Apple’s former executives

In the mid-1990s, former Apple executive Jean-Louis GassΓ©e founded Be Inc., a company best known for its BeOS operating system.

Despite its technical strengths, including a responsive multitasking kernel, symmetric multiprocessing, and a 64-bit journaling file system called BFS, BeOS struggled to make a dent in a market dominated by Microsoft Windows. Apple briefly considered buying it, but ultimately decided the price was too high and instead acquired Steve Jobs’ NeXT, using its OPENSTEP OS as the basis for what would become Mac OS X. In 2001, Be Inc. was acquired by Palm, and BeOS quietly disappeared.