OS-tan Collections

OS-tan discussions => OS-tan Talk => Topic started by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 03:19:44 PM

Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 03:19:44 PM
i've noticed that both the theory threads died, and the new theory discussion about the os-tan world is springing up in the wrong place.

SO I PRESENT TO YOU, THE OS-TAN THEORY THREAD.

the os-tan world

Quote from: "aurora"Something I wondered about is the location of the OS-tan world, I've never thought of it taking place in the 'real world', but rather cyberspace, to explain things like how several of the LUC members live together though they're mainly from opposite sides of the US, etc. Maybe this could be another conjecture article, like with the OS-tan species thing?

Relating to this, I'd imagine Linux-tan as being born in an isolated, rural area going with that hypothesis.

The real world theory especially confuses me because of the Binteeji Renmei, which has OS-tans from all over the US and UK, where would their faction be located? I had imagined there'd be a Windows Empire, Mac Kingdom, The Binteeji Renmei located somewhere presumably in a neutral territory, the Unix Nation (not sure if they'd be an empire anymore), etc.

Quote from: "bells"I always imagined the OS-tan universe taking place in the "real world", albeit a very technologically advanced (bordering on magical) one. The LUC, for example, I imagine would have headquarters on the east and west coasts of the US, with other holdings all around the world -- while the Macs would, naturally, live in Cupertino, the Windows-tans in Redmond, etc -- the thing that sets Linux-tan, for example, so far apart is that she doesn't really have a hometown. By this reasoning she was born in Helsinki, but doesn't have a corporate HQ that she's attached to.

Sounds like a good topic for a Theory article though -- do you suppose we should sort the different theories by their "creators" or just have each one in its own section? IE, have one section call the Cyperspace Theory of OS-tans, another the Real World Geography Theory, etc...

Quote from: "choco"in my os-tan comiket, the world isn't really discussed (of course i only have 1 issue for right now) but maybe a sort of parallel-japan? all i know is that the main house was on a large compound (large house w/ yard). the macs lived nearby (walking distance) and i imagined the NT branch of the windows house wasn't too far either (Inu-t was at the main house, but i imagined she'd live with NT-tan.)
there was also a market nearby.

evolution, hybrids, hardware, and other species/classes
Quote from: "Bella"
...Also, I had a thought (all this talk of OS/hardware/software relationships gave me the idea)-- d'ye suppose that hardware, software and OS-tans are distinctly different species? I mean, they're all alike in that they're humanoid, but that they're essentially unrelated?

-(Computer) hardware-tans would almost always be mortal and age. Not nearly as quickly as humans, but they wouldn't be ageless like OS-tans either (since hardware is physical and prone to physical damage). Hardware-tans would have the most affinity with OS-tans (since hardware and OS directly communicate) and very rarely work with software-tans.

They were the first of the three groups to be created by humans, and have an existence spanning many decades (although earliest ancestors may have been created hundreds-- even thousands-- of years ago, depending on what you consider "computer hardware" to be).

-OS-tans can be mortal or immortal and are almost always ageless. As a species, they're more conducive to magic (sourcery if you will) because software tends to be more mailable than hardware (existing only as data-- information-- instead of being physical like hardware*). Equally cooperative with hardware and software.

They were created after hardware-tans, to do things (maybe that aforementioned magic?) that hardwares are incapable of.

-Software-tans are related to OS-tans, but still distant enough to be their own species. The same comments regarding mortality, aging and magic-conductivity that apply to OS-tans apply to software-tans. Typically regarded as a lower caste in the computer-tan universe, software-tans are generally dependent upon OS-tans for employment, companionship and ultimately survival (since you can't use a program w/o an OS to run it on). They have very little contact with hardware-tans.

The last species, Firmware-tans, would be something akin to a cross of hardware and program-tan or OS-tan; they'd probably be the lowest class, but one of the largest, since firmware is used in almost EVERYTHING electronic. They usually play a support role for or intermediary between hardware and OS-tan.

I also imagine that only members of a certain species would be able to have children-- meaning that two OS-tans could, in theory, beget a lil' OS-tan, but that a software and OS-tan couldn't. (For instance, there have been rare cases when two OSes have been merged to create a third OS-- but since software, hardware and OS are so different, you could never cross any of the three and make a new product). Then again, there are some instances (typically historical) of hardware and OS being so closely connected that the result is a hybrid of the two-- but these were more likely the result of human creation than natural crossbreeding between species.

I've thoroughly read through all this and will comment in-depth, but I'd like to add something: I decided to split these -tans into different groups exactly so I COULD avoid the problem of the evolution of OS-tans. Aside from evolution in social customs and outward appearances (clothing, etc), I'd rather not think about hardware/software/OS-tans evolving because I've always assumed that they were created by humans and are not some sort of natural phenomena within the OS-tan universe.

As for OS-tan deaths, death is usually caused by a diminished userbase-- OSes with the largest userbases are the healthiest, while those with very small or nonexistent userbases are dead. There are exceptions to this rule, of course-- Multics and SAGE-sama, for instance, should by all means be dead, but are considered alive for story purposes. Xenix-tan, on the other hand, could arguably be considered alive (since Xenix can be, and is, emulated) but she's dead for the sake of story purposes.

Also, when I speak of hardware-tans, I don't mean drones of nameless, random pieces of computer hardware-- I mean one -tan for each distinct computer system. Like there would be a first-gen iMac-tan (or -kun), an IBM PC-kun, a PDP-10-kun-- not a character for every single computer ever made, because that would result in bedlam rather quickly.

@ Aurora: microcomputer-tans would be what I described as "hybrids" of OS/software and hardware-tan. Since the OS/BASIC interpreter and hardware are SO closely connected (at least from a user viewpoint) to be almost inseparable. This will also come up a lot with very old OSes and computer-tans, from the days when there was only a thin line of distinction between the hardware and the software controlling the hardware.

If you want to look at it from an evolution POV, I see them as the transitional species between hardware and OS-tan. The difference from being that evolution implies a transformation from simpler to more complex lifeforms, I don't think hardware-tans are less developed than OS-tans-- they look and act alike and have the same intelligence, it's just that OS-tans can manipulate "energy" or "magic" in ways that hardwares can't.

@ Choco: the evolution of Unix to Linux is more like a... bloodline... if you ask me. It's like talking about the evolution of yourself from your great-grandmother. (BTW, the Unix-tans and Linux-tans are supposed to be related; they're supposed to be roughly from the same "race" or culture, sort of like two people sharing the same country and customs being considered related).

I wouldn't dismiss armies of random hardware-tan masses for storyline purposes, but then again, there's not a lot I would dismiss for storyline purposes. It's not my place to tell people what they can and can't do for a story, just because it doesn't precisely match up with my vision of the OS-tan universe-- short of someone inventing new characters to replace existing ones, or radically re-writing established backgrounds for the characters, that is.

I like the Mac "mafia" idea, as for the Linuxes being like Commies... I actually think that they'd be quite the opposite. Sure, they ARE strongly socialistic, but they're also a very open, transparent culture and attach a lot of stigma to secrecy and shady dealings. If anything, the old school Unices would have have been more Communistic, not really philosophically but politically-- at least in their rapid takeover of vast amounts of "territory" through rather... underhanded... means. >.>

Sorry for that TL;DR: but I've always loved inventing new species and races and stuff. This was fun. ^^
Quote from: "Aurora"BTW, I edited my post and went more in-depth about it, but I agree, Bella.

Still wanting to know about the Mac 'mafia', I don't think the Mac-tans are in it by choice, and they have to follow orders, or at least the OSX-tans do, since the 'protection' doesn't apply as much --or at all-- to the Classic Mac-tans. Speaking of which, I think the Classic Mac-tans have stayed in the House of Mac out of loyalty for the OSX-tans, and the OSX-tans are grateful but have not experienced any other upbringing aside from the 'protection' they live under so they have to comply with executive orders.

I read your edited post and would have to agree with you on all points. :)

At least when I envision this Mac Mafia scenario, it's not exactly like the typical idea of organized crime-- not even criminal at all, of course. But I imagine the Macs are a group that have a VERY high regard for family, honour and tradition, and have a lot of gratitude and reverence for their leader-- don, so to speak-- Jobs. ^^'

They know they can never seize political power and regain their lost territory (the home computer market) but this doesn't faze them very much because they're comfortable in their own niche market-- or racket, if you will. They're generally good-willed and friendly, too, but they can go a bit overboard when it comes to proving a point to their competition.
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"
are we considering the vintage OSes their own species or just a class of OS?

Depends of the Vintage-tan in question. Some are purely hardware, some are OS-tan, others (like the micros) are hybrid of the two.
(hybrid) It's a fusion of two (or possibly more?) different species... just like a mule isn't considered its own species, but a cross of horse and donkey. So they're both hardware and OS-tan or program-tan.

But I guess you could say it's its own species for the sake of organisation...

I suppose file type should be a kind of -tan. Hardwares, of course, could be split us further into different sub-categories: actual computers, peripherals, storage devices, etc. but I'd rather not do that now.
We're overthinking things, guys! :V

As least in the case of hardware, software and OSes and class system, that's a fluid thing. At the dawn of computer-tans, all that existed were hardware-tans. Somewhere along the line, softwarish/OS elements were incorporated into hardwares, but it wasn't until the 1950s that OS-tans split away from hardwares and a separate species and not until the late 50s/early 60s that they jumped slightly ahead of hardwares on the social class scale. Software/App-tans are a bit difficult to judge: they're vital to OS-tans in support roles and some become just as powerful and popular (and even richer) than some of their OS-tan counterparts (Photoshop-tan, for example) but they still have a lot of strange customs that prevent them from full participation in the computer community (like being restricted to certain OS social circles... in the case of a Mac only or Windows only program).

And also, like Aurora pointed out, social status does not necessarily equal economic status. There are plenty of OS-tans who are poor and software and hardware-tans who are wildly rich: the difference being, namely, how they interact with each other (in other words, no amount of riches could buy a Linux-only app-tan the power to socialize with Windows OS-tans).

I also agree that hybrid OS-and-hardware-two-in-one -tans should be considered on par with OS-tans.

As for processors being their own -tans, I don't wanna trample on anyone elses' designs or views of the OS-tan universe (and I have seen some nice processor/HDD/etc -tans), but in the computer hardware-tan designs I create it'll be assumed that those are a part of the computer-tan himself/herself. (IE, the processor is the brain, the HDD is the memory centre, the mobo is the spine/centre of the nervous system... and so on and so forth).
And just how the hell are we supposed to do this?

EDIT: Also, bear in mind that I don't want to freak people out by telling them "this is the way things are". Everyone seems to have his or her own vision on the OS-tan universe (seeing as the fandom is "fanon" and not "canon"), and I don't want to be intolerant of other ideas...
Mac
Linux
Unix
Windows
DOS

I'm not exactly feeling the vintage class, since it's so broad... it could refer to anything from a mainframe to a micro. I'd further the divisions to include various non-Unix:
-Minicomputer OSes (the DEC-tans and DG-tans for example)
-Microcomputers (OS/hardware hybrids like the Commodores, Ataris, early Apples)
-Mainframe-tans (the IBM-tans, CDC-tans, Multics, etc)
-Others

As for the Hardware-tans, it would seem Wikipedia has already laid out different classifications for us.
Also agreeing with Nej on the lineage v. family thing-- two people can be of the same tribe, culture, family, even if they don't have the same bloodline.
Quote from: "NejinOniwa"Imma go out on a limb and say you people who want categorization of programs for STORYLINE purposes, go ahead and do whatever you want with that. It does seem quite unnecessary to categorize them as a central effort, however, since it goes without saying that programs are one of the more obscure classes...aside from a VERY select few.

...

As for the subcategorization itself - I see it as counterproductive and a quite useless effort. Looking at the OS side for example, what categorization we have of them is in affiliation - which the apps don't have nearly as much of - and to some extent, heritage - which apps usually don't go by with, seeing as they normally evolve from themselves and merely version-up, or otherwise. A very good exception from this is the entire Mozilla family; their Gecko engine is derived off later Netscape (i think?), and FX, TB and Seamonkey all stem from Mozilla Suite; they also have distinct version changes, which could be used for certain storyline purposes.
The fact, however, is that this sort of easymode family tree is VERY uncommon from what I know in the apps cloud, and thus the easiest thing would be to skip the lesser classification altogether in cases where the family/heritage categorization can't be made - all in all, I say that's the sort of categorization system we should stick to over most classes.

This.

The entire reason I even got to thinking about hardware-tan/OS-tan/software-tan classification was for my own story purposes... it's good to have some organisation, but let's not get bogged down in semantics so to speak. <.<
Slightly OT, but I've been trying to figure out how hardware/OS-tan relationships work in conjunction with OS-to-certain architecture relationships.

The Unices and Linuxes, for example, would probably be very democratic and open toward computer-tans of all varieties, since *nixes are very portable and used on tons of different processor architectures.

Whereas the DEC OS-tans (for example) might be more "xenophobic" toward hardware-tans outside of their own cultures... since DEC OSes could only run on DEC computers. Same goes for the Mac-tans, and any of the old-school OS-tans. (Since portability is a relatively modern idea.)

[/randomthoughts]
@Aurora: the OSXen can now socialise with non-Apple hardware-tans, but it would probably still be against social mandates to do so.

Perhaps, but hardware or software the Mainframe-tans are still very powerful and would probably respect each other (at least to a point. ^^').

@Stew: If SCOPE ain't happy ain't nobody happy, huh? d:

@Kari: Yep, the Windows-tans are definitely sociable when it comes to hardware-tans (yet another Unix/Windows parallel... portability, portability, portability). The OSX-tans COULD venture outside of their Apple-centric society, but would have to do so in the utmost secrecy... just because it's possible, doesn't mean they'd necessarily WANT to do it.

This is something I've realised all along, since OSes work directly with hardware. I think it would vary depending on the character in question... some hardware-tan/OS-tan pairings would constitute friends, business partners and couples. But they definitely wouldn't be relatives of any sort... remember, hardwares and OSes are completely different species. While they look and act alike, they're biologically unrelated and incompatible and derive from completely different ancestries.

Quote from: "Aurora Borealis"
Those ideas all sounds very good, even the part about the Mac-tans being forbidden from interacting with non-Apple hardware-tans.

But many of the vintage home computer-tans blur the line between hardware and software, representing not just the computer but the OS/BASIC it runs. So would they be considered both at the same time? Though I think they'd be more in line with the OS-tans, since these characters would also be cooperative with the software-tans.

Hope that doesn't interfere with that the Mac-tans (especially the Classic ones) are known to visit the vintage-tans from time to time! ^^;

I agree that hardware-tans would have widely varying lifespans, with time not just taking a physical toll but also an emotional toll for those old hardware-tans that were touted as the NEXT BIG THING when they were new.

But I don't see the Mac-tans as supremacists themselves, in fact they're very friendly with most others and have friends from different factions, but it's the security enforced by the executives that is, and forces them to be shut-ins for the most part.

When you're referring to the Classic-tans, are you referring to them being less (or not) 'protected' by the security --and giving them the freedom to be with others, though at the cost of protection from danger-- or the rest of the family, since I see the Mac-tans being a close-knit family despite major generation gaps. (This referencing the considerably large userbase of vintage Mac hobbyists who use both the Classic Mac OS and OSX in the present day)

I can certainly see Tiger-tan and Leopard-tan being the rebellious types though, and interact with 'unapproved' outsiders to challenge the the security guards.

As for OSes that can run on multiple architectures, I see it as an OS-tan being multi-lingual.

I like the forbidden love idea between ME-tan and Mac OS9-kun. While the more laid-back Mac-tans and Windows-tans may approve, there'd be fierce opposition from 95-tan and OSX-tan.

The Windows Family is laid back, with the younger Windows-tans having grown up in peace and prosperity their whole lives. They'd be accepting towards various software-tans --though too accepting at times, to the point of risking their own safety--, but there a lot of secrets are being kept from them.

Their security, enforced by their executives are historical revisionists who have erased records of the family history before the OS Wars, so the Windows-tans know nothing of 1.0-tan, 2.0-tan, PC-DOS-tan, Xenix-tan, and OS/2-tan being a part of the family instead of an enemy. Poor MS DOS-tan, who is still part of the Windows Family, and remembers all of the family's history but is not allowed to speak of it!

I'm still iffy on the idea of the Mac-tan mafia since almost all of them are way too friendly for that (an exception maybe being the gun-toting System 7.5-tan), but do you think may be that way against their will?

The Linux-tans vary a lot. Some of them affiliate with the hard-lined 'elite' Unices, while others are eager to interact with anyone and don't care for stealth tactics, and some of them live as hermits and wanderers. The Unices as a whole are similarly diverse. But there are conflicts between the more elite, and more free Linux-tans.

I think the Vintage-tans would be in a class of their own, but as equals to the OS-tans.

The lifespan for an OS-tan is characterized by the OS's popularity when it was current, how much it continues to be used (if at all), and how well remembered it is.

In the case of Apple I-tan, she represents a fairly well-known computer that had an extremely limited run, but lives on in emulators and Apple I replicas being made currently.

Another case is Xenix-tan, an obscure Unix version from Microsoft. Wasn't widely used or remembered. She died in obscurity.

Even though the Commodore 64 is long-discontinued, C64-tan will live for a long time with all the emulators out there, including a fully licensed one for the iPhone!

However, some life/death cases aren't so clear-cut, or decided for story reasons. Like with Apple III-tan, representing a system that sold very poorly with a high percentage of defective units 30 years ago, and she's still alive!


EDIT: On the OS-tan wiki front page, I created a section for OS-tan theories and conjectures, and will add the evolutions and species theories. :)

I see the each of them as distinct but equally important species, with the vintage computer-tans being in a class of their own. Many of them had not just their own proprietary hardware, but also their own OS/BASIC, file formats, and ROM/firmware in one package.

There was some of that divergence in the 80's, with the DOS-tans and the Mac OS-tans, but it wasn't until the 90's that this became the norm and not the exception.

It was mainly due to MS DOS and the different Windows versions running on various hardware brands. The other major competitor was of course the Mac OS and its distinct hardware. This sacrifice of hardware+OS integration has the advantage of flexibility and adaptability, mainly for OSes that run on x86 architecture.

