Google has for some time now been working on a new operating system. Tentatively known as Fuchsia, the search giant’ s third operating system (alongside Android and Chrome OS) is an open-source project that’ s slowly but surely coming together.
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Google has for some time now been working on a new operating system. Tentatively known as Fuchsia, the search giant’s third operating system (alongside Android and Chrome OS) is an open-source project that’s slowly but surely coming together.
As we reported last August, Fuchsia isn’ t based on Linux but rather, a new Google-developed kernel referred to as Magenta. The OS was limited to just a command line last summer but now as Ars Technica highlights, a new UI has emerged that’s worth taking a look at.
The Fuchsia System UI, dubbed Armadillo, in its current state features a pretty radical card-based reimagining of the home screen alongside a keyboard, home button and a window manager. As Ars notes, nothing really “works” at this point – it’s all just placeholders – but it’s interesting nevertheless.
For what it’s worth, Google describes Magenta as a product that targets modern phones and personal computers packing fast processors and copious amounts of RAM with “arbitrary peripherals doing open-ended computation.” Given that description, it’s easy to see how some believe Fuchsia could be Android’s eventual replacement.
Ars points to a post on the public Fuchsia IRC channel from developer Travis Geiselbrecht who says it „isn’t a toy thing, it’s not a 20 percent project, it’s not a dumping ground of a dead thing that we don’t care about anymore.“
More details could emerge at Google’s annual I/O conference later this week although given the current status of the project, I wouldn’ t count on it.