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Cosmos Blog

The team blog. Find the very latest news here.

3/22/2008 - Ethernet packets transmitted

A few days ago Frode successfully transmitted our first Ethernet packet! Now we are on to cleaning it up a bit and on to UDP.

3/22/2008 - USB Device Support Completed

Users of the dev kit now have the ability to deploy to USB devices directly. User kit users must wait for our next release.

3/21/2008 - Boot Cosmos from USB

I have updated the boot from USB instructions to be more clear. In addition I am working on building USB support directly into the user kit so it will be automatic, just like ISO or PXE.

3/21/2008 - Milestone 2 Released

Milestone 2 has been released. Numerous bug fixes, and an all new user kit.

3/13/2008 - What's New?

It has been a while since our last post. So what are we doing? Is Cosmos still alive. Yes!

2/7/2008 - Cosmos on ZDNet

Cosmos is definitely in the wild now thanks to an article by Mary Jo Foley.

2/6/2008 - Cosmos on InfoQ

Short article and interview on Cosmos is now available on InfoQ.

2/6/2008 - Detailed Cosmos Coverage

Some more blogs about Cosmos, including quite a detailed review by Microsoft's Scott Hanselman.

2/5/2008 - Boot Cosmos from a USB drive or USB stick

Thanks to Joel for this.

2/5/2008 - More Cosmos in the news

Here are a few more Cosmos mentions in news, blogs, and forums.

2/5/2008 - Cosmos Interview with Chad and Scott

C# has been a language with a mixed history but precise goals. Although the C# language definition is for some time an ISO standard, only a part of the Base Class Library (BCL), which contains the fundamental functions that are used by all C# programs (IO, User Interface, Web services, etc) is also standardized. Parts of the BCL have been patented by Microsoft, but that has not deterred developers from attempts at implementing the components that are standardized, in various forms (Mono and affiliated projects). What happens when you go beyond that? What happens when outside the language, you start to implement not a mere application platform, but an entire operating system around it? Brace yourselves, because there is not only Microsoft Research who has done this with Singularity, but at least two other projects doing the same; and they are doing this under opensource terms. A system based around a C# Kernel. In this article, we are looking at one of the two, Cosmos by asking Scott Balmos and Chad Hower about the project they are involved in.

2/5/2008 - User Tutorial for Cosmos in Virtual PC

A step by step tutorial with pictures by an end user showing how to boot Cosmos in Virtual PC. The ISO can be regenerated using the build wizard (F5 from within Visual Studio)

1/30/2008 - Share the Love

Cosmos has its very own page on Facebook. Become a fan. [jonathand]

1/30/2008 - Some Publicity

We got some publicity. [jonathand]

1/30/2008 - NGDB

GDB opened up to .Net. [jonathand]

1/26/2008 - Milestone 1 Released

Milestone 1 is released. Build your own OS in just a few minutes. Install, New Project, add a few lines of code and press F5!

1/20/2008 - Take a guess: We are closer to MS1

The guess kernel is complete. [jonathand]

1/15/2008 - New Website

Things should feel a lot better now. [jonathand]

1/8/2008 - Exception Support

Full exception support is now complete. [mterwood]

1/6/2008 - www.GoCosmos.org

We have a real domain name now. [chad]

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