An Interview with Haiku
Monday, February 4th, 2008
BGA: Bruno G. Albuquerque
Kokito: Jorge Mare
Gareth: Gareth Greenaway, SCALE Community Relations Chair
Gareth: So first off, please explain what your roles in the Haiku community are.
BGA: I have been a part of the Haiku community since it started, I guess…
Gareth: When did it start?
Kokito: Aug 18, 2001.
BGA: First, just working as a developer from the outside but eventually I joined the project officially around 6 months after it started more or less.
Gareth: Was that before or after the name switch from OpenBeOS to Haiku?
Kokito: The project started as OpenBeos. The change to Haiku was in 2004.
BGA: I am still a developer in the project (although with real life taking most of my time).
Kokito: I have been involved in the Haiku project since 2006, mainly in the area of marketing. communications. I worked mainly on the (new) website, and organizing events like the Google Tech Talk last year, SCALE (of course!), Kansai Open Source in Japan, etc. The new name was officially announced at the first WalterCon (the Haiku conference), held in Ohio, sometime in August of that year
Gareth: What was the reasoning behind the name change?
BGA: Basically we did that because there could be potential legal problems concerning the use of BeOS as part of our name.
Gareth: Did Palm ever pursue anything regarding the name? Or was the change a precautionary measure?
Kokito: The latter, as far as I know.
BGA: Yes. Palm never really said anything about it.
Kokito: In the end, it was a positive thing, as it helped Haiku develop its own image and identity.
BGA: Sometime ago someone from Access said Haiku was OK, as we were recreating BeOS from scratch. Access currently owns all BeOS trademarks.
Gareth: Has Access done anything with the BeOS trademarks?
Kokito: Not that we are aware of. I mean, other than claim that they own them.
David “Lefty” Schlesinger was the person from Access I had contact with. Lefty is the Director of Open Source Technologies at Access. He was always very supportive of our project.
Gareth: That seems to be what most company that buy up trademarks do with them
So what is the goal of the Haiku project? Where does its future lead?