Sure, the Mac OS has always been confined to Apple hardware, but not just one particular model.

BTW, I edited my post and went more in-depth about it, but I agree, Bella.

Still wanting to know about the Mac 'mafia', I don't think the Mac-tans are in it by choice, and they have to follow orders, or at least the OSX-tans do, since the 'protection' doesn't apply as much --or at all-- to the Classic Mac-tans. Speaking of which, I think the Classic Mac-tans have stayed in the House of Mac out of loyalty for the OSX-tans (even though most of the Classic-tans would actually be better suited as Vintage Federation members), and the OSX-tans are grateful but have not experienced any other upbringing aside from the 'protection' they live under so they have to comply with executive orders. :(
Each 'class' of OS-tan should still be the same species, just of different cultures. Still support the idea of calculator-tans as mercenaries.
I think the hybrids should still be equals to the OSes, at least for storyline purposes.
Economic status can vary a lot between the OS-tans too. Windows 1.0-tan and 2.0-tan are OS-tans, but as part of the Vintage Federation, they're by no means wealthy.

And there's the OS-tans of the Anti$oft Coalition, with their constant financial problems!
Don't forget the Unixes and the mainframes.

The vintage class has some overlap with Mac and Windows. And Yggdrasil might count as a vintage Linux OS.

The DOSes are listed as their own class in the wiki and Annex Project.
I agree with the classes, and the family vs. lineage thing, but it's a little stranger than that...

The Windows Family and the Mac House both have two united lineages.

With the whole extended Apple Family, make that at least three lineages with the Classic Apple-tans (Apple I/II/IIGS/III), or four with the iPod-tans. Or five if Newton-tan is considered a lineage of her own.

While those are families (and their own factions) of united lineages, the Unix lineage is divided into different families and factions!
The OS Wars arc involving the Windows and Macs reminded me of the Montagues and Capulets respectively in the anime adaptation "Romeo x Juliet". :)
I agree with the classes.
if OS-tans can die, programs probably can too.
That all sounds good. Likewise Windows and DOS would be open to many different brands of hardware, if not different architectures.

OSX Tiger, Leopard and Snow Leopard would be rule-breakers though among the Mac-tans, being able to run on other x86 hardware. Still can be done, although Apple has been cracking down on that with the newer Snow Leopard releases.

However, among the mainframes are some characters who represent OSes (i.e: SCOPE, NOS, MACE, etc.), plus some that represent only hardware (i.e: Harvard Mark Series, ENIAC, etc.), or those that represent both but mainly the hardware (i.e: Cray-1). I wonder if that would make for some interesting debates among the Mainframe Guild members.

Quote from: "Nejin Oniwa"
If there's one thing one needs when producing any sort of material, it's order. Chaos plays a big role as well, but things need sorting out a lot more than they need shuffling around.

The hardware mortality is a good idea - especially since in the day of the now, not only do they suffer physical damage and degradation but all the more they become outdated. Thus recent hardware-tans will have to exist in extreme abundance, while very select few have actually aged well and remained "alive" and in use - although the hardware itself might not physically age very quickly, they mature and become obsolete very fast, and don't tend to live very long and/or break down at a young age. Easy fodder for TRAGEDY TRAGEDY TRAGEDY, the transience of hardware is.

OS-tans are wide in kind and number, and differ alot from each other - as natured by the difference in their code and usage of file systems, file types, etc. While software-tans are way more abundant, they always have to order themselves by family of end-user OSes; the caste system idea is a good idea indeed, and I would also like to lobby for conflicts over license usage (GPL vs closed source etc) among the families themselves. The Mac-tans as a supremacist familia of somewhat shut-in ladies and gents protected by Tiger SPs is an idea I endorse here, and only select families of software AND hardware -tans allowed to visit "the mansion"; the classics would most likely be less protected or even uncared for in the older cases, and the younger sisters may be rebellious from case to case - I don't know the Macs that well, though, so maybe leaving it to Aurora/Bella is a good idea in this case.

As for Firmware-tans, I don't know if they are entirely necessary - that'd mean that a classic iPod, for example, would have two -tans: the Hardware part, and the Firmware/OS part (which is the same, afaik) - and the same goes for your everyday gfx card as well. This seems highly redundant to me.

The Vintage-tans are a special case, both in -tan "biology" and capability - they were, after all, the origins, the Homo Erectus of computers, if you will - and and thus they are several of the things at once. It's not blurring the lines, since the lines were pretty much not invented at that time. Their evolution WAS the drawing of lines, so to speak. So rather than the HW-tans being "created" after the OS-tans, they would rather have been distinguished as of a different class than the OS-tans somewhere in the middle of the Vintage-tan evolution from computer-tan to multiple species, and since diverged further.

Some interesting events make for crossroading questions. For example, OS architecture porting (OpenVMS VAX to Alpha and Alpha to Itanium, for example) poses an interesting question. How is this to be considered in the element of the evolution of the OS itself? What is the difference, if any, between XP Pro and XP x64, or Mac OSX PPC and Intel? Is it constant among the differently platformed OSes?


As I'm writing this TL;DR, I realize I should REALLY start working on some OS-Tan fiction as soon as I get my stuff done and ready. Hope for a thread to be revived/rebooted somewhere during the summer, if all goes well. WRITERS READY UP~

Data does not age (kinda). Thus the only two deaths OS-tans (and vintages as well) are susceptible to would be death by complete extinction of all copies, OR the death of all supporting HW-tans (although emulation adds in an idea of possible OS NECROMANCY in this case).

Emulator-tans...now THAT'S a SW-tan class with some pretty big power, there. Necromancers/Spirit mediums much? -w-

Standardization and clarification is needed much here -w-;

At least, if one is aiming for some sort of canon continuity. Some might not. -w-

I meant, if OUR canon is to have some sort of continuity within itself, and not just be a strange assortment of buttcheeks and waffle iron.

Internal Apple Familia oppression...I CAN SMELL THE PLOT. Z:3

Linux-commie idea seems a bit meh to me as well. If for nothing else then the fact that Linux/Torvalds TEH CREATOR is from Finland, one of the few countries in the area to actually manage escaping Sovietification back in the day (and well managing to kick quite a heap of ruski ass in the Winter War), I'd say it'd make for a good attitude against that sort of stuff.

Vintage class of its own is pretty much what I've been thinking but more on that later as this demon has SHITLOADS OF WERK.

Also it'd be more appropriate to continue the OS-volution etc discussion and stuff not related to this IBM topic in Aurora's new thread:[/size]
http://ostan-collections.net/viewtopic.php?t=1238

Hybrid isn't exactly a species. It's a class composed of those with elements of multiple other species. Or what?
File types is one thing I'm hesitant to - it just seems like one thing to many in the bottle...
Well, I don't know about you guys - but my experience as a writer is that generalizing tends to be the better option instead of specifying (and that's despite me doing a LOT of specifying in my works) at most times. I'm just doubting whether it'll come to use at all if we do branch it off; then again, we're multiple writers so one might use what another might not...gah, so annoying. -_-;
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"that's the benefit of having multiple writers, one person = one species or the like.

i'm a comic artist. and from my experience, details can make all the difference. i try not to generalize (except for crowd scenes, like the barfight i drew the other day), so that each thing sparkles in its own right. sure, it takes a little while, but the results are worth it.
I suppose that's very true for comics; The reverse rules for literature, since you just can't take it all in in one glance like you do with an image.
What was the stance on vintages, by the way? Classification in the basics may not be the best with the ways we've used them storyline-wise, so just "unclassified" or "Vintage Class" might be to prefer.
Vintage is partly a subclass, since OSes can be both Vintage and another class - the old OLD Apple OSes and the like.
Family trees are one of the most hellish things ever to construct, as a matter of fact. -_-

As for DOS/NT they're both the same class of OS-tan - just different lineage (what with the NTs being diverged off VMS to NT and onward whilst the DOSes are descended from MS-DOS and whatever came before that) to base things off. No class diff, same thing with the macs. Unless you start talking about classes as actual lineage, which would make things overly complicated and start dividing things for no reason, that is. I suggest we simply link "class" with affiliation for the sake of ezmodo.
Quote
Also agreeing with Nej on the lineage v. family thing-- two people can be of the same tribe, culture, family, even if they don't have the same bloodline.
The Clan does, however, only accept new members through the old-fashioned ways of marriage, birth and superior awesomeness, so we won't be getting our first new official member for a while until next year...
Ufufufufufufufu. -∀-

OS Classes seem fine. And speaking of the Windows family, it's an awful lot like what happened to the Swedish royal family back in the 1800's...what with the Vasas dying out and the Bernadottes taking their place, and such. Good riddance. -w-;
The obvious question:
WHO ARE THE CAPULETS, AND WHO ARE THE MONTAGUES?
An OS is software in that it's not hardware - it's code, data, information stored on some sort of hardware medium. Thus, it is software.

Not to say that I refer to OSes as software anywhere else than in technical references - I'm well off with either, although "software" is a smoother term, despite the wider spectrum.
Think like this: OSes are humans, and Apps/Programs are zoo animals. Both kinds are animals, but the zoo animals can't survive all that well without the humans' services (well, I dunno, but probably not all of them, at least) to promote their way of life. In turn, the humans are provided various services (entertainment and in some cases knowledge from studies, in this example) from the animals.
The same trip goes for OSes vs Apps/Programs. Both are software, but one is rather dependent on the other for an environment they can survive in as well as provide their services to the other.

METAPHORS YAY.
Imma go out on a limb and say you people who want categorization of programs for STORYLINE purposes, go ahead and do whatever you want with that. It does seem quite unnecessary to categorize them as a central effort, however, since it goes without saying that programs are one of the more obscure classes...aside from a VERY select few.

As for your question, choco, Websites are content displayed by an engine (software) run by a server OS; whereas the other three are merely possible subcategories of programs/apps/software/mcguffin, and thus go there anyway, subcategorization or not.

As for the subcategorization itself - I see it as counterproductive and a quite useless effort. Looking at the OS side for example, what categorization we have of them is in affiliation - which the apps don't have nearly as much of - and to some extent, heritage - which apps usually don't go by with, seeing as they normally evolve from themselves and merely version-up, or otherwise. A very good exception from this is the entire Mozilla family; their Gecko engine is derived off later Netscape (i think?), and FX, TB and Seamonkey all stem from Mozilla Suite; they also have distinct version changes, which could be used for certain storyline purposes.
The fact, however, is that this sort of easymode family tree is VERY uncommon from what I know in the apps cloud, and thus the easiest thing would be to skip the lesser classification altogether in cases where the family/heritage categorization can't be made - all in all, I say that's the sort of categorization system we should stick to over most classes.

Quote from: "I"
wow, i actually had to take notes on this. oh lawls.

let's see...

--the apple forbidden from mating with other -tans lends itself a romeo x juliet air in the case of emuii-tan and kyourou-kun, due to the fact that from fandom (and the comic i transcribed myself) has kyourou hopelessly in love with emuii-tan, and emuii returning his feelings to some extent. this makes for a very interesting story, no? :3 (although the only one i would think would be truely angry in the windows sect would be 95-tan; as for the mac side i figure the only ones NOT angry with this pairing would be sonata, apple II, apple I (may she rest in peace), and maybe system1-tan.)

--hardware morality makes sense. it also lends itself to that idea i had about the IBM army--lots of strapping young hardware-kuns charging off to battle with the other hardware types, thus ending their lifespan, leading to only a few straggling survivors in their old age.
-tragedy may be a good motif for this, although WE'D have to make up the parings, as there aren't exactly alot of canon hardware-tans/kuns.
-technically they are the oldest, as TECHNICALLY the first computer was created by ada lovelace, which was pure hardware. we could consider them "the original race", or something. they should at least garner some respect.
-i was going to consider firmware part of the limited "magics" held by the hardware species, but i like your idea MUCH better.

--the os-tans may be the most complex of the species to plan, as most of it is already planned out for us. this SEEMS simpler, but in reality this actually binds us to the set given.
-nej, i like your idea about the mac "famigilia". this (http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=7&pos=28) is pretty much how i've thought of the macs, so only "elite" software seems to fit this image. i also like the idea of the youngsters being "rebellious", though OSX-tan would probably be a little more traditional than OSX-kun or the OS9 set. (the italian flair also goes with the romeo/juliet thing i mentioned earlier ;D )
-i am wondering what sort of "magics" you meant, considering the software are a class in themselves. explain?
-the windows seem like they would be more laid-back, as with the usual setting for the windows houses, relaxed, japanese, and cozy. they would welcome even unlicenced software with open arms, though vista would ask permission first. xD
-the linux, considering they are rather scattered, seem like they'd be more like an underground group, having secret meetings, like communists in the 1950's. xD they would probably cater to mainly open-source/unlicenced software, and be a bit more stealthy in their dealings. they probably would not get along with other clans, if they got along with themselves.
-OSes are not immortal, if i remember right. i once read that apple 1 died, as did a few others. they might have impressive longevity, maybe even not able to succumb to natural causes (what IS "natural" for an OS??), but they CAN die.

--i like the idea of firmware-tans. i have an art book that reminds me of something that bella said about them:
Quote from: "Bella"ITS CRAZY :V WE SHOULD HAVE A PICNIC AT LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE SOMETIME OR SOMETHING. :V
no, not that, though we should. xD
Quote from: "Bella"they'd probably be the lowest class, but one of the largest, since firmware is used in almost EVERYTHING electronic.
the art book is called "Manga Matrix" (i reccomend it, $25), one of it's purposes is to help people plan stories. one of the samples i really took a shine to (actually helped inspire a potential comic of mine) and i think it would fit here.
the pages are here (http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/boundarysky1.jpg), here (http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/boundarysky2.jpg), and here (http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/boundarysky3.jpg) (the third one is just the unreadable text on #2.). I think the stateless people from the story would describe the firmware-tans quite well. (on another note, like the statless people, they are connected with the upper-class whether they like it or not [in this case the hardware-tans].)

--software-tans would most likely be of a lower class than the rest (but not as low as firmware). They are dependent upon OSes for work and purpose, for without OSes, they (technically) do not exist (though with disk-burning, this is subject to speculation). There would likely be 3 classes: Licenced, Unlicenced, and Freeware. (i suppose piracy could come into play as a 4th class, but me thinks they would fall under "unlicenced".) I'm thinking that Certian OSes would only hire certian Software; i'm thinking Mac would mainly hire Licenced (and very few at that), Windows would be equal-oppertunity, and Linux would cater mostly to Freeware.
-Software reminds me of a sort of assistant to OSes, like a boss and secratary (in certian cases).
-Applications and gadgets should fall under this catagory.
-Would malware fall under this catagory?

--I like the evolution theory for Vintage-tans, although this is slightly degrading in addition to being true; if we compare them to evolution, then as the "modern" OSes represent the evolutionary stage of today, Vintage would be farther down on the chain, as early homo sapiens, or perhaps even closer to our primate cousins.

--I vote we start a seperate species for Filetypes, as they are not software, not OS, and not anything else. i can't figure out where to place them, unless we start counting them as the "cells" of the OS, as they make up the OS itself.

also, i made a prototype hierarchy chart based on the one in the book.
(http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/oshierarchy.jpg)

hmm, i think i'm done with my arguements.

very cool, thanks aurora-sama. ^^

given that the mac familt sports lisa, OSX, AND 7.5-tan, not to mention a brigade of overprotective catboys and close-minded office execs, the mafioso idea doesn't seem TOO far off.....

considering the vintages are OSes, they would probablyfall under that catagory. but there needs to be some explanations...
1. time warp
2. immortality
3. evolutionary
4. clones
5. suspended animation
6. ????
7. profit

bella: i suppose you're right about the hardware-tans, although for certian computers (and storyline purposes) having an army of clone-puters would be pretty cool.
as for os-volution, there must be SOME hints of it, whether it's a family line or OSes coming from other computers. unix to linux could be considered an os-volution.
i wonder if, for storyline purposes, viruses and malware could "kill" an OS-tan.
(ps. dost thou live in plymouth? :3)

nej: since when is this canon? WE keep the -tans alive now. which means WE make the canon stuff now.

hmm, indeed, there has to be SOME organization. i think that may be what sparked this philosophical conversation of philosophy and os-tan
(or "On the OS-tan of Species").

yes, orginization is needed. but first we need to agree on what is being organized. we have os-tans, software, and hardware as separate species; we all agree on that it seems. i like the idea of firmware and filetypes as separate species as well. does everyone agree? and what to do about vintage-tans?

after that, there's the OS-volution debate. then we could probably start some organizing, cause then we'll know what we're dealing with.

the "hybrids" from long ago could result from a time when OSes were not limited to whom they could reproduce with. An OS could have mated with a Hardware, producing the hybrid. as time moved on, it was considered "forbidden" to mate an OS and a piece of hardware. hybrids should also perhaps (for storyline purposes) be a different class, or maybe treated as outcasts in certian ways, since they are a fusion of what should (by modern standards) not be fused.
so, people, on the creation of species, i was going to move for the creation of certian catagories, but i need a question answered first:
are we considering the vintage OSes their own species or just a class of OS?
ok, so the species are still OS, Hardware, Software, Firmware, Hybrid, and Filetype? (no one has disputed me on filetypes so i'm putting it in).

i move for the creation of the following categories of species:
Hardware
Software
Firmware
Operating System
Hybrids
Filetypes

seconded?
all in favor?
i think (hybrid) deserves it's own species, since it can't fall into either "hardware" or "os".
@Nejin: logically, firmware could fall under the same assumption. but it adds an interesting element to the storyline, and to be honest, if you could find a species for them to fall under, be my guest, cause i just can't. =\

@Bella: i was proposing that we set down the basic species now, then we can start working on genus, phyus, ect.
this is more about species than -tan types.

that's like making Mac-tans and Windows-tans seperate species. they're both OSes.

this is a rare moment when i'm speaking not of the fandom.
because the OS-tans are a double-edged sword: in addition to the technical aspect, we also have the storyline to think about.

firmware is both hardware and software. this means it could fall under the hybrid category, but for STORYLINE purposes, it makes it interesting to have firmware as a category.

it feels too generalized to have it just be hardware, software, and OS as the species.

we could expand it further, but by my count, we currently have:
Hardware
Software
Firmware
OS
Hybrid
Filetype

if this still bothers you, we COULD move firmware to the hybrid folder, and just have them be a lower class than the rest (or something).
i made a small chart, but it's mainly for class purposes....

