| >The ideals of Haiku are great but is anyone using it consistently? If they are what workflows benefit from Haiku's feature set? I do, but maybe i am not the best everyday example with my ~20 years user experiences with BeOS and Haiku and do development/porting for Haiku. I use on a dedicated Haiku laptop and planing to switch to Haiku on my main system too, the only roadblock is the external-display support. After it gets enabled (i have intel based system) i will switch completely. >I'm curious if anyone is actually using Haiku features in some non-trivial way, e.g. All the files coming from packages have an own attribute which identifies the parent package, so it is extremely easy to find from which package the questioned file comes from. For example. I have to frequently search for existing recipes, i use bash to craft me a search query. I definetely could use `find` instead. I like that i have no email client, so if i need to search for a mail on a busy covered desktop i don't have to hunt for the mail-client icon on the taskbar i just click on the desktop where it visible between all the windows, Alt-F > type what i want > ENTER. I really like the virtual-desktop handling, S&T, etc., so long story short: i like so how it is. |