This is the Haiku boot screen. Pressing the space bar during boot displays a screen with various boot options.
This is the default desktop right after the system is started. http://haiku-os.org
This is the About Haiku window; here you can find the version/revision number of Haiku, as well as information about the CPU and memory of your computer.
Shown here are two small applications included in Haiku: Clock and DeskCalc. Both applications are shown running standalone and as replicants embedded in the desktop.
Mail is the default email client bundled with Haiku. By making full use of email file attributes, Mail allows users to easily manage their email using Tracker, Haiku's file manager. Has multilingual support, including double-byte character encoding.
Haiku stores personal contact information in People files. The People application shown here is used to create and manage contact files in Haiku. People file data is stored in file attributes, which can be seen, managed and edited directly in Tracker, Haiku's file manager (see upper window).
This is the DiskProbe application, a low-level disk viewing/editing utility.
Shown here is the preference application for Haiku's data translators, modules available system wide which applications can use to provide data conversion services to the user. Adding a data translator to Haiku has the effect of extending the data conversion capabilities of those applications that use them.
This is the File Types application, used to manage the various file types, their attributes, files associations, etc.
This is the Fonts preferences applet, used to configure fonts used throughout Haiku.
This is the Keyboard preferences applet, used to adjust the key repeat rate and delay until key repeat setting for your particular keyboard.
The Keymap preferences applet is used to select the keyboard layout for your language. The on-screen keyboard allows you to see and enter the special characters available with the various combinations of the Ctrl, Alt and System keys.
This is Haiku's Media preferences application. In this application you can adjust all media related settings, including selecting the audio and video sources, as well as whether you want to display the volume control in the Deskbar or not.
Menu preferences: this applet is used to configure the way menus are displayed; settings include font typeface, font size, color scheme, separator style and shortcut selection (Alt or Ctrl).
The Mouse preferences applet is used to configure your mouse for optimal use with Haiku. Settings include mouse type, mouse speed and acceleration, double-click speed, and focus follows mouse.
Printer preferences is an applet is used to add, and configure printers for use with Haiku, as well as to manage print jobs.
The Screen preferences applet is used to configure various screen-related settings, such as resolution, color depth, and refresh rate. Here you can also specify the number of workspaces (virtual desktops) you want to use in Haiku (up to 32).
The Screen Saver preferences applet is used to configure all screensaver settings, including trigger time, screen off timeout, password and a couple of features to enable/disable the screensaver with the mouse. You can also test the available screen saver modules, or add your own.
Time & Date: This applet is used to set the time and date of your computer, and to specify the time zone your are located in.
This applet is used to enable/disable Haiku's virtual memory, as well as to set the size of the swap file.
This is a small demo application that shows the bitmap drawing capabilities of Haiku.
This is an astronomy demo application for Haiku.
This is an OpenGl-enabled demo application that shows the capabilities of the Mesa-based OpenGL engine used in Haiku.
This is a small application designed to demonstrate the vector-based drawing capabilities of Haiku (including SVG).
This is a very simple application used to demo the creation of vector-based objects such as lines, rectangles, ellipses, etc.