(http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/osspecies.jpg)

threw this together. up for debate since we haven't taken a vote yet.

and The Hobbit had plenty of detail. What's your excuse?
Quote from: "Aurora Borealis"I think the hybrids should still be equals to the OSes, at least for storyline purposes.

With class, are you referring to purely a social/caste one, or a social/economic one?
social/caste, however this tends to effect economic status as well.

i was a little iffy on the hybrids, i figure that's better left to a case-by-case basis.
Quote from: "Aurora Borealis"Economic status can vary a lot between the OS-tans too. Windows 1.0-tan and 2.0-tan are OS-tans, but as part of the Vintage Federation, they're by no means wealthy.

And there's the OS-tans of the Anti$oft Coalition, with their constant financial problems!
not to mention the variation of the wander sect and the linuxes. :3


anyway, we're a little OT i think.

now people, before we let our ideas loose, we need somewhre fr them to go. nej is right that we need a little organization or else we end up with little moar than random assortment of buttcheeks and waffle iron.

who's cool with the species?
=\

nice? it's a little confusing since i thought we agreed that applications were falling under the same catagory as software. drivers, technically, might as well, or maybe under filetypes.

all of the hardware related stuff (processors, chips, ect.) would probably fall under hardware as a catch-all.
stew: well, you're a contributing member of society, i don't see why you shouldn't have a say.

kiso: we are moving for the basic creation of the catagories i mentioned earlier, not evolution.

in case anyone forgot, they were:
hardware
software
firmware
OS
hybrid
filetype


so far that's 5 yays, 0 nays. aurora has yet to vote.
i believe we clarified that vintage will be a catagory of OS (or hybrid, depending on the circumstance).

alright. so we've established that the following species exist:
Hardware
Software
Firmware
OS
Hybrid
Filetype


shall we move on to classes? :3
alrighty. so for OSes, we have:

Mac
Windows
Vintage
Linux
Other

any others?
good, good. ^^
i'm liking bella's sub-species of OSes, any other OS types anyone would like to add in? (of course we could debate for years over the numerous OSes in existance and whether or not to put them in.)

i'd like to add "others" to the OS list to cover any loose ends. :\ anyone opposed?
that's pretty much what i was getting at; "class" actually being "family house", so we have macs, windows, ect.

and yeah, family trees are better left to later; right now everything is strewn all over like a 4-yr-old had a tantrum in our office.
alright. :3 anyone have anything else to say on OS classes? or are we good with:
Windows
Mac
Linux
Unix
DOS
Others

?
:3
Quote from: "Bella"Agreed.

Also agreeing with Nej on the lineage v. family thing-- two people can be of the same tribe, culture, family, even if they don't have the same bloodline.
like adoption, or blood brothers. :3
are people cool w/ the following catagories for OS classes?
Windows
Mac
Linux
Unix
DOS
Others


ps. if there was ever an OS romeo x juliet it would be kyourou x emuii. ^^
IT IS DONE.

OS-CLASSES ARE AS FOLLOWS:
WINDOWS
MAC
DOS
LINUX
UNIX
OTHERS

MOVING ON, NEXT TOPIC:
SOFTWARE CLASSES.

Application
Website
Program
Antivirus (could fall under program, so this one's up for debate)
Other (sidebar gadgets, ect)
i feel that's getting ttoo specific too quickly. i use "software" as the term because 1. it matches ^^ and 2. it's an umbrella term so we cover anything we might have missed.

the reason i am so general is so that we can gradually get more and more specific.

and i don't believe OS falls under software, due to the fact that it can run on it's own. software cannot run w/o an OS.
Quote from: "NejinOniwa"An OS is software in that it's not hardware - it's code, data, information stored on some sort of hardware medium. Thus, it is software.

Not to say that I refer to OSes as software anywhere else than in technical references - I'm well off with either, although "software" is a smoother term, despite the wider spectrum.
but in this case they are their own catagory. they can survive without software; not too well, but they can, but software cannot technically "exist" without an OS to run it.
i prefer software so cover all. so we don't miss any and end up with OVER 9000 catagories.
i don't like the "applications/programs" title because it raises the question, where do websites, malware, antiviruses, sidebar apps, ect.fall?

meh. i respect your input but i don't agree with it personally. giving specific types of programs (creative, office, ect) their own catagories defeats the purpose of having a "programs" catagory. too fluffy for my taste. and having the title tailor made to application snd programs kind of throws out having websites in there, since they fall under neither description.

is any one else going to debate on this?
god, i miss a lot when i'm lazy for days on end.
let's see,

OF COURSE this was for storyline purposes. if it wasn't, it wouldn't make a lick o sense ;____;

i was going to throw sites, programs, ect into their own catagory then start breaking it down after, like domain - kingdom - phylum - class - ect ect.
(sorry if my thoughts seem a little less-than-coherent. need to get my head back to ostan...)
exactly. but if, let's say "virtual" was the domain/kingdom/whatever, we can't seem to agree on the next tier. (we've got the "OS" catagory so far, but we're stuck on "software" now, because we can't seem to agree on just what the hell that is.)
i like the "xenophobic" idea on hardware-specific computers (which means windows most certianly does NOT fit in this catagory. ^^) this would also mean that the more recent macs would be some of the first to venture outside of the family line, since it is recently discovered that mac can indeed be installed on a windows computer (monopoly no more!)

the hardware-software relationship between older OSes can really be played upon, i just realized. business partners? married couple? twins? sounds interesting :3
firmware is an essential part of the computing process--! don't treat it like a lower-class component--!

Quote from: "kiso"Hmm... I read through the whole first page... and the post above. I clearly understand that you people are trying to define clear categories for '-tans. So I have the following question to make:

Why is "firmware" set apart from anything?

To me (and judging by the Wikipedia article)... it would just be the software form of hardware. So it would fall under "OS" or "Software".

Hmmm... this got me thinking too much and brought me right into taxonomy. But yeah, you can use basic taxonomy to separate most of the species and evolutions through the different taxonomic ranks/categories. At least that will allow for Firmware to exist somewhere... or not... lol
If anything... I have done both and can agree with both. But then... hybrids of anything can exist and firm ware can just be it's own kingdom in between hardware and software... at least there it could better represent itself.

Hmm... I think I feel the need to create an evolution tree to represent what I have thought up so far.
I made an evolution tree!! Might explain what I was thinking later though... I have a headache that forces me to not think too much.
(http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/kisosevotree-01.jpg)
@Chocofreak13: f by making basic species you mean an evolution tree, I guess we will all differ in views.... just the way it is. But I guess I can vote "yes" if that means that we are going to agree on what is what. Then again, it may never be like that... unless we're talking about hardware. But when it comes to zeroes and ones... we're pretty much stuck.

I call "software" anything that's not physically tangible (OSes, Apps, Filetypes, Firmware, etc.) that is directly related to computer hardware... and you refer to software when you speak of apps/programs. Bella said that she views the different hardware parts as parts of a computer-tan's body. I share Bella's view, however, I also can view them as separate entities themselves... mainly because I've seen the illustrations on each hardware part already.

I don't know if it's just me, but if we want to move forwards with this. We actually need to agree on the really basic stuff. Then again... we could all end up arguing and just go back to drawing. I'd kinda' feel bad if something like the latter happened though.

EDIT: @stewartsage: You can vote if you want... you just need to know what we're talking about. You should also contribute... the more people that do, the more fun and random this might end up being. :D
@Chocofreak: Uhm... yeah... I forgot that I needed to write the alternative to all that I wrote there... which basically amounts to... "yes". lol

Anyways... all of those categories do exist... I still view them differently, but yes... they exist already.

@Nejin: Ditto on what Aurora said.
Well... for further expansion we'd have to look into the roots of all OSes, since many are simply versions of what currently exists. That would take reaaaally long though, and likely it will be too much of a job for few people to handle. Well... at least not without dedication.

Anyways... under Windows, should there be sub-classes for DOS and NT or not? The same could be said about the Mac-tans.

Man... this is actually the time to start making relationship/family trees... it would only make jobs easier.
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"alright. :3 anyone have anything else to say on OS classes? or are we good with:
Windows
Mac
Linux
Unix
DOS
Others

?
:3
If by "Other" you mean "we'll add more classes as they come up"... then yes.
We need to be looking out a few steps ahead into the road to make sure everyone comes ready to voice their opinion.

Am I right or am I wrong on this suggestion? *is only following where OP leads... but doesn't know where to...*
Instead of using "Software" as the group class... I'd suggest using "Applications/Programs". Why? Well... "software" is too redundant for it's general group word and may as well include OSes and all that. On the other hand, "application" and/or "program" are a bit more specific in that it basically asks "what does it do?"

Anyways, the above suggestion aside... I propose the following classes:

Web - More general for both browsers (Firefox, Safari, IE, etc.), engines (Trident, WebKit, Gecko, etc.) and actual pages and their internal widgets (since these are viewed/used through the browsers). ((Programs that can access or require a web connection, but do not actually browse/render the web, should probably not be in here.))

Office - We all know this one should include stuff like MS Office, OpenOffice.org and stuff related to them.

Security - This is for malware security suites such as Norton, AVG, Security Essentials and the like.

Creative/Design - Any suite/app that allows you to create/edit images, websites, magazines, and other stuff in 2D, 3D and audio. Adobe Creative Suite, Autodesk Maya and Vocaloid (yay MikuLuka!) would be great examples of this section.

Messaging/Chat - This is where all of those programs should be, you don't view the web through them you just communicate with other people. I guess this should include both text, audio and video.

Performance/Optimization - Tools that help a computer stay in tip-top shape.

Multimedia - Media consumption applications that allow you to just view, watch and/or listen to your stuff. Windows Media Player, iTunes, Winamp, Zune player, Windows Media Center (not the actual OS, mind you), Preview (that's from Mac OS), etc.)

Hmm... I guess that should about cover all of the things that are in my folder.
Wow... I managed to forget about something... the things that I least use by the way. I guess...

Data Management - For burning disc images or creating backups. Nero would fall under this. And I guess Daemon Tools would fall under here as well since it's able to read disc images and you can emulate drives and stuff. Drive encryption also falls under this category, as well as data recovery tools. So yeah...
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"EXACTLY WHAT I WAS SAYING.

and i prefer software so cover all. so we don't miss any and end up with OVER 9000 catagories.

Uuuhh... but software is just the definition of all non-tangible assets in the technology/computer sector. I'm not going to say "change eeet nao!!11!1!!", but I did want to make the point known that using "application/programs" was more of a valid term to define these new groups (if only for a mere technicality). But like I said, I won't force change on something like that based on my personal scientific thoughts.

Now... let's carry on with the topic. And by the way, you forgot to agree/disagree with my proposed classes for the "software" group. Well... that, or I missed something on your part. ^^;
Quote from: "Exa"I support Kiso's version, as it provides a more diverse classification of programs. I wonder what group would contain stuff like cd burning software, Daemon Tools and similar, as they don't seem to fit anywhere on the list. Otherwise, I like this concept.
With this new addition, I believe your classification feels complete. And considering the massive number of programs, it's not hard to miss a few by accident, and mistakes like that can be corrected. ^^
Actually, I have a different opinion about this question. I can see your problem with having too many categories. On the other hand, I do believe that even the more diverse list doesn't have uncontrollably high amount of classes. I feel that having too few categories can be just as problematic, as there would be a chance that we would end up with classes clogged up with way too many elements, which makes it harder to check through it.
Quote from: "Stew"When it comes to the CDCs at least, it's more of a matter whether SCOPE-sama likes you. Hardware or OS.

Since the interaction between hardware and OS-tans would have to be pretty close I can't imagine that outside of cultural differences (DEC, CDC, IBM, etc.), there would be much tension between the Guild members. Though some of the older members might resent the upstart "Operating Systems".
Quote from: "Kraus"Looks confusing and hard to understand at first glance. (read about everything on page 1) I would agree that OS-tan's are immortal and that hardware isn't but were douse programs fit in? Do they die or no?


if i remember right, we got as far as this on os-tan species and social classes:
Species:
Hardware
Software
Firmware
OS
Hybrid
Filetype

OS classes:
WINDOWS
MAC
DOS
LINUX
UNIX
OTHERS

we were moving on to software classes. :\

(continued in next post)
Title: (part II)
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 03:22:51 PM
os-tan family trees
Quote from: "choco"everytime we talk about older OSes, they always relate to RL releases of OSes. basically, 1 came first then 2 (which was a better version of 1) and even though 98 and SE are widely considered twins, 98 came first and SE about a year later.

this makes about as much sense as me going to church.

so i decided to take an anime approach: (DISCLAIMER: THIS IS NOT ARTISTIC, JUST -slightly- INFORMATIVE.)
http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/ostanlineage10-1.jpg

1. DOS, the black cat, guardian of the windows family.
2. Windows 1.0, the oldest known windows ancestor. Helped create the windows family.*
3. Windows 2.0, daughter of 1.0, keeper of the family record, current caretaker of 1.0.*
4. Windows 3.1, daughter of 2.0, link from main family to elder generations, current keeper of DOS. **
5. Yamada, daughter of 3.1 windows 98 first generation, current wherabouts unknown.(*)
 5.a. Windows 98, daughter of Yamada, twin sister of SE
 5.b. Windows 98 SE, daughter of Yamada, twin sister of 98
6. Windows 95, daughter of 3.1, family warrior.
 6.a. Windows ME, possible daughter of 95, ward of 2000, 1 of 3 OSTAN mascot
7. NT, daughter of 3.1, caretaker of Inu-T.
 7.a. Windows 2000, daughter of NT, guardian/caretaker of ME 1 of 3 OSTAN mascot
   7.a.a. Pizza, adopted daughter of 2000, professional public nusiance
   7.a.b. Windows Server 2000, possible daughter of 2000, Server representative
 7.b. Inu-T, daughter of NT, ward of NT
 7.c Windows XP (Saseko and Homeko), daughters of NT, twin sisters, 1 of 3 OSTAN mascot
 7.d. Windows Server 2003 (SABA), daughter of NT, current server mascot, server represntative
8. Unknown (**)
 8.a Windows Longhorn Server (SABA LONGHORN), unknown origin, server representative
 8.b Windows Vista (Vistan), Unknown origin, multiple forms
9. Norton Anti-virus, Family Doctor, pervert

*This OS, while a part of the Windows Family, does not reside within the main branch of the Windows Family.
(*)This OS is currently missing.
**Due to a time paradox at the end of the cold war, 3.1 remains younger than her children.
(**) The entire Vista branch's lineage, while inexplicibly tied to the Windows Family, cannot be traced back. Origins thus remain unknown.
aurora, i agree with most of your points. i will work them into a version 2 chart. (thanx for the compliment btw, but they're just doodles. i'm also getting a good art program and a tablet soon hopefully, so perhaps i will improve. :3 )

as for yamada tan, though, i've read around, she IS 98, but was criticized for being too plain. i still count her (she's just forgotten, like many non-mainstream tans), and besides, i've always pictured her (from an anime standpoint, not an os standpoint) as 98 and SE's mother, she looks the part, and seems to be the only OS who can actually hold down a job. but since she's not mentioned much, or pictured with any OSes, i peg her as currently "missing".

thanx for the info though. it's going into my next report.
btw, next year i hope to be part of an online animation class, if i make the cut please expect lots of OS-tan related flash clips! xD

also, next time, could you include a link to some pics of these tans? i'll go to wiki for now, but...

oh, and a suggestion for future site updates: a gallery search feature would be nice. :3
thanx both, got em. going through the wiki anyway to see if there are any i missed.

also looking on actual os releases on wiki, why don't we use their codenames more often? janus and chicago and asteroid sound nice, i think. :3 not that there's anything bad about the names now, i just think janus sounds pretty. :3
hmm, damn, i was picturing (anime standpoint) a big sis that 3.1 remembers fondly, but died when she was very small....

at any rate, i'm gonna split, okie? i'm getting antsy (pc and ps2 running upstairs) and i'm already freaking out that itunes had dissapeared. 0_0;
aurora, yours makes mine fail!!! ;_;
at any rate:

http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i98/Chocofreak13/windowsfamilytree2o.jpg

oh also i was sure there was a comic with saba longhorn it it!!! but i can't find it.....
so i'll give you this instead. ♥
http://iiichan.net/stuff/homeo/index.php?file=37

pizza is sou kawaii, rite?
ooooo do the mac tree in a mafia style!! xD there's a photo in the gallery like that, i love it! xD

at any rate, version 3 is done, just need to colour and upload.
btw, i got my tablet in the mail yesterday, perhaps we'll be seeing prettyful things coming from me now!! =D
i like it, never seen the early MACs before! (earliest i saw was Lisa and OS2.)

i should try to make an OS-kun tree, and upload the ver. 3 windows tree. O__O;

btw, got tablet and CG program! <D

aurora-san, you left out Lisa, os-2 (the blonde one) and OS9's name! (sonata)
AUGH, i'm gonna stick with windows on second thought, mac be too confusing.


except Kyourou-kyun. sou kawaii, Kyourou and Emuii 4eva!!!


lulz chatspeak xD
come to think of it, openVMS is the mother of NT-tan, who is the mother of half of the win-tans, and step-mother to the rest, which makes openVMS grandma to windows, which means we should put her in the tree too.....who was openVMS related to? can't find her in the wiki.
Quote from: "aurora"VMS-tan's mother is RSX-11-tan, whose adoptive mother is DOS-11-tan, though RSX-11-tan's true ancestry is unknown. They're listed in the wiki.

VMS-tan's younger sister is VAXELN-tan. RT-11-tan and RSTS-tan are step-relatives to them, those two being stepsisters to VMS's and VAXELN's mother.

TOPS-10-tan and TOPS-20-tan were also in the same faction as them (The DEC), and are some sort of step-relatives, but I don't know what their relation is exactly.
Quote from: "aurora"That's a pretty good chart. I like your artwork and I'm glad you remembered Windows 1.0-tan and 2.0-tan! :D

However...

