BeOS and the G3 Power PC: not to be?

The very first BeOS story OSNews ever published – from 23 January 1998. Here’s the same article rendered in the then-current OSNews website.

More of the fallout from Apple’s decision to bump off its cloners last Fall has settled over the Valley recently, falling particularly hard in Menlo Park, home of Be Inc.. It seems Apple has been loath to hand over the documentation for the “Gossamer” motherboard line of PowerPC 750 machines (popularly referred to as the “G3” line) that began shipping last November.

In the past, Apple had been more than happy to hand over the documentation to its various motherboard designs, each having colorful names like Alchemy, Tanzania, and Tsunami. But the return of Jobs has chilled the once congenial relationship the two companies had, although both Motorola and IBM are more than happy to provide the BeOS team all the technical specs they desire.

The result for Be users on PowerPC machines (right now they’re the only kind, although BeOS for Intel is due in March) is that Apple’s gradual improvements in motherboard design are forever off limits, forcing them into an upgrade path (if they choose to even stay on the PowerPC platform) dependent upon the processor upgrade cards offered by companies like Newer Technologies and PowerLogix.

Steve Jobs closing off the entire company and cutting off access to its specifications is one of the four times Be, Inc. died. Fitting it is the subject of our very first BeOS story.

4 Comments

  1. 2015-02-03 12:35 pm
    • 2015-02-03 7:31 pm
      • 2015-02-03 7:33 pm
        • 2015-02-04 4:19 pm