Virtual OS Museum
Coverage of Virtual OS Museum in the Nexus archive.
- A better way to manage all your screenshots
The article discusses a guide for managing screenshots and highlights topics like Steven Spielberg, wearables, the Boeing 747, computer nostalgia, and sports events. It also mentions podcasts and personal preparations for the World Cup.
- The Virtual OS Museum lets you relive over 600 operating systems right on your desktop
The Virtual OS Museum offers over 600 operating systems for download and emulation across 250 platforms, created by developer Andrew Warkentin since 2003. The collection spans from 1948's Manchester Baby to early Android builds, including numerous obscure OSes like DOS variants and MOS for the Acorn BBC.
- The Virtual OS Museum opens its doors
The Virtual OS Museum is a massive collection of over 600 historically significant operating systems across 250+ platforms, offering Full (121GB) and Lite (14GB) editions for offline use. It includes emulators for Linux, macOS, and Windows, developed by Canadian developer Andrew Warkentin, and features licenses ranging from MAME to CC-BY-NC-SA for its components.
- I've built a virtual museum with nearly every operating system you can think of
A virtual museum featuring nearly every operating system has been built and is available at https://virtualosmuseum.org/. The museum showcases a wide range of operating systems. It has garnered 117 points and 23 comments on news.ycombinator.com.