2.0-tan is the oldest sister to 3.1-tan, 3.2-tan, 95-tan, the 95 OSR 2-tans, the 98-tans and possibly ME-tan. (the DOS-based branch of Windows-tans are all daughters to Windows 1.0-tan) I say possibly related to ME-tan because IIRC, Windows ME is largely DOS-based but also has some NT-based elements.

NT-tan and her descendants are not related by blood to the DOS-based Windows-tans (NT is based off of Digital Equipment Corporation's VMS operating system) and are actually stepsisters to them but none of the main Windows-tans know that. You are correct that NT-tan is the mother to Inu-T, 2K-tan, XP-tan, and Saba-tan. Vistan and Windows 7-tan are also NT-tan's daughters.

98-tan and 98SE-tan are sisters to the DOS-based Windows branch. Yamada isn't an OS-tan, she's just an OS-tan wannabe like WE-tan and Pizza-ko.

There is also a Windows 3.2-tan who is 3.1-tan's twin sister but because of 3.2-tan's distant upbringing (and living as a wanderer for her whole life), most of the other Windows-tans are unaware of her existence.

And then there are 95 OSR 2.1-tan and 95 OSR 2.5-tan but they don't reside with the rest of the Windows Family. They live as wanderers.
Another of Windows 3.x's codenames is... SPARTA!!

The Classic Mac OS also has some awesome codenames though the only one that most people know are Mac OS 9's first codename of "Sonata" and Macintosh System 7's first codenames of "Blue" and "Big Bang".
Windows 3.0-tan is the same character as 3.1-tan, just when she was very young.
3.1-tan does have a very sappy backstory in the OS-tan Annex Project:

She was born during the era of MS-IBM cooperation and she lived with Windows 1.0-tan, 2.0-tan, MS-DOS-tan, PC-DOS-tan, OS/2-tan and possibly Xenix-tan (she was said to have retired around the time 3.0-tan was born).

This was for a very short time, as later in 1990, the MS-IBM Family broke up. And then during the OS Wars, Windows 1.0-tan and 2.0-tan were exiled and 3.1-tan is not allowed to speak of them (if she can remember them at all)

Here's my try at a Windows family tree. It's a collage but I like how you went that extra mile and drew everything in yours!

(EDIT: OOPS! I forgot to add in CE-tan! >__< )

http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/albums/userpics/10307/windowshistorychart-rev1.png
Quote from: "hicamajig"Its missing server 2008, though has anyone even created a server 08 tan?
Oops! I forgot her too! >__<

There is a Server 2008-tan. She's a mackerel girl like 2003 Server-tan but 2008 Server-tan has curly blonde hair, a tiara and her mackerel body is gold-colored.
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"i came up with the idea last week, icerain. nice to meet you btw, haven't seen you before. :]

but aurora, i like yours better, on some points. i might borrow some of your format for version 3. :3
Thanks! I'm glad you like my version too but mine's not as original as yours -_-

I still need to revise my version of the Windows family tree (add in CE-tan and Server 2008-tan) and I'm also working on the Mac-tan family tree (I'm warning you all now, it's going to be weird!).
Here's the first revision of the Mac-tan family tree!

http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/albums/userpics/10307/machistorychart_rev1.jpg
And I thought that System 3.4-tan and 5-tan would be enough to make anyone go "WTF?!"

Since I added in the codenames for the Mac OSX-tan, I was wondering if I should also add in some of the codenames for the Classic Mac OSes too.
Lisa-tan and Apple II-tan (that's the other blonde girl older than the Mac-tans) are not directly related to either branch of the Macintosh line but if I decide to extend the family tree to include all the Apple-tans I'll include them in. Though I certainly should add in Lisa-tan since the Mac OS was heavily influenced by the Lisa OS.

I'll add in the Classic Mac codenames too in the next revision.
You're right but are getting some things mixed up here.

The Lisa is hardware but there is also the Lisa OS (Lisa-tan represents both). And once again you've gotten Apple II-tan (the blonde girl with braided pigtails) confused with another. Apple II-tan is a catch-all character representing the Apple II series hardware and its OSes. Mac System 2-tan is one of the Mac OS-tans, of course!

The thing is a lot of the vintage OS-tans mainly represent the hardware but assumed to also represent its OSes or version of BASIC it runs. These vintage-tans tend to blur the line between OS-tans and hardware-tans!
Quote from: "iamnothere900"About early Macintosh version numbers...

In the beginning there were three separate pieces of software in a Mac: the Finder, System Suitcase (sometimes called just System), and ROM. The ROM stored code in a chip so it could be kept out of RAM, which was very expensive. The Finder was like Windows Explorer: it was the program that you used to launch other programs. The System Suitcase was everything else. The ROM chips were part of the motherboard and rarely upgraded. That leaves the Finder and System Suitcase.
Thanks for clearing all of that that up! ;019 I didn't know how to explain all of that myself!

Quote
At first each had their own version number, but that got confusing very fast. At some point certain Finder + System Suitcase combinations where discussed as "System Software x.y" were x and y had nothing to do with the System Suitcase or Finder version number. System Software 5.1 had System Suitcase 4.3, Finder 6.0 and MultiFinder 1.0 !
I'm still baffled by those strange version numbers (who isn't?!), especially System 3.4 which doesn't even have a System Software version number!

Quote
To fix this, System Software 6 brought all the version numbers together. Also called just "System 6", it was the best yet and lasted much longer than anything previous.
System 6 brought the version numbers ALMOST completely together but it was close enough and a lot less confusing. :)

Quote
System 7 was a complete rewrite, and had many new features. Apple agreed to let other computer makers sell their computers (clones) with "System 7" for a fee.
That probably explains why many apps work with System 6 (and older) but not System 7! I thought that System 7 was good (except for System 7.5) though its advancements did have a few major trade-offs.

Quote
Mac OS 7.6 was more trademarkable than System and allowed Apple to shutdown illegal cloners more effectively. Mac OS 8 was not part of the contract with clone makers; 8.0 was the end of legal Macintosh clones.
That's right! But IIRC, most of those clones at the time were legal. Apple was losing a lot of money to the clones (legal or otherwise) and wanted to shut them all down.

Quote
Hey, are there any OS-tans for A/UX ?
Yes there is! Here's her article at the OSC Wiki: (http://ostan-collections.net/wiki/A/UX)
Yeah, drawing a Linux family tree or even a Unix family tree would be way too difficult and huge! x__x
Not necessarily. Linux IS based off of Unix and made to operate just like Unix would but Linux is not derived from its code at all.

However, Linux-tan is sort of like the daughter Unix-sama wished she had! Unix-sama's actual daughters are mostly bratty, fight against each other and she can barely trust most of them at all due to all the infighting since the Unix Wars.
There aren't any human male Linux characters. The only male Linux character is that creepy penguin with three packages if you know what I mean. o_o

*shudder*
Quote from: "smokey"Well, as far as i know... Vista (wich was then called longhorn) was developed to replace the XP line, so basically they should be in that line... How Longhorn relates to Vista, i don't know, because Longhorn was the codename for Vista and basically all i ever saw from Longhorn were betas...
Well, that's mac for ya...weird... ^_^
Wow, different, but not much more complicated than the windows tree... ^_^
Sure, why not...Makes it more complete... and indeed MacOS 3.4 is indeed a bit strange... ^_^
But aren't Lisa and Mac System II hardware?
Ah, so the older the system, the more confusing it gets... ^_^
Wow, Linux is a family, but they're all bastard childs of Unixes...
Quote from: "Nej"Digital family life has nevar been this complex.
Quote from: "CaptBrenden"You know guys.. Longhorn is sever 2008.. much like a couple other tans there is more then one version of her. Ive seen a few pictures (tho i dont remember where) of a Saba with horns, and that was suppose to be server 2008
Well, not really, actually - it's true Saba 2008 has horns, but the original longhorn-tan is someone different - since Vista was in prototype status and known to the public for quite a time and under this time known as longhorn, there was a separate -tan made during that period. Longhorn thus represents the prototype releases before it was named Vista. Server 2008 is a separate, finished product.
And the Linux family tree...

hm.
Is there a possibility to do something like different -tans for different kernels? or is that unnecessary?
So...the Linuces are UNIX-sama's adoptive children.

Good riddance?
And what was Odyssey now again...something to do with 2k as well, if I remember things right.
Quote from: "iamnothere900"About early Macintosh version numbers...

In the beginning there were three separate pieces of software in a Mac: the Finder, System Suitcase (sometimes called just System), and ROM. The ROM stored code in a chip so it could be kept out of RAM, which was very expensive. The Finder was like Windows Explorer: it was the program that you used to launch other programs. The System Suitcase was everything else. The ROM chips were part of the motherboard and rarely upgraded. That leaves the Finder and System Suitcase.

At first each had their own version number, but that got confusing very fast. At some point certain Finder + System Suitcase combinations where discussed as "System Software x.y" were x and y had nothing to do with the System Suitcase or Finder version number. System Software 5.1 had System Suitcase 4.3, Finder 6.0 and MultiFinder 1.0 !

To fix this, System Software 6 brought all the version numbers together. Also called just "System 6", it was the best yet and lasted much longer than anything previous.

System 7 was a complete rewrite, and had many new features. Apple agreed to let other computer makers sell their computers (clones) with "System 7" for a fee.

Mac OS 7.6 was more trademarkable than System and allowed Apple to shutdown illegal cloners more effectively. Mac OS 8 was not part of the contract with clone makers; 8.0 was the end of legal Macintosh clones.

Apple continued making large and small updates to Mac OS until 9.2, when they dropped the old line completely for Mac OS X.

More info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_OS_history

Hey, are there any OS-tans for A/UX ?
Quote from: "OS Freak"Awesome. Never saw a complete three of Windows. It's kinda missing CE, Server 2008, Home Server, OS2 Warp as well as minor variations to be mentioned like XP 64 bit, Tablet PC, Fundamentals for Legacy PC's and Neptune which is real just not released to the public, only the workers.
Wonder why microsoft didn't just call 98SE windows 99 and 95 OSR2.5 as windows 96. Yeah I know those name exist already. 96 is a beta released update for 95 supposedly and is called windows Nashville and 97 tan is the prebeta of 98 called Memphis. 99 is the beta of 2000 called NT 5.0.  ;018 wt... if so what is Neptune then? Windows 2001? based on XP released XP is NT 5.1 or Windows 2001. Confusive but makes sense. Just intertwined which derails the actual sense into not making sense. This thing needs to be studied or debated. ;138
Yes Ive heard ME being has she is carries a great piece of history over her. She was the first tan ever created. To tell you the truth I like ME. I have it in virtual pc 2007 and she hardly ever crashes. Randomly on random days at random times she crashes the virtual machine service. Says: Vmsrvc - the application vmsrvc.exe has caused a problem in vmsrvc. The application will now close. It closes and nothing happens. So I think I have a pretty stable and loved ME version.

As an OS collector I also have Neptune and it's pretty much like an advanced 2K but a very stable one. Sometimes drivers mess her up. I've gotten that problem were at the end I manage to revive her and bring her to life. "Neptune, I'm so glad to see you safe, welcome back girl - Ohh master thank you for your loyalty and kindness" When she restarts you wish she'd say that. What she says is a box with System Failure : This machine has recovered from a fatal internal error. Would you like to provide comments about this problem so it can be fixed?

Obviously the Neptune team does not exist so you cannot report anything since to microsoft Neptune does not exist as it was abandoned/scrapped. The windows update service also fails on her and many programs requiring 2K SP 1, 2, 3, 4, RU will not install. Since she's an NTC or no service pack modified 2K. Ever tried SP4 on her? I did it says Neptune cannot be upgraded becaus the SP4 of 2K is for 2k SP3. lol Makes sense. Either way Neptune is a 2K engine so it's kinda messed also.
Quote from: "red"Neptune was going to be a home version of 2000, but it was pulled by Bill in favour of ME. I've played with the beta and it seems pretty solid, although a tad unstable when it has the latest DirectX...
Yeah, Neptune was a bitch to get running properly. She comes as standard with a crippled version of IE 5.5, which can't do anything. You update to IE 6 SP1 and it will crash a fair amound of times. It also comes with DirectX 7, so you try to update it to DirectX 9.0c and it hates you. I managed to get it work by copying some files from my ME partition.

Long story short: she's stable, but only as long as you're careful and have a copy of ME/2k to hand in case you need some files.


we had gotten prototypes of the windows and mac family trees done. :3



DISCUSS, MAN!!
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 22, 2010, 03:50:26 PM
Whoa... You've got a lot of patience to go through all of that! Where should we get started with this? @_@
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 03:59:28 PM
i'm waiting for someone to pick a topic to start with. we got three topics up there, with hybrids being the most developed. pick one.

and yeah, this was just MADE for a good nightly read. .___.;
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on December 22, 2010, 04:05:45 PM
/sits down with glass of hot cocoa/
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 06:26:20 PM
there ya go, now you can properly see what we have (potentially) birthed in the os-tan universe. :3

once you are properly informed, then you may start contributing. ^^

and really, what topic do you wanna discuss first? we've gotten the furthest with the hybrid theory (if anyone gets that joke, i love them -w-).
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on December 22, 2010, 07:52:00 PM
THE WALLOTEXT

MY EYES

THEY BURRRRRRRRRRN

Srsly, I appreciate the effort you put into this but imma just do what imma do.... "canon" be damned. =w=
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 22, 2010, 08:14:35 PM
From the new Wiki thread:

Quotein my os-tan comiket, the world isn't really discussed (of course i only have 1 issue for right now) but maybe a sort of parallel-japan? all i know is that the main house was on a large compound (large house w/ yard). the macs lived nearby (walking distance) and i imagined the NT branch of the windows house wasn't too far either (Inu-t was at the main house, but i imagined she'd live with NT-tan.)
there was also a market nearby.
I had thought of the Windows and Mac territories being neighboring... countries?

With the setting for the Windows Family, a large house with a yard seems just right, the most common depictions being a large traditional Japanese-style house.

Quote
@Aurora: batshit as it sounds, I always considered the BR to sort of.... transcend the bounds of the physical world. (Which may or may not go in hand with my theory that the BR is an OS-tan stand-in for an afterlife, not to mention the BR's semi-inspiration Haibane Renmei). Either that or it's in California, which may contain the largest collection(s) of vintage computers on the planet. -w-

Never considered that! With your first interpretation, how would others enter/leave, since the BR has its share of visitors, including the Classic Macs who are semi-retired, which fits them (especially the pre-System 6 OSes) because they're still alive and known by Mac enthusiasts (therefore still loyal to the Mac House), though the earliest versions are barely used on original hardware.

Similar analogy works for SAGE, though a wanderer, is a visitor, and is against so many odds still alive.

I'd also imagine that many deceased OS-tans, if they were to be resurrected, would settle there. Well, there's Multics. And wasn't CTSS open-sourced too?

Speaking of which, if a 'deceased' system can still be emulated, that character isn't really Deader Than Dead, are they? (i.e: Apple I and Xenix, both deceased for story purposes but the system can still be emulated)
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on December 22, 2010, 08:21:52 PM
Very fascinating read, though I am not sure where my own beliefs would fit into this.


PS; Giant Wall of Text critical hits Krizonar for 9,005 damage.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 10:14:01 PM
@krizo: the point is, you weren't lazy like BELLA and actually read it, so now you can debate and suggest while being informed. :3 thus, everything you suggest is relevant.

@bella: i've read your textwalls before, why not return the courtesy. >:[

@Aurora: i agree with bella about BR, but i would expand it to cover the entire OS-tan world, since the only setting we've seen for them is either unknown/unspecified or in toshiaki's house, which would be japan. :\
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on December 22, 2010, 11:41:28 PM
It's super interesting, but super different from what I always had in mind.

And I did read it, it's interesting to see what other people's theories are.

Besides, sittin' beside the fireplace in my snow leopard PJs with warm chocolate put me in the mood for some reading.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 22, 2010, 11:42:43 PM
Please contribute- what do you have in mind? More discussion is good!
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 22, 2010, 11:57:04 PM
that's what this thread is about, the open discussion of theory involving the OS-tan world. ^^ help with the creation process, but as for stuff that was already established (such as the -tan species), don't rehash it too much.

so let's discuss something. :3 (the only reason i textwall'd the hell outta the beginning of the thread is so that we'd be current).
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 22, 2010, 11:59:59 PM
In my last post, I made some conjectures about the setting of the OS-tanverse
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 23, 2010, 12:09:32 AM
lol, i forgot, my bad. ^^;

any sort of consensus on this? i like the idea of it being not in the physical world, cause if it was that'd just be weird. :\

i also prefer keeping the houses rather close; the houses aren't big enough to encompass entire countries so it feels weird to have them be in different countries, especially since they're fighting for the same thing. :\

now, if every faction was linux-sized, i'd agree with having them in different countries, but they're not.

maybe having the countries be almost the same as our world?
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 23, 2010, 12:16:58 AM
I thought of there being countries, with a population of files, apps and the userbase, and with the OS-tans of their countries living in their capital cities. In conflicts, the Unix Wars and the OS Wars, the OS-tans would be the generals of their respective armies, though OSes would sometimes duel. (i.e: Windows 95 vs. Mac System 7)

The Binteeji Renmei would be a neutral, micro-country that might not even have a militia. Attacking them would be regarded as a crime against humanity.

The wanderer OS-tans live across the lands, mainly in the outskirts. Regardless, they would still be of higher status than file-tans, etc... That is if they don't fade into obscurity! Similar thing for the CIOST, but they are a confederation of territories owned by individual members.

But to keep things simpler, I imagine each of these countries as being small. This virtual world would be much smaller than the real world.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on December 23, 2010, 01:01:05 AM
Quote from: "Aurora Borealis"Please contribute- what do you have in mind? More discussion is good!
First I'll start off with where I think the world is set.
I've always believed it was sort of like KITT from Knight Rider, the OS Tan is indeed in the computer and they are aware of their surroundings, but, since a Computer is obviously not a Transformer, most things that take place will of course be virtual.
Perhaps think of the OS-tan as an AI with an avatar.
The world with the Mac house and Windows somethingsomethingorsomefin is virtual as well. Most, if not ALL computers have some sort of data output or are able to transfer items. Heck, my Macintosh SE, if configured right, can go on the internet wirelessly. With system 6. The capability for that is there.
So we've established that the world is virtual, what now?

