For many years, I have been one of the most vocal, public advocates for the Haiku Operating System (the "Open Source BeOS") -- writing about it for several publications, covering it on my own shows, and even hosting an entire "Haiku Week" within The Lunduke Journal of Tech community.
I have used Haiku as a "daily driver" OS, and recommended it to many.
All of that, unforunately, is in the past.
Going forward -- at least for the time being -- I will not be using, covering, or recommending Haiku. To anyone.
And I feel like I should explain why.
Note: Yes. It's political.
Note 2: This is not a hit piece (though I'm sure some will view it that way). As i have expressed so often, I have tremendous respect for Haiku. i sincerely, strongly, hope that the Haiku policies will change.
Note 3; The vast majority of communications I reference here are private (including emails, IMs, and phone calls). If you don't read the article, and try to piece things together purely from scraps of public postings, you will become very confused. What few public postings exist represent less than 1% (at most) of the conversations with Haiku on this topic.
With that out of the way... here's the quick version of the story.