Well, currently my OS Tan is sitting at a coffee table with a (likely) UNIX server representative as they discuss things. That's how I'm typing this message. Servers are like businesses IMO. The OS tan requests information and they just generally talk. This can be over the phone or anything else.
Travel in this world is quite fast as it's virtual, this allows you to have huge countries filled with OS tans and they are still able to be traveled to rather quickly. (depending on how well the OS tan is connected, that is).

Another thing with the talk of software, hardware and OS, I don't believe in hardware tans or software tans. The hardware is the body, the OS is the 'soul', the software is the household tools, so to speak. Like, with say, Pixelmator, your OS tan gets a paintbrush they can use :)

As for architectures like PPC and Intel for example, that's just a way of thinking. Just like how people are right brained, OS Tans can be born "Intel Brained" or "Power PC Brained". I don't like the idea of it being other languages, because then they can't understand each other. This way, they can communicate just fine, just if they switch bodies, their brains (souls?) are just confused on how to function.

Those are a... few delves into my line of thinking.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on December 23, 2010, 03:31:53 AM
The hard part of this "virtuality" is that it doesn't weave well into many of the story works so far (mine in particular, since it explicitly depicts i.e. Ruka waking up inside the mountain that's thought to house the Perimeter facility etc). The -tans are also tightly knit together with their "faction leaders", that is, corporate/development/ideology head (Steve Jobs, Bill Gates/Steve Ballmer, rms, etc)
I am unfortunately VERY busy now, but I could write up a proposition on how I'd view things, and more specifically, how things work with regards to Sorcery, among other things.

The base view I use is that OS-tans are built from code; it may be completely new, or based upon an earlier OS' release. In the case of subsequent kernel versions etc, I'd imagine some sort of "mothering" going on, but nothing like the human process due to the fact that OS-tans, while possibly immature in other ways, ARE made to be "ready to go" from day one. The first runnable/compiled release marks the first incarnation of an OS; after that, betas may spawn off in various directions before they conclude in a final thread as the finished OS. Like some sort of eerie robot, one turns it on, works its works and adds parts to it. Ofc, not by mechanics, but by code - we'll get back on that when I have time, but atm it's full holoday madness and I've got work to go to in a bit, so meh.

The Code itself is something of great importance to most -tans - it is what they're made of, after all, and some even take to a sort of religious-like view of it, comparable to the worship of ancestors and so on. While relations to their human creators may vary, I imagine it's all good as long as support is provided in some manner; some others, however, may have cut ties with their old "faction" or even started their own (for all purposes, Unix is a good example of this).

When it comes to program-tans and so on I've used multiple approaches so far in stories, but IMO it depends a lot on how "separate" the program and host system is, alongside how powerful the program can be; Git, for example, while a program, is also a great system of its own, as well as someone who's responsible for handling the entire Linux kernel repository, and more - thus, I determined she was good to characterize. Finder (Mac) however, is more of a shell or part of the system, and very integrated into it; I worked this into it being a spell usable by the various Mac-tans.

Overall that's my main issue with program-tans; as they're at the same time entities of their own, they are also the base of all Sorcery (as Sorcery is essentially the extended magic ability of -tans via code) used by OS-tans. It comes down to a question of who goes where.

I don't think it would be wise to disregard the Sorcery concept for program-tans, as it's the base for much parts of several -tans (Linux and other Open -tans, for example) - it'll be hard to come with the end verdict, but that's that.

More later, but now I'm off to work.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on December 23, 2010, 11:17:30 AM
Quote from: "NejinOniwa"THE TRUTH.

MAGISTER DIXIT.

I agree with this 100% -- or damn near. To itemize:

QuoteThe hard part of this "virtuality" is that it doesn't weave well into many of the story works so far (mine in particular, since it explicitly depicts i.e. Ruka waking up inside the mountain that's thought to house the Perimeter facility etc). The -tans are also tightly knit together with their "faction leaders", that is, corporate/development/ideology head (Steve Jobs, Bill Gates/Steve Ballmer, rms, etc)

This, this this this. I know the "virtual world" theory is rather popular, but I find the inspirations in the "real world" so much richer to draw upon. And attaching the -tans actual places, people and events makes it more tangible for the reader -- and can even include a good (albeit warped) dose of computer history if done correctly.

QuoteThe base view I use is that OS-tans are built from code; it may be completely new, or based upon an earlier OS' release. In the case of subsequent kernel versions etc, I'd imagine some sort of "mothering" going on, but nothing like the human process due to the fact that OS-tans, while possibly immature in other ways, ARE made to be "ready to go" from day one. The first runnable/compiled release marks the first incarnation of an OS; after that, betas may spawn off in various directions before they conclude in a final thread as the finished OS. Like some sort of eerie robot, one turns it on, works its works and adds parts to it. Ofc, not by mechanics, but by code - we'll get back on that when I have time, but atm it's full holoday madness and I've got work to go to in a bit, so meh.

This, again. Where code = something like the genes of OS-tan (since isn't that what it essentially is to a OS/program? The instruction set that gives a software its identity and maps its behaviour). I've always imagined that, excluding the odd androidic OS-tan, they'd have replicated human bodies -- right down to the same biological processes (eating and reproduction just to make an example) -- but that they'd be, on a genetic level, completely unlike and incompatible with humans, and the other -tan class -- hardware -- neither of which carry this "source" as their genetic material.

I also imagined that OS-tans would, in general, reach physical maturity much quicker than a human, and that once the reached maturity, they would not age. Of course this maturity could be anything from an apparent age of seven to forty depending on the -tan in question. And although I suppose they have reproductive systems they wouldn't use that to continue their species; instead opting for... um... I dunno what to call it. Pod-babies? O.o

QuoteThe Code itself is something of great importance to most -tans - it is what they're made of, after all, and some even take to a sort of religious-like view of it, comparable to the worship of ancestors and so on. While relations to their human creators may vary, I imagine it's all good as long as support is provided in some manner; some others, however, may have cut ties with their old "faction" or even started their own (for all purposes, Unix is a good example of this).

Yes, yes, yes again. Of course this Code-ancestor worship would vary by -tan; the Unixes and Unix-likes would be VERY into this practise (since Unix-and-*Nix-like users usually relish the "old" status of their OS and advertise this fact) while others -- such as Windows-tans -- wouldn't venerate their ancestry as much (when was the last time you heard a Windows user brag about their OS's DOS/OS2/VMS ancestry?)

Some OS-tans are attached to their companies and others are essentially free, as you said, Unix is a great example of the latter. She became SO powerful and her reach so widespread that she outgrew the need for one. Linux might be another example.

QuoteWhen it comes to program-tans and so on I've used multiple approaches so far in stories, but IMO it depends a lot on how "separate" the program and host system is, alongside how powerful the program can be; Git, for example, while a program, is also a great system of its own, as well as someone who's responsible for handling the entire Linux kernel repository, and more - thus, I determined she was good to characterize. Finder (Mac) however, is more of a shell or part of the system, and very integrated into it; I worked this into it being a spell usable by the various Mac-tans.

Right-o. To make another example, Vi is considered a part of Unix but is important enough to warrant his own -tan; conversely, Time Machine is viewed as an object in literal OS-tan terms -- as Snow/Leopard's, well, time machine.

QuoteOverall that's my main issue with program-tans; as they're at the same time entities of their own, they are also the base of all Sorcery (as Sorcery is essentially the extended magic ability of -tans via code) used by OS-tans. It comes down to a question of who goes where.

Something that also bothered me. (Especially when it comes to very "primal" programs, like Daemons and the like). Maybe program-tans GIVE their OS-tans a portion of their Sorcery powers?

QuoteI don't think it would be wise to disregard the Sorcery concept for program-tans, as it's the base for much parts of several -tans (Linux and other Open -tans, for example) - it'll be hard to come with the end verdict, but that's that.

This too. Some program-tans have become powerful enough to almost be considered completely free entities; while all programs depend on OS-tans for survival, some are unattached enough (or attached to SO MANY OSes) that they can get by completely on their own (Emacs-kun is this way).
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 25, 2010, 11:57:11 AM
@krizo: i don't like your theories >:[

@bells, aurora & nej: i agree with you guys to a point, but....

i'd like to combine the ideas of the "virtual" and "real" world for the os-tan, so that everything they do is in virtual space, but reflects the real world (basically a virtual mirror of earth), so that while they are not physically "real", they can still do the daily things they do in our world, interact with us, etc.

    -there's a comik that speaks to this quite well (kimmie66, if you'd  like to pick up a copy). in this comik, it's about 2200 on earth, and virtual reality has gotten a MASSIVE upgrade, being put into these things called lairs (comparable  to today's MMOs), in which it envelops all the senses, transporting the person to a virtual world. as the book goes on, it shows that while this process is "one step removed", theyb have found a way to remove that step, thereby virtualizing the person, turning them into data so that they may roam the internet, the lairs, computers, etc.
maybe this could be worked in somehow; perhaps the os-tan are comparable to those lairs, only in reverse: instead of the human going in, the os girls come out. (holograms?)

as for the code and programming languages, etc, i still like the idea of keeping them as seperate languages that an os-tan can learn (just like you download a new language pack for your OS). it's likely that they'd know a lot, but not all, just like when you don't have the appropriate language pack, the characters show up as "▯". this can lead to comedic situations, such as 95-tan not being able to understand a newer programming language (and having to ask one of her sisters for help) or ME-tan forgets to download the appropriate language pack and ends up talking to her foreign counterparts with "▯▯▯▯▯ ME-tan! ^^".

as for programs, it could be a case-by-case basis, which might fit, but as i see it, it could be along the lines that they have a physical form, but in terms of using them like sourcery they would disintegrate into pure code, allowing the OS-tan to manipulate them into the form/shape/spell they desire.

i still don't see the program-tan being able to exist w/o an OS.....except for DOS, which is simultaneously a program AND an OS.

i also like the idea of ancestor worship among the OS-tans, though i agree that certain houses are more likely to observe this than others (i have the feeling that the Macs might practice some form of this).
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on December 25, 2010, 12:23:23 PM
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"@krizo: i don't like your theories >:[
:(
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 25, 2010, 12:28:00 PM
That was harsh, Choco. :(

If anyone is going to criticize anyone's ideas, be constructive about it!

@Krizonar: Nobody else here has really given the hardware much thought since we see them as separate from the OS, but your ideas have their merits, and bring up the point that OSes can't operate without their hardware!

I had thought of the architectures as being languages, but you bring up a really good point there! I consider the architectures to represent different things in different contexts, such as languages (i.e: NT-tan recognizes many architectures and is multi-lingual) or philosophies (the "Harvard Architecture" of the Harvard Mark-tans), or literally styles of architecture (i.e: QNX-tan builds a lot of stuff, mainly mechanical, and that's an OS ported to many platforms), but I also like the idea of 'brain style' too.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on December 25, 2010, 01:38:15 PM
Obviously, EVVVVVVVVVVERYBODY is gonna have their own theory (except for me and Nej, who are on the same letter on the same page), so this is gonna pretty quickly devolve into petty bickering.

And Choco, DOS is an OS entirely -- unless you refer to DOS mode in Windows 9x, when it's technically still running as an OS subsystem (not a program).
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 25, 2010, 01:47:42 PM
My theories have some similarities with yours and Nej's, while I believe the OS-tan setting is in cyberspace and takes place in OS countries, I also see the settings as Cyberpunk+Fantasy Counterpart Cultures to each OSes hometown/region, with lots of inspiration from the real world.

I fully agree with the 'ancestor worship' concept, and idea of all OS-tans having sorcery powers to run programs and code, while depending on special programs to give them their powers. Would there be different styles of sorcery?

Obviously, some OS families use more of it outside of just carrying out code than others, i.e: Multics, the DECs with geomancy powers, the Unices...
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 25, 2010, 01:56:11 PM
i'm sorry, i regret saying that(was in a slightly frustrated mood). >___<; just plz, plz, don't take a tone like you're dictating what is going to happen. that REALLY irks me. just be like, "i think blah blah blah" and not "this is how it is blah blah".

i'll agree that that's in interesting interpretation of it, but i just don't agree with it, i guess. i like adding in moar characters, since we're good at that here. ^^

i think one of the reasons that we haven't really discussed hardware-tans/kuns in details is due to the fact that it's hard to draw the line between a certain company, model, or just -tan every single computer in existance.

one of the reasons i don't agree with your take on software, krizo, is that they've been represented in the original japanese fandom:
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?pos=-7897
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=35&pos=17 (vocaloid counts as software)
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?pos=-4527
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=35&pos=49
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?pos=-1377
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=35&pos=152


oh, and i lawl'd when i found this:
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?pos=-1205
apparantly they beat us to the OSvolution theory. xD

EDIT: damn you people and your posting before me!! damn it all!! >___<

*sigh* lemme see, i like nej/bella and aurora's thoughts on the representation of the world, but i'd like them smooshed together. tastier as a sandwich people, then the condiments can blend. -w-

as no one has commented on my take of this, i will end here.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 30, 2010, 02:29:30 PM
Some software are represented as other characters (i.e: the antivirus-tans, browser-tans), but others may represent items (i.e: Leopard-tan's Time Machine).

Some apps, such as art programs could be represented either as separate characters or simply art tools an OS-tan wields, depending on the artist and/or storywriter's preferences.

On the wiki, the article for theories (http://ostan-collections.net/wiki/Theories) got started.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 30, 2010, 02:36:15 PM
that sounds about right. :3

and yay <3 ty for adding it, now if only i could figure out how to add to the ostan wiki. :\
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 30, 2010, 02:37:54 PM
First, are you able to log into it? I've heard that some have had trouble logging in.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on December 30, 2010, 10:44:10 PM
i entered my password correctly about 3 times, and it says i entered it wrong. :\

can we pick this up in the wiki project thread? i don't want to get off topic. somehow i don't think you guys want me making TWO wall-o-text threads. :\
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on December 30, 2010, 10:48:22 PM
Okay. Let's move that there.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 01, 2011, 10:33:33 PM
so does anything have anything else to say on the OS-tan world? i don't feel like we've resolved this completely. :\
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 01, 2011, 10:54:16 PM
I don't have anything else to say here that hasn't been stated already.

>>
<<
>>
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 02, 2011, 04:44:15 PM
At the moment all channels seem clear.

Despite the Saharan sand coming out of my ears.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 02, 2011, 09:56:20 PM
i still need to know everyone's thoughts on what the os-tan world IS, since we have yet to reach a concensus.

it's easier to go with "it depends on the artist", but i'd prefer if we agreed on something, so that future generations/non-artists can grasp what it is.

i think parallel earth in virtual space. what does everyone else think?
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 02, 2011, 10:17:35 PM
Screw the future generations. >>;;;;

My thoughts are Nej's thoughts, almost to the letter. I support the theory that OS-tans are physical beings in the real world, in a parallel-universe sort of place where all of history is basically identical to ours... except for, you know, the anthropomorphic computers part.

For examples of said universe(s), see any of my, Nejin's or Stewart-san's stories.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 02, 2011, 10:29:29 PM
hmm, ok. which means i think the same way as you only with the os-tans one step removed.


though with more thought and consideration, i think i probably agree. :\

so we have 4/6 people on board for the alternate-universe-physical-os-girls theory. :\ anything to add, aurora/krizo? :3
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 02, 2011, 11:51:46 PM
I partially support the real world-based ideas, since even in my previous ideas I agreed with the cultures and settings being based on the real world, but with fantasy and cyberpunk twists. (make that 4.5/6 people who support the real world ideas?)

It being entirely based on the real world still irks me a bit, because how would the CIOST meet up when they need to in emergency, and Wanderers finding each other, and banding together or joining other factions, wherever those may be. x_x

If the current fanon is anything to go by, either way we have some sort of alternate universe full of Schizo Tech and anachronisms.

i.e: 60's OS-tans mainly dressed in Victorian fashion and followed Victorianesque ideals, many 80's OS-tans were dressed late 19th-early 20th century fashions but still used tapes and floppies as their technology, yet some also used phonographs. Some OS-tans dressed in Medieval, Byzantine, or even Roman attire combined with other fashions for the pre-60's OS-tans. Even in the 'ancient' OS-tan world, cybernetic enchancements were possible (i.e: Whirlwind being transistorized in the late 50's)
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 03, 2011, 12:32:44 AM
Quote from: "Aurora Borealis"It being entirely based on the real world still irks me a bit, because how would the CIOST meet up when they need to in emergency, and Wanderers finding each other, and banding together or joining other factions, wherever those may be. x_x

How do large groups of people congregate in the real world? How do people of similar interest run across one another? I don't think OS-tans necessarily travel by completely human means or that the OS-tanverse travel infrastructure is like our own (far more advanced I imagine), but nothing you've described is impossible.

QuoteIf the current fanon is anything to go by, either way we have some sort of alternate universe full of Schizo Tech and anachronisms.

Yes. Yes it is.

Quotei.e: 60's OS-tans mainly dressed in Victorian fashion and followed Victorianesque ideals, many 80's OS-tans were dressed late 19th-early 20th century fashions but still used tapes and floppies as their technology, yet some also used phonographs. Some OS-tans dressed in Medieval, Byzantine, or even Roman attire combined with other fashions for the pre-60's OS-tans. Even in the 'ancient' OS-tan world, cybernetic enchancements were possible (i.e: Whirlwind being transistorized in the late 50's)

The key suffix being -esque; I don't imagine that's how the rest of the world (human or OS-tan) dressed, as much as a matter of their creators fashion preferences (and of course you can draw a a parallel between the complexity of a system and the complexity of a -tan's design. Multics is very complex, therefor she wears complected gowns; while some less complex-yet-older systems wear less complected and more modern fashion).

And Whirlwind wasn't actually cybernetically enhanced - at least I don't think - I always imagined her modifications were purely biological.

My last piece of advice, when it comes to chronological matters in the OS-tan world (and all worlds really) is think nonlinearly.  And don't overthink, either. =v=
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 03, 2011, 01:20:34 AM
Ahh... Now I see, and our seemingly conflicting ideas are starting to work together better. I didn't think about the anachronisms too much until like just now, probably because now there are so many 'ancient' characters with fashions of such varying time periods! ^^;
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 03, 2011, 05:53:32 AM
Fashion almost killed the science of this thread >_>
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on January 03, 2011, 08:31:40 AM
Quote from: "Chocofreak13"hmm, ok. which means i think the same way as you only with the os-tans one step removed.


though with more thought and consideration, i think i probably agree. :\

so we have 4/6 people on board for the alternate-universe-physical-os-girls theory. :\ anything to add, aurora/krizo? :3
Just putting it into perspective, I'd say that to them, the virtual world is the 'real' world. They are software more or less, not matter, so that works.

The alternate universe is believable to me as well as my own theory simultaneously, since there's bound to be an alternate universe that fit those criteria.

I just don't really agree with the other theories and made my own because I felt the need to rationalize it for our world. Plus I'm not a fantasy fan and therefor not a fan of magic.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 03, 2011, 02:01:23 PM
Quote from: "Aurora-sama"Ahh... Now I see, and our seemingly conflicting ideas are starting to work together better. I didn't think about the anachronisms too much until like just now, probably because now there are so many 'ancient' characters with fashions of such varying time periods! ^^;

Yes, don't sweat the small stuff like fashion, I consider that a creator's prerogative and not a reflection of the technology or advancement of an OS-tan (or era) in question.

Quote from: "Chozo-san"Just putting it into perspective, I'd say that to them, the virtual world is the 'real' world. They are software more or less, not matter, so that works.

This seems to be a popular theory, but it doesn't explain how or where hardware-tans or humans come into play.

(Incidentally, this was also my viewpoint on OS-tans initially; at first I considered it to be a population of OSes and software with little or no human interaction)

QuoteThe alternate universe is believable to me as well as my own theory simultaneously, since there's bound to be an alternate universe that fit those criteria.

As someone who's written alt-universe OS-tan stories, I support this; alt universes are fun, cause they allow more creative freedom.

QuoteI just don't really agree with the other theories and made my own because I felt the need to rationalize it for our world. Plus I'm not a fantasy fan and therefor not a fan of magic.

I respect your theories and the right of every artist to formulate their own visions of the OS-tan universe; it would be dull if everyone had the exact same notions. And yes, no matter what consensus the majority reaches, I'll pretty much stick to my theories when I write -- as long as there's no major changes to the established characters, I really don't mind how anybody views the OS-tan universe.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 08:56:33 PM
@bells/krizo: the purpose of this thread is to create a -standardized- rendition of things within the os-tan world, including the world itself. but just with the os-tans, there will always be variations:
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=35&pos=180
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=30&pos=3

for those that remember the osvolution thread, we were trying only to decide on groundwork for what existed. of course, with the advent of creative license, all this can get thrown out the window. the same applies here: we are merely trying to agree on a basic standard with the knowledge that it may vary from story to story. the standard will help when discussing new additions to the os-taniverse, as well as provide a base for potential work.

also: bella, i have barely any idea who the hell you're talking about. for my sake, use the nicknames from HERE, not DA. ;v;
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 03, 2011, 09:11:59 PM
With the NT-tan example, Choco, the burgundy-haired version is no longer used and has fallen under canon discontinuity, but I see what you're getting at.

I think we don't have to agree exactly, but some agreed 'standards' to follow would be good, i.e: established characterizations. They don't need to be followed right down to the letter, otherwise that would stifle freedom for interpretations.

For the OS-tanverse, it seems the consensus is that it is an alternate, super tech-savvy, cyberpunk universe which is -at least partially- based on the real world.

It wasn't until very recently (when I started reading stewartsage's SAGE fanfics) I had given any thought to 'regular people' in the OS-tanverse, and had only imagined it being populated entirely with computer-tans, app-tans and file-tans, with the 'ancient' computer-tans being depicted as very old-fashioned to reflect how much 'simpler' and primitive those past eras of computing were. But even with the real world-based ideas, those anachronisms from older fanon are still compatible and can be explained away somehow, as Bella previously described.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 09:27:16 PM
with the "real" people in the os-world, i think it depends on the story.

for example, with my comik, it's free standing (as in the user is never involved, this is a private saga within the os community). but with stew's story Eastern Standard Time, the interaction of "real" people is necessary.

same goes for the "cyberpunk/tech-savvy" angle. my comik is almost dated so far, given than the only reference to them being computers is their names and a brief mention of "filesharing". most actions have been on the housing complex, which resembles an older-style japanese house (quite large, several courtyards, possible 2nd house on property), and the only other actions have taken place at the market. :\ even the 4-koma series i was planning follows this format. :\

i agree with you on the general consensus, aurora, minus the cyberpunk angle (given that we're using it as an umbrella term right now).

2/6. all in favour?
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 03, 2011, 09:35:15 PM
Pretty much the main cyberpunk aspect in my interpretation is the creation and existence of the OS-tans, who are presumably artificial humans. But my interpretation of the Windows Family household is very much like, if not exactly like yours.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 03, 2011, 09:51:57 PM
Quote from: "Kari"@bells/krizo: the purpose of this thread is to create a -standardized- rendition of things within the os-tan world, including the world itself. but just with the os-tans, there will always be variations:
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=35&pos=180
http://ostan-collections.net/imeeji/displayimage.php?album=30&pos=3

...but that first NT-tan hasn't been featured in any other other artworks besides that comic. I support variations in -tan designs due to aging, different outfits and the like, and shape-shifting ability, but I don't support the remaking of already existing -tans.

Quotebut with stew's story Eastern Standard Time, the interaction of "real" people is necessary.

...How is Eastern Standard Time relevant here? . .;;

Quote from: "Aurora-sama"It wasn't until very recently (when I started reading stewartsage's SAGE fanfics) I had given any thought to 'regular people' in the OS-tanverse, and had only imagined it being populated entirely with computer-tans, app-tans and file-tans, with the 'ancient' computer-tans being depicted as very old-fashioned to reflect how much 'simpler' and primitive those past eras of computing were. But even with the real world-based ideas, those anachronisms from older fanon are still compatible and can be explained away somehow, as Bella previously described.

That's what I thought for a long time too; when I did my comic series, I included real-world humans involved in the computer industry too (see: cameos by Bill Joy, Ken Olsen and dmr and ken) 'mostly cause - at least to me - it makes more sense to have humans in the OS-tan universe than not, since it solves the who-created-the-OS-tans problem quite nicely.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 10:01:39 PM
ok, that clears it up a bit. when i think cyberpunk, my mind flashes to burst angel/the matrix/etc. that's why i got confused. :\

anyway, we have 2/6 people. i repeat, all in favour?

EDIT: DAMMIT BELLA YOU ALWAYS GOT TO MAKE IT COMPLICATED. >___<

i've seen that NT in more than one comic. i just haven't uploaded those pictures yet (i was waiting for the move).

EST is relevant here, since i was quoting the fact that different stories call for different aspect/interaction. trading main characters in moby dick and catcher in the rye doesn't work because their particular stories call for those particular characters (i wouldn't expect capitan ahab to complain about his roommate whistling "Song of India").
it was referencing that while it's POSSIBLE to have "real" people in an os-tan story, it's not REQUIRED.

if you'd like to add humans into your stories, that's your business and i have no objection. usually when i view the OS-tan world, it's an independent rendition of what goes through the computer's eyes. the humans created the OS, but not the OS's experiences.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 03, 2011, 10:08:11 PM
2/6? Who's in favour of what here? D:

But..... Eastern Standard Time isn't even an OS-tan story (http://cptlfrghtr.deviantart.com/gallery/#/d2rga8p). I'm not getting how a sentient post-apocalyptic radio station has any bearing on this conversation....
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 10:30:08 PM
jeez, i thought it was about some random obscure raido-reading vintage-tan!! you're missing the point!!!

last time i checked, me and aurora were on board for the "broad-spectrum virtual parallel to the real world" take on the OS-world.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on January 03, 2011, 10:50:35 PM
Virginia abstains, courteously. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSCFA3ynxqQ)

Video fixed.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 10:58:40 PM
so 2/5?

you people, though i consider you some of my best friends, make me want to take a LONG hiatus from here.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 03, 2011, 11:06:18 PM
Annnnnd this, Kari, is why I choose not to talk religion, politics, or larger OS-tan universe theories with my friends. For nothing good can become of it. -w-;;
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 03, 2011, 11:08:58 PM
the only reason i'm getting frustrated is because we can't seem to agree, even though i think we've been saying the same thing.

and because we're getting off topic. >__< i doubt you want ANOTHER wall of text like the last one.
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 04, 2011, 04:06:41 AM
A view from the old stone table...

Using the relevant scene from Mertvaya Ruka as example, space exists in two "modes": Open and Closed. For example, while navigating through the streets of Boston, Helsinki or some other human area we have typical Open space; whilst when inside Unix-sama's base where Leopard time-warps in, it's a Closed space, impossible to enter without possessing the correct lines of code (password, if you'd like). Since most ordinary humans aren't even aware of that aspect of code in the first place, they won't even be aware of the entrance - whilst OS-tans without the code in question in their possession won't be able to get through.

This sort of "code bubble" makes it possible for OS-tans, or factions thereof, to make private areas which only a select few can access; such as the Mac House or Windows Family mansion (or Unix' secret base). While the "magical" aspect of code usage (sorcery) can be involved in different levels depending on the story, this makes most of the workings possible within a single theory's scope (which saves us the hassle of explaining things later on).

THUS: Public space and human-populated areas are Open space regardless of human security levels, unless someone used code to force it otherwise; areas accessible only by OS-tans are locked by code of various levels and thus within Closed space (lolol heisakuukan). This can be anything from a private faction enclosure to a simple meeting spot for -tans (such as the "market" used in canon works, where -tans from many factions can meet) of all kinds and factions. I believe this solves most, if not all, of our problems, no?

Have to get off now due to leaving for tourist works in Marrakech, but will return to elaborate some more tonight. Hopefully. >_>
Title: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 04, 2011, 11:00:50 AM
......isn't that what i was trying to say? *facepalm*

*pout*
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 04, 2011, 02:32:28 PM
Quote from: NejinOniwa on January 04, 2011, 04:06:41 AM
A view from the old stone table...

Using the relevant scene from Mertvaya Ruka as example, space exists in two "modes": Open and Closed. For example, while navigating through the streets of Boston, Helsinki or some other human area we have typical Open space; whilst when inside Unix-sama's base where Leopard time-warps in, it's a Closed space, impossible to enter without possessing the correct lines of code (password, if you'd like). Since most ordinary humans aren't even aware of that aspect of code in the first place, they won't even be aware of the entrance - whilst OS-tans without the code in question in their possession won't be able to get through.

This sort of "code bubble" makes it possible for OS-tans, or factions thereof, to make private areas which only a select few can access; such as the Mac House or Windows Family mansion (or Unix' secret base). While the "magical" aspect of code usage (sorcery) can be involved in different levels depending on the story, this makes most of the workings possible within a single theory's scope (which saves us the hassle of explaining things later on).

THUS: Public space and human-populated areas are Open space regardless of human security levels, unless someone used code to force it otherwise; areas accessible only by OS-tans are locked by code of various levels and thus within Closed space (lolol heisakuukan). This can be anything from a private faction enclosure to a simple meeting spot for -tans (such as the "market" used in canon works, where -tans from many factions can meet) of all kinds and factions. I believe this solves most, if not all, of our problems, no?

Have to get off now due to leaving for tourist works in Marrakech, but will return to elaborate some more tonight. Hopefully. >_>

This makes sense. PERFECT SENSE. Gratias Tibi Ago Magister!

I imagine Hardwares wouldn't be able to access this closed "Code Space" either, because, like humans, they exist solely as material beings. Your theory also explains how OS-tans can travel and congregate so easily.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 04, 2011, 04:43:43 PM
Quote......isn't that what i was trying to say? *facepalm*

*pout*
Well, true, but I seem to be a tad in the lead when it comes to getting things across to the entire populace. Don't be sad if you get what you want, yan! -w-

Also Hardware-tans have the same level (though not the same kind) of rudimentary grasp of Code as humans - only in more extreme cases can they manage to access any Closed space unaided, and their presence can normally cause disturbances on quite high levels within the field. I am in a bit of a bind in this spot, however, as it deals with the matter of the source of Code and power among OS-tans.

Viewpoint 1: A piece of hardware is the material focal point for any and all execution of code by any OS-tan. The amount of magic/code/whatever power accessible by one single OS-tan should thus in the defining norm be roughly equivalent to the amount of hardware under his/her control - that is, computers with the OS in question installed, and the raw processing power they can provide. For example, while the various Windows versions have dominated the desktop market for just about two decades now, their actual code strength is limited by the hardware used in these lightweight machines. Linux, while not very widespread on the desktop side, controls a huge chunk of server farm through her distributions; as they are direct iterations, code relatives AND direct subordinates of hers, this supplies her with an enormous amount of raw processing power. And while the Unix empire may not be as glorious as it one was, the rise of the OSXen and the persistence of Mainframes running various Unix versions ensures her a good deal of raw strength as well.
This also gives a good way of handling the rise and fall of various -tans; as the amount of hardware under their control diminishes, so does their power, with eventual lapses of sanity or physical ability to follow depending on the scope of their fall, with an eventual death possible as a result of having no hardware or direct descendants/subordinates to draw power from at all. As an example, OpenVMS will keep going even if her own hardware base ceases to exist, as long as NT-based Windows-tans are present and in possession of enough power to keep her alive; at the moment the prevalence of NT-based Windowses gives her the ability to tap into their enormous code power pool, resulting in her being a great deal more powerful than one would expect from a wanderer of her state. NT herself will likely never gain much power as a result of her being a rather inconspicuous character in the shadow of various Windows versions (XP, Vista, 7 and so on), leaving her almost in a subordinate state of the hierarchy despite being higher in the chain of Code; in addition, as she is the link binding OpenVMS to the Windows power pool, and since she is not in the top of that hierarchy (she is a direct descendant of OpenVMS, not an original piece of code - compare Linux and Unix, with the former being semi-related but not directly related in code and such, thus granting no power sharing) what power she can draw herself is only a small branch on the trunk supplied to OpenVMS through her own channel.

The main problem I see with this is with -tans who don't follow this pattern of power-in-accordance or have other kinds of powers; I dunno the amount of these, however, but I think they are sort of few in number atm. Keep in mind that this "power level" scale only pays mind to actual usage of code/magic - 95-tan, for example, while not being as powerful in spell usage as she was during the height of the 90's OS wars, she still keeps her physical prowess and swordsmanship; as this is a natural ability that she has by "birthright" so to speak, one that was hardcoded into her very matter as she was created, and not a spell.

WALL OF TEXT. What say you, /osc/?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 04, 2011, 06:29:28 PM
Your explanations are pure win, Nejin! :D

With your explanations on life force and code sharing, does emulation count, and help keep an otherwise dying/sick/insane OS-tan alive, healthy and sane? I imagine that it would, with emulators granting emulated OSes a special kind of code that would allow those OSes to run on hardware they otherwise wouldn't, and for the host hardware to accept the emulated OS.

And what about OS-tans that are deceased but can still be emulated?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 04, 2011, 07:05:40 PM
*dies*

*1up*

you've made excellent points nej. however:

1. you're getting too detail-specific. when i made this thread i had everyone in mind; meaning their stories and viewpoints, which means that while this system may work for you, it might not for someone else.

2. you're over-thinking it. this was a problem in the old OSvolution thread as well, since it's so easy to make everything super rich and detailed. it feels better because you're being more specific. but since this was to apply to EVERYONE, we want plain vanilla ice cream, not a banana split sundae with the works. it's best to provide the basics and let everyone else fill in what they choose. (like a tabletop RPG! ^^)

3. i thought we were discussing the OS-tan World first? ;___;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 05, 2011, 04:33:59 AM
It's just that, I don't see too much conflict with this "over-detailed" system with any of the works produced here, or even the old originals from Futaba. Might as well define everything that's being used, no? SCIENCE likes it that way.

And Emulation is the equivalent of necromancy; it provides a -tan, deceased or not, with code/life force from another entity. Thus, an OSXen in Windows Bootcamp supplies power to the Windows power pool; while an emulation of old, deceased OSes provide them with temporary life force. Depending on the scope of emulation (actual installation on a virtual space VS plain ISO-booting and whatnot) she may be able to keep some of that power and keep running in a low state even when emulation is not in progress; or be forced into a "standby" mode. The former alternative also gives for healthier-looking corpses.

True revival, however, needs the complete reconstruction of the original hardware or somehow else giving a -tan a code pool all of her own.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 05, 2011, 10:24:40 AM
i completely agree with this.


but i say this is too specific because it conflicts with 'my' stories....which means that it might conflict with other people's stories too. i'd prefer to keep it super-basic, since someone (like myself) might have a different view on the OS-tans and they way they function. while the "code magic" thing is interesting, and a very good theory, that's not the way i laid it out in my comik, which leads me to worry that i or other artists in the future will have their work called "wrong" (as in, "you're doing it wrong!!") because they didn't follow the format we're laying out here.

oh, and, I THOUGHT WE WERE STARTING WITH OS-WORLD FIRST?? ;___;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 05, 2011, 12:16:36 PM
Don't worry about that too much. You can still keep your comic simple and not include or mention any more details than you need to, and these fanon ideas aren't actually set in stone anyways.

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 05, 2011, 12:35:57 PM
Quote from: NejinOniwa on January 05, 2011, 04:33:59 AM
It's just that, I don't see too much conflict with this "over-detailed" system with any of the works produced here, or even the old originals from Futaba. Might as well define everything that's being used, no? SCIENCE likes it that way.

And Emulation is the equivalent of necromancy; it provides a -tan, deceased or not, with code/life force from another entity. Thus, an OSXen in Windows Bootcamp supplies power to the Windows power pool; while an emulation of old, deceased OSes provide them with temporary life force. Depending on the scope of emulation (actual installation on a virtual space VS plain ISO-booting and whatnot) she may be able to keep some of that power and keep running in a low state even when emulation is not in progress; or be forced into a "standby" mode. The former alternative also gives for healthier-looking corpses.

True revival, however, needs the complete reconstruction of the original hardware or somehow else giving a -tan a code pool all of her own.

(http://moritheil.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/haruhi_objection_by_ri_chan_glory.jpg)

I would argue that virtualization is no different from running an OS on its original hardware; after all, it's the same code (let's say Windows 1.0 for this argument) running on a physical machine (an iMac), it just happens to have a virtulization software acting as intermediary (VirtualBox).

NOW: I would make an exception for emulated systems that are gone and have been "rebuilt from scratch" so to speak -- say, an ENIAC or Univac emulator (both of which exist), but I'm increasingly considering that there's no such thing as death -- at least as we know it -- for OS-tans, since they exist as code and as long as that code exists, they can be brought back from the dead.

Make sense? D:
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 05, 2011, 01:04:32 PM
I agree that deceased OS-tans aren't completely dead if they can be emulated (I see them as ghosts that normally can't be seen or heard until called upon, and barely have any power of their own), but would this take away from some of the potential drama in OS-tan stories, such as bringing a long-dead relative back for a brief family reunion if the deceased could be seen again more than just one time?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 05, 2011, 01:21:35 PM
In my view of OS-tan death, there are 4 stages.
1: Operation death - there are no longer any pieces of hardware running the OS. This gives the -tan a few moments to say some last words (length dependent on the size of the final code pool and the maintenance/power level needed to sustain her equipment), whereafter she goes into a "dormant state" resembling a coma. This of course under the condition that any external power supplies have also kicked the bucket; a -tan with still-operative direct descendants, subordinates or a sizeable code pool available through other means (in possession of a family company, for example, that is willing to supply the -tan with power) will not cease operation until these link(s) are gone.

2: Hardware death - there are no longer any hardware in good enough condition to run the OS. This marks a deepening of the "dormant state", where only porting can give the -tan a true return to life.

3: Software death - there are no longer any pieces of the original installation mediums left, and the -tan starts to effectively decay into bits of code.

4: Code death - the final stage of the deceased, when all vital pieces of code (source or not) is gone from existence. This is effectively the final death of a -tan.

More later, for off to dinner nao.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 05, 2011, 02:24:16 PM
Great explanations! if I get to writing or rewriting the wiki article on deceased OS-tans, I will include that info.

It seems that most of the deceased-tans are in either stages 1 or 2, but some of the 40's and 50's mainframes are gone from existence.

The idea about being able to connect to relatives' code pools/life forces could also explain why some OS-tans that seem like they should be deceased are still alive (i.e: C65-tan, Mac System 3.4-tan, Lisa-tan?), and others died so prematurely because they were 'left to die' and shut off from other connections (i.e: Apple I-sama, presumably also Multics and CTSS when they died).

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 05, 2011, 05:17:53 PM
makes sense. and aurora, the article can't be written and rewritten at the same time, lol. xD

is there any record of the 40's/50's -tans? maybe like a picture in the BR or something?
(sorry, but it feels like i have nothing to contribute at this point).
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 05, 2011, 05:32:34 PM
If you mean in-story, there are still people who know of and remember them, including historians and former colleagues. But there are pictures of some of the ancient OS-tans.

And I meant to say 'write or rewrite' since I couldn't remember if the article for deceased-tans had been started.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 05, 2011, 05:35:08 PM
lol, ok.

to be honest, i wonder where the  "death of os-tans" notes would fit.....in the os-tan evolution section?

should i update the first post?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 25, 2011, 10:07:37 AM
NECROPOST~~~~~


how about we move to a different topic? i found some family tree pictures when i was pictrolling, so has any work been made on windows/mac family trees?

and anyone think we should make a linux family tree? or would that be too complex?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 25, 2011, 11:18:58 AM
A Linux family tree is possible, but can get complicated because it has many more branches.

GNU/Linux is of course the mother or ancestor of all Linuces, but her oldest daughters have many descendants themselves. Most distros are derived from either: Red Hat, Debian, and Slackware; all of which are three of the oldest distros. Though there are some notable exceptions such as Yggdrasil being the oldest distro (or Linux's first daughter) but doesn't have any descendants of its own.

Both the Windows and Mac Family trees can get even more convoluted if you include the NT line's and the OSX line's biological ancestors into the mix, and MS-DOS's other biological relatives. @_@
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on January 25, 2011, 02:33:27 PM
Quote from: Chocofreak13 on January 25, 2011, 10:07:37 AM
NECROPOST~~~~~


how about we move to a different topic? i found some family tree pictures when i was pictrolling, so has any work been made on windows/mac family trees?

and anyone think we should make a linux family tree? or would that be too complex?
I've made a Mac family tree, and although it may not coinincide with everyone's ideas, some if its backstory got forwarded to the Annex project.

Linux family tree? How many thousands of branches? Xd
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on January 25, 2011, 03:49:01 PM
I once did a preliminary family tree of some 50's and 60's Mainframes/OS's.... it is horribly out dated now.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on January 25, 2011, 05:11:14 PM
Protip: when it comes to Linux-tan's family tree, DO NOT THINK IN TERMS OF HUMAN FAMILIES. Or even other OS-tan families, besides the Unixen maybe (who have a similarly muddled family structure). Her "code" has been spread throughout hell and creation and modified at every step of the way -- severely blurring the line between children, grandchildren, clones, etc.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on January 25, 2011, 05:55:40 PM
Linux family vs Persian army.

Persians are outnumbered I believe.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 25, 2011, 06:53:41 PM
Clone army?

LINUX = THE EMPIRE WUTWUT
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on January 25, 2011, 07:03:25 PM
Mac OS 8 was in the clone wars,
she Forced them to stop using OS 7.


/ba dum psssshew
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on January 25, 2011, 07:04:13 PM
notgettingthis.jpg
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on January 25, 2011, 07:23:44 PM
Yeah... The relations between the Linuces gets awfully confusing quickly, but most of them are derived from three main distros.

As for the Mac clones, It's time for the Don't Explain the Joke trope!:

What is now Mac OS 8 was originally called Mac OS 7.7, but was renamed to exploit the loophole of the clones being licensed to run Mac OS 7.x in order to force the clones out of the market, since the clones were eating away at the Mac's market share.

Is this a possible conjecture: the Mac Clones?

I thought Mac OS8-tan would have killed them off, but apparently not since there are still hobbyists that use them. So would Mac OS8 just forced them to retire by fighting them into submission, when they weren't willing just because of some loophole...

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on January 25, 2011, 10:12:20 PM
@bella: now i want a picture of mac os 8 shaking her head in shame at some retarded/mutated os 7 clones. xD

i think we should try our hand at a linux family tree. sure, if we overthink it it'll end up bigger than the TREE O' LIFE, but since bella said that pretty much everyone in the linux family decended from those three heirs, it might not be too complex. especially if we take it step-by-step. :3

btw, when all is said and done, and i upload all the pics i've gathered, i'll post the family tree pics i've found. :3
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 09, 2011, 08:50:28 PM
Moved from the wiki thread:

Quote from: Bella on April 09, 2011, 06:10:39 PM
Relevant to this thread? (Now that I've found the right one) >>

(http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s320/BellasOS-tans/map.jpg)

This was drawn in mid-July, so, it's REALLY out of date. For instance:

-It's been established that SAGE-tan = AN/FSQ-7 computer and whatever software it ran
-Likewise, CTSS-tan represents the OS and the modified IBM 7094 hardware on which it ran
-PDP 1-tan is only the "mother"/genetic ancestor of the 18-bit PDP lineup (PDP-4, -7, -9 and -15) the other PDP-tans descended from LINC, PDP-8, -6, and -11
-I'm not sure what, if any, influence CP/CMS had on later generations of IBM-tans

Quote from: Aurora Borealis on April 09, 2011, 06:31:03 PM
Excellent! So true that Unix and Linux have too many descendants to count, and separate trees would be needed for them. DOS-11 stole RSX-tan from her biological mother?! Now I'm really curious about that! Please elaborate!

A few more I'd add if you plan on making an updated version:

-Altair influenced IMSAI 8080, though they're rivals.
-IMSAI 8080 was also the mentor to DR-DOS (CP/M)
-I don't see any mention of the Data Generals, but the Nova influenced Apple I.
-BESYS's life was sacrificed for Multics' creation, and UMES's life was sacrificed for MTS' creation.
-Apple III and Lisa influenced the Classic Mac OS.
-A/UX is a stepsister to the Classic Macs, and a presumably a cousin to the OSXs, highly influenced by the former.
-NeXTSTEP and Rhapsody are sisters.



Finally, something to discuss here again!
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 09, 2011, 11:28:21 PM
Crazy random (conspiracy?) theory: IBM 7090-kun is the brother/counsin of SAGE and CTSS (and, I guess, PDP-1-chan by association). Using this simple formula:


If SAGE = IBM AN/FSQ-7, and IBM 7090 = a solid-state AN/FSQ-7, then 7090-kun = SAGE-sama's sibling... or cousin... or something.

Not to mention the fact that CTSS-sama = both CTSS and the IBM 7094 computer on which it ran; and the 7094 = a modified 7090.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 10, 2011, 09:08:12 AM
in that respect, i'd consider SAGE 7090's sister, and have CTSS be their half-sister.

and this is good that we've revived this thread; i was preparing to port it over to a new thread (i still might, since there's about a page and a half of topicless-style babbling).
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 10, 2011, 10:58:21 AM
Well, I'd consider SAGE and CTSS 7090-kun's full sisters (since they all share a common hardware base) while PDP-1-chan would be his half-sister (since SAGE and CTSS are related to original!Whirlwind, while PDP-1-chan is related to TX-0 Project!Whirlwind).

Please no new threads, K - gratuitous threads are bad enough, but are REALLY annoying when they rehash things laid out in existing threads. If we made a new thread every time something got OT, by GAWD, we'd have a million and a half here.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 10, 2011, 04:15:28 PM
if you think that, then that's what we'll go with, since you're more knowledgeable than me.

it aggravates me when we go OT in threads like this, since we have places for it, and if anyone new wanted to discuss, if they read up they'd be confused by the blabber.

besides, there's more information on the topics now. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 10, 2011, 04:33:25 PM
Protip: nobody is gonna read up on this/wanna discuss. As far as OS-tan theorists go, it's pretty much me, you, Stew, Aurora, Kriz and Nej.... >>;;;;;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 10, 2011, 04:35:02 PM
ouch, that hurt. way to stab. >:[
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 10, 2011, 04:43:03 PM
Krizy has been upgraded to theorist!
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 11, 2011, 10:35:39 AM
Quote from: Chocofreak13 on April 10, 2011, 04:35:02 PM
ouch, that hurt. way to stab. >:[

Count your blessings, back in MY day the only people who could be bothered to engage in discussions about non-canon OS-tans were Aurora and C-Chan... and we had members who not only didn't care about our work, but were trying to undermine it. : |
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on April 11, 2011, 10:50:59 AM
Let's not be overly reminiscent of the Not-so-good-ol'-days, shall we?

In other news, I'm still thinking of a way to implement the sacrificial spell...it is an interesting concept, at least story-wise. _W_
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 11, 2011, 04:15:53 PM
yeesh. glad THOSE types are gone. :[

anyway, back on topic, any chance you could make an upgraded version of that chart, bells? i'd like to contribute but it's a little hard (and some of the arrows aren't labeled).
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 04:24:49 PM
New theory, AU/X tan and System 7 are sisters. I'll have to update my family tree.
OSX and AU/X still aren't related though.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 11, 2011, 05:21:59 PM
dude, don't just go adding stuff to family trees w/o discussion first. didn't i scold you about instant decisions before?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 05:28:43 PM
Not even to my own tree?
and it's because I learned AU/X has built in software to emulate System 7, much like Rhapsody has it to emulate System 8 (and had an exchange of features). I just didn't know that before I went out and read up on AU/X.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 11, 2011, 05:32:39 PM
well, personal tree yes, but that may be deemed irrelevant through discussion. whether it's your own tree or not, it feels premature. :\

wish bells was here to weigh in. she's more knowledgable on the subject than me. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 05:47:57 PM
"-A/UX is a stepsister to the Classic Macs, and a presumably a cousin to the OSXs, highly influenced by the former. "
hm?
I went to check and yes, she is a step-sister (to system 7) but, I do disagree that she's related to the OSX's because they had very little in common and did not share a common ancestor. OSX is BSD based, AU/X is UNIX System V, they are actually complete opposites!
"System V was considered one of the two major "flavors" of UNIX, the other being Berkeley Unix (BSD)."


Next and Rhapsody being sisters (or at least, closely related) was already on my fanmade family chart ^^;


Also, we do need an iOS tan D= (oh, and a Lion Tan icon)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 11, 2011, 07:16:10 PM
Personally, I don't think A/UX and System 7 or Rhapsody and System 8 are related.... not even vaguely. A/UX is a Unix, Sys. 7-tan is a Mac Classic.... emulation =/= relation. Just, no.

But.

I would suggest they be intellectually-related - that is to say, step-siblings - of totally different bloodlines, but a part of the same family. This has already been established, of course....

Likewise, I don't think A/UX and the OSXes are related either; while they share a common Unix heritage, A/UX didn't influence OSX enough to be considered an ancestor...
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 07:32:33 PM
Quote from: Bella on April 11, 2011, 07:16:10 PM
step-siblings
That's more or less the term I was searching for, just "step-" has a strong negative connotation to me that I didn't really think of using it that much.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 08:51:30 PM
A/UX dates back to 1988 actually, versions 1 and 2 look just like (and can emulate) System 6, version 3 looks just like and can emulate System 7. Of her stepsisters, they're the two she has the most in common with.

She is a step-sister to all the Classic-tans and isn't related to them by blood, but shares cultural and intellectual ties with them (like how the older OSXs do too), and is distantly related to the OSXs. They're Unix-based but that's about it in terms of blood ties. She considers the Macs (Classic and OSX) plus Darwin OS, NeXTSTEP and the early Apples her main family, but will also show that she doesn't want to be a traitor to the Unices either.

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 10:21:10 PM
Oh yes, I had overlooked that version 1 and 2 of A/UX boots System 6, I connected them horizontally, (indicating "step-sisters", not by blood and since they're all related, that technically makes her an even looser "step-sister" to the rest of the classics, so it fits) on my tree. It should be quite accurate now. I also updated backstories.

I also added Newton to the tree and gave her some as well... trying to connect her to some other Mac OS failed, so I had to come up with something new.
Let's say that after Leopard saved Antares' life from the future, the Apple family... thought different!
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 10:37:35 PM
Newton doesn't have blood ties to any of the Apple-tans, or really anybody, AFAIK. She is most often seen with A/UX-tan, and maybe also System 7-tan, and may have influenced iPhone-tan in some form, and is least seen as a spiritual predecessor.

I haven't gotten to writing these stories, though I'd really like to, but in their early years, A/UX-tan was also a mentor figure to System 6-tan (who after having her life saved, needed help adjusting to a new life). It also helps that A/UX-tan wasn't scared of her. :)

And while A/UX-tan was also a close friend to System 7-tan, A/UX wasn't able to help her in her time of need due to exile, and still feels really bad about that. :(



Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 10:51:43 PM
Yes, and the current backstory theories I have definitely allow for these :) In my mind, A/UX is Apple's way of "thinking different" using the advanced technology that Leopard used to save Antares. They reverse engineered anything about genetics and technology they could find from it. So the reason A/UX is not scared of Antares is because they are similar! (although A/UX is not a cyborg and relied more on genetic engineering technology, she is also NOT the first Unix to have had such modifications done ;) http://ostan-collections.net/wiki/UNIX ). This also helps explain why System 7 was finally a healthy system, even at launch and why the more current OSX girls are cat girls while Rhapsody is not. Newton under this theory is genetically engineered to fill a niche (much like A/UX), which explains her completely non-standard height and body form (fairy) as well as how she doesn't relate to anyone. :)

interesting? makes plot? makes sense? I hope so, though tell me if it's not/doesn't.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 11:02:22 PM
A bit convoluted, but I do agree with the genetic engineering to some extent- mainly the reason why the OSXs except Rhapsody, DarwinOS, and Mac-tan/OSX-tan/OSX Public Beta... --whoever she is!!-- are catgirls.

Genetic engineering could also explain some of the height differences too. :P

And I could see how A/UX may have been engineered to meet the Apple Family's needs, but I'd say her upbringing would play a larger role- she was raised to be professional and helpful, with Mac-like behaviors, but still acknowledged as a Unix system as well. The reason she wasn't scared of System 6-tan though, is simpler. Even when System 6-tan had violent outbursts (this was before her improvements in stability), A/UX-tan had the strength and willingness to restrain her.

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 11, 2011, 11:13:50 PM
@kriz: why is -step a negative thing?

ugh, now i know how your guys felt earlier in this thread. i can't bring anything to the table. :[
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 11:28:43 PM
Is it because of the whole "wicked stepmother" thing in the fairy tales. I used to believe in the negative connotation because of "Cinderella" being one of my favorite childhood movies.

@Choco: Just try. Are there any questions you have about what's going on in here currently? Your interpretations? And anything else you'd like to bring up?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 11, 2011, 11:30:26 PM
My explanation may need simplifying :P

Quote from: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 11:02:22 PMMac-tan/OSX-tan/OSX Public Beta... --whoever she is!!-- are catgirls.
Kodiak :)

Hm, that it could, all the first Macs were short, then, all of a sudden, after Antares, most are quite a bit taller.

Yes, she was raised in such a way as to be very professional and such (A/UX's security is so strong that it cannot even be emulated, A/UX recognized partitions, A/UX could scan over 4GB of Hardrive space, etc) , although from what I see, she had a silly side. She was conditioned very strongly, however, so definitely agreed that her upbringing played a very large role.

Well, there's that too, A/UX was one heck of a System :P
but the big question is... did A/UX ever have to restrain Antares? a lot happened in 1988 and I cannot find an exact release date of A/UX to check against System 6.0.2 (the patch that cured Antares) to see if my theory works of A/UX being... "made" of Antares. Though one thing is for sure, System 6 was released before A/UX.

All I can find useful is "Apple came out with their own version of POSIX compliant Unix, A/UX, in late 1988" which would put A/UX at coming out AFTER System 6.0.2, meaning Antares was fixed before A/UX came out, which would make my theory plausible. :)

@Choco: -step usually implies a divorce.
You can, you can! We can always shift topics.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 11:52:54 PM
I thought A/UX-tan was slightly older, as A/UX was (presumably?) released in Feb '88, and System 6.0 in Apr '88. Dammit! It's a toss-up! x__x

As for the height differences, the first outlier was System 5-tan, who is 5'4" (while System 4 and older were 4'4" or less).

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 12, 2011, 12:06:41 AM
Yeah, late 1988 would most likely be after system 6.0.2, as it was released more in the middle. http://www.kernelthread.com/publications/appleoshistory//4.html says System 6 is older and hints at Antares hitting 6.0.2 (apparently released in September) before A/UX (apparently being released around November/December) was actually released. Man, Apple was busy...
still, it is rather a toss up, as it's still not exact dates :)
I think I just did something monumental though!

hm... but does a ghost have a standard height they stay at? Xd but point taken.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 12, 2011, 02:41:53 PM
no, a ghost wouldn't. xD but i assume that measurement was taken when she was alive.
given the timeline differences, and that ya can't seem to nail down an EXACT date, i think it would come down to storyline purposes. what does everyone think should happen? personally i like the idea of A/UX being slightly older than Antares, and acting as a sort of mentor/onee-chan figure to her. :3
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 12, 2011, 06:23:34 PM
Quote from: Aurora Borealis on April 11, 2011, 11:02:22 PM
A bit convoluted, but I do agree with the genetic engineering to some extent- mainly the reason why the OSXs except Rhapsody, DarwinOS, and Mac-tan/OSX-tan/OSX Public Beta... --whoever she is!!-- are catgirls.

Genetic engineering could also explain some of the height differences too. :P

Semi-related funfact: Word of God says that the the root of animal features in the Unix bloodline traces back to their part-avian ancestor, Multics. .w.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 12, 2011, 06:40:52 PM
Individual storyline purposes suits me, since it cannot be exactly determined.

Though I think that Antares should be older, as it confirmed Antares (unstable version) is older, at least. Even if she was older, A/UX could still help her or not depending on storyline purpose and writer opinion.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 12, 2011, 07:08:06 PM
I think that'd still work just as well.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 12, 2011, 08:00:01 PM
hmm, yeah. you guys know more about this than me, like i said. ^^;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 12, 2011, 08:29:34 PM
Apple is about the only thing I know, computer-wise, so yeah.

Took me a little over a month to figure out you can move the Start menu.

We all have our knowledge specialties.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 12, 2011, 08:32:36 PM
of course. :3

hmm, well, now that we've pretty much got that figured out, what shall we discuss next?

also, if i can get your opinion, would it be rash and foolhardy of me to dismiss the theories of those that refuse to recognize (or at least acknowledge) the canon literature? :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Krizonar on April 12, 2011, 08:35:10 PM
Depends, is OS-Tan literature considered hard or soft?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 12, 2011, 08:35:58 PM
What do you mean? The original OS-tan canon? I acknowledge that, and so do most (if not all of us) here, even with the expanded universe.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 12, 2011, 11:46:03 PM
eh, i've encountered a few people who forsake the canon completely to the point where it makes me want to track them down and punch them in the face. >__<;

eh, w/e. what to discuss?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on April 13, 2011, 10:00:05 AM
Not to say that the original canon is a bit sketchy on what actually is original canon and not...

But I'd say that commonly we've just melted and melded it into our own sets of theories.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 13, 2011, 12:07:22 PM
I accept canon; it's just never really gonna come into play in any of my stories. ._____.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 14, 2011, 12:07:21 AM
but the reason i don't midn you guys is that you don't write anything with the "canon" -tans, like XP and such. and even if you did, you guys recognize that they already had names, and if they didn't it's sometimes best to play it close to the actual name (codename).

a-anyway....

what to discuss? should we continue with the family trees or go back to the old topic of the os-tan world? (we had made good progress on uniting theories untill an abrupt cutoff stopped us. :\)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 14, 2011, 12:04:39 PM
RANDOM THEORIES~~~

-Amiga-tan isn't the real (memetic?) sex goddess of the Amiga clan, that honour actually goes to C=128-tan. I realized this after reading C=128-tan's article for the first time; my GAWD, she's gorgeous, mature, refined, can do everything C=64-chan can and more, has none of the physical awkwardness of Amiga-tan, and has a level of adaptability nigh-unmatched by other vintage micro-tans (the C=128 has three different processors, four separate kinds of RAM, and two video chips to support its different modes of operation). Also, I'm one of the heartless bastards who dislikes Amiga-tan and has never gotten why she's supposed to be so special/desirable/clever/etc. >____>

-All the Wanderer-class-tans should get hobo names. A la http://e-hobo.com/hoboes/list/

DISCUSS.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 14, 2011, 03:59:56 PM
C128-tan does often get overlooked, doesn't she? And I'm guilty of overlooking the C128 in favor of the C64, Amiga and even the C65! (and C65-tan would have been a lot like C128-tan if it weren't for the abandonment and the ax craziness...)

The Amiga was to be the most awesome computer ever made and was way ahead of its time. I could see how she's really pretty and nice, but there has to be a caveat to that. I feared she is a Mary Sue, so I have an alternate interpretation of Amiga-tan: That she started off arrogant, or her efforts to help others came off as being condescending, and she struggled to relate to her puny, relatively tone-deaf competitors. While she may have meant well in her early years, humility and successful cooperation are things she had to learn the hard way, so she really had to earn the status she has now.


Bwahahaha! I love the idea of wanderers having hobo names! Sadly, I can't think of any at the moment. :(
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on April 14, 2011, 04:52:40 PM
I think I write (current) Amiga as too much of a Yamato Nadeshiko.... so that's just me.

Discussion: That's an awesome idea.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 14, 2011, 09:12:55 PM
I've always seen Miggy as being one of the nicest characters in all of OS-tandom. I remember something her creator said, when we were discussing tragedies in OS-tan backstories; something to the effect of, "it's arguable OS/2, VMS, Multics, Unix - even Windows 1.0 and 2.0-tan - all did something that lead to their own downfall, but Amiga-tan was completely innocent." Of course that was C-Chan so there was a pretty clear bias there... but I digress. I kinda have to agree with him, I've never seen Amiga-tan as anything less than a selfless, sweet individual, and that's probably why I don't really like her. >__>;

Quote from: stewartsage on April 14, 2011, 04:52:40 PM
Discussion: That's an awesome idea.

I think I mentioned it before during a late-night discussion of such silly matters. xP

A few to get you started:
#1: "Hot Mess" Sara
#2: Stabs-A-Lot SAGE
#3: VICchan the Vixen
#4: Sharpshootin' Motorbike ITS-san
#5: ..........Commodore Sixty-Four (http://e-hobo.com/hoboes/175)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 14, 2011, 09:26:43 PM
We never did find out what 1.0 and 2.0 did that got them into trouble, did we? Amiga-tan seems too perfect- there has to be a dark side to her that she's struggled with at some point! There has to!

Good start with the hobo names!

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on April 14, 2011, 09:33:51 PM
She killed a dude in Pasadena.

Commodore Sixty-Nine amirite?  Nah, she's a nice girl I'm sure.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 15, 2011, 08:33:32 PM
Love the Commodore. -w- what happens if (s)he's promoted to admiral, though? :\
Amiga's sin might be the sin of indifference. when shit hit the fan, maybe she just stood by and watched.
I've always wondered what happened to get 1.0 and 2.0 exiled. ik people have said that it was because they couldn't keep up during the OS wars, but with that mentality every OS prior to the newest would be exiled. :\ (for that matter, why wasn't 3.1 exiled at the time too?)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 15, 2011, 08:41:09 PM
That sounds like a good idea too- Amiga-tan didn't take Commodore's downfall as hard as some of the others, Minuteman-tan, VIC-20-tan and C64-tan were the most devastated since they worked so hard to get the success they had. PET-tan would have still taken the fall hard, but by that point may have been more laid-back than she used to be.

It wasn't just that 1.0 and 2.0 couldn't keep up (that wasn't actually the main reason, as you said, so many more discontinued OS-tans would have otherwise been exiled), but also because they weren't very successful, and were seen as a liability more than an asset by that point. But the main reason was that they were conscientious objectors who outright opposed the imperialistic direction the Windows Family was taking. They didn't want to take part in scorched-earth tactics, and were seen as a threat from within.

As for DOS and 3.1, they both still had a considerable userbase, and although they didn't take part in scorched-earth tactics like 95 and NT, they were supportive of their endeavors.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 15, 2011, 09:45:20 PM
i wonder how the mac's views would fall in that timeframe. 7.5 was leading the family by that point, right? wonder how the rest of the family felt, and what 8 and Sonata would have to say. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 15, 2011, 10:08:14 PM
None of the Mac/Apple-tans got exiled (Apple III-tan and System 3.4-tan ran away from home years before) since there family unity and honor were strongly valued, and because of Apple II-tan's influences. She'd never let any of her family get exiled.

First, a little bit of background info:

The Mac-tans in the first half of the 90's were really confident that they would never be involved in a large-scale war, and didn't see the Windows-tans as a threat (i.e: Apple doubted Windows 3.0's success). They were short-sighted, slow to change, and none of them were particularly good tacticians. (Apple had some 90's successes, but some huge blunders too.)

They never expected a full-blown OS Wars, let alone from the Windows-tans. Reality hit them hard. Very hard, and suffered the consequences. System 7-tan and 7.5-tan tried their own aggressive tactics, which backfired and led to desperation attacks, which the other Mac-tans didn't object to because they were trapped in a state of desperation themselves.

Could it have been possible that System 7.5-tan was actually exiled because she didn't try to atone for her mistakes (at least System 7 did afterwards)?

Mac OS8-tan was born during the worst of the OS Wars and would have initially been used to the desperation felt by her family, but would be disappointed now. She's still a bit upset over what happened and that she couldn't get very involved, and now she tries to keep the peace and motivate others to learn from past mistakes.

Same would go for OS9-tan, who was born during an unstable transitional phase, when the family was trying to rebuild what remained of their territory.

I have seen some pictures of 7.5-tan and OS9-tan getting along, so it looks like they were able to put the past behind them, at least somewhat... just as long as they don't talk about family politics.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 15, 2011, 10:29:59 PM
i'd be afraid to see 7.5 and 95 together now. :\

the macs sound like Japan; close-knit but stubborn and hard to change. :\

(will discuss moar tomorrow, too tired right now =__=; )
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 17, 2011, 01:11:21 PM
Quote from: stewartsage on April 14, 2011, 09:33:51 PM
Commodore Sixty-Nine amirite?  Nah, she's a nice girl I'm sure.

......it took me three days to see what you did thar. And it made me laugh. >///////>
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 17, 2011, 02:37:12 PM
.....now you've got me thinking about 95 and Sys 7.5 doing naughty things to each other..... ./////.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on April 17, 2011, 03:09:11 PM
I thought about that during the slash week...and abandoned it due to not having the urge to write guro at the moment.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 17, 2011, 04:26:23 PM
wimp.

so. did we ever reach a consensus on the os-tan world?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 17, 2011, 04:54:39 PM
No, while at least one of the theories is widely supported here, there still isn't a total consensus, but I think that's okay.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 17, 2011, 05:17:54 PM
mmm.

alright then, should we discuss os classes? we left off on that when the theory thread died the first time. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 17, 2011, 05:51:32 PM
....and now YOU'VE got me thinking of System 7-tan eviscerating 95-tan after 95-tan makes a pass at her, is rebuffed, and goes all psycho-bitch on Sys. 7...... there's totally not a half-drawn comic about this.......
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 18, 2011, 11:03:19 AM
i'd like someone other than you or me to draw it though, since we'd be biased. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on April 18, 2011, 11:08:19 AM
>implying there is unbiased anything

I mean...
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 18, 2011, 11:48:35 AM
Quote from: Chocofreak13 on April 18, 2011, 11:03:19 AM
i'd like someone other than you or me to draw it though, since we'd be biased. :\

You're too cute, Kari. *Pinches cheeks* >3<

I'll tell you what my ninth-grade science teacher told me: Everyone is biased. And if they say they aren't, they're lying. Of course she said this while trying to prove that man-made climate change is a myth, but I think the point stands....
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 19, 2011, 10:57:39 PM
don't make me kick you, sweetie. >__<;

i meant that we'd be TOO biased to provide a semi-fair account, since each would be rooting for a side; we'd need a neutral party, say a linux user.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 19, 2011, 11:39:18 PM
Why, WHHHHHHHHHHY, does everyone think I'm a Mac fan?! I'm a Unix fan dammit, and couldn't care less about pre-OSX Mac operating systems. >___________<
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 19, 2011, 11:41:53 PM
I knew they aren't your favorite, but I thought you at least tolerated Macs, including the Classics. :(  (you have used Mini vMac, didn't you? and what about your Mac 128k?)

Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 20, 2011, 12:22:49 AM
Er, let me rephrase.

Basically, I am sick and tired of people giving me this DURRRRR UR A MAC FAN LOLZ PCs ARE BETTER or DURR YOU LOVE MACS SO YOU HATE WINDOZE crap. It makes me want to DROP A SUITCASE-SIZED FIVE-MEG TRS-80 HARD DRIVE ON SOMEONE'S HEAD, since (and listen close everybody, I'm only going to tl;dr this once):

I do not identify as a Mac fan. Sure, I love Macs. But most of my love for Mac OSX is based on its Unixness (and even that starts at 10.5 and ends at 10.6). Likewise, I like Mac Classic, but, again, I don't feel like a "fan" of it. Mac's a good OS among many good OSes; Apples are good computers among many good computers. I will never go back to using non-Mac computers or OSes, but that's a personal choice like what music I listen to or clothes I wear, and I don't advocate that EVERYONE should use or love Macs.

I think Macs are cool, iconic, well-built computers. They have a lot of history and a background I find very appealing. But it appalls me that, by having an interest in them, I am reduced to a mere caricature of a sheep who will follow whatever company line is thrown at me. It's sad that some people have such a black-and-white worldview and think that, just because I love some Macs, I automatically ADORE them all and am BIASED, and again, IT MAKES ME WANT TO DROP AN 8-INCH HARD DRIVE ON SOMEBODY'S CRANIUM.

It's worth noting that I DO hate Windows, but my hate for it is rooted in experiences that have nothing to do with my love of Macs....
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 20, 2011, 12:35:15 AM
Okay. I understand, and I like Macs too, they're some of my favorite computers and OSes, but I also don't like being lumped in with that stereotypical group either. And although I like OSX, I'm ambivalent towards Unix, and I don't really hate Windows anymore.

To avoid this from devolving into hostility, since the picture idea suggested was a touchy matter, any other theories and such to discuss?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 22, 2011, 03:43:31 PM
I did a second relationship map, this time focusing solely on parent - child, sibling and conceptual lineages.

(http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s320/BellasOS-tans/mapmk2.jpg) 

Straight line = blood relationship

Broken line = conceptual relationship

Lines deriving from a single parent that SHARE a single root = a common genetic heritage separate from the parent (See: important point #1, below)

Lines deriving from a single parent but NOT sharing a single root = siblings

Two important conclusions can be drawn if you believe this map:

1. I am going to use a specific example to explain the first important point. Note how SAGE, CTSS and IBM 7090-kun all derive from a single root. Whirlwind-hime is the mother of SAGE-sama. CTSS-tan and IBM 7090-kun are SAGE's siblings, but NOT necessarily Whirlwind's children. How is this possible? Because SAGE (the AN/FSQ-7 computer) inspired the creation of the IBM 7090 (a solid-state AN/FSQ-7), and the IBM 7090 inspired the creation of the IBM 7094 (which, as you will recall, is the computer on which CTSS ran). This means SAGE-sama's creation is directly responsible for the creation of 7090-kun and CTSS-tan (who represents the OS and 7094 hardware), and that 7090 and CTSS are more closely related to SAGE-sama than Whirlwind-hime. 

A different person might interpret this relationship as being that of a parent and child, or cloning*, but going by the backstory we've established for those characters, their being brother and sister makes the most sense. It would also explain why SAGE, 7090 and CTSS share common traits (for example, brownish hair, average height, physically-mature) while PDP-1-chan - their sister - is radically different (small, child-like, blonde). Blue eyes is a trait found on both sides of the family, and can be attributed to their mother, Whirlwind.

*An example of cloning can be found on Plan 9-tan's family tree; note how Plan B and Octopus are rooted from the same stem as Plan 9 herself. In this case, Plan B and Octopus are NOT Plan 9-tan's children, but artificially-created siblings. 

2. In the earliest days of OS-tans, hardwares and OS-tans could be related. Today there is a clear distinction between a hardware-tan and OS-tan, and they are typically NOT related (exceptions include microcomputer-tans, who are both hardware and software). In the beginning there were only "computer-tans" and the distinction between software and hardware was blurred. Whirlwind, for example, was both hardware and software. She "produced" four children, some of whom were hardware and some of whom were hardware and software. One of these "hybrid"-tans, CTSS, produced an entirely OS-tan child, Multics, the descendants of whom are entirely OS-tan in nature.

Which brings me to the conclusion that hybrid (part hardware, part software or OS) computer-tans can have hardware or software children; and that hardware-tans running rudimentary software can produce OS-tan children (this is how the first early OSes were made). But an OS-tan or software-tan can never produce a hardware-tan offspring.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 22, 2011, 08:17:59 PM
Excellent! I'll post that up on the OS-tan lineage page!

The DEC-tan part was especially helpful, I couldn't keep track of all the branches when typing up the article, but now I remember that there is no single DEC bloodline, but rather multiple bloodlines united into a cultural lineage. I'll have to take note of that when expanding on the DEC section.

Btw, do you know who the mother of the System/360-tans are?

I didn't know that Plan B and Octopus would be considered cloned -siblings- to Plan 9!
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 22, 2011, 09:28:48 PM
i like point 2. point 1 is slightly confusing, but 2 is crisp and clear and easy to understand. :3 good theory bells, it makes sense. -w-
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 23, 2011, 05:27:31 PM
Quote from: Aurora Borealis on April 22, 2011, 08:17:59 PMBtw, do you know who the mother of the System/360-tans are?

I didn't know that Plan B and Octopus would be considered cloned -siblings- to Plan 9!

If i recall correctly the System/360-tans were created from scratch.

Plan B-tan is Plan 9-tan's clone - making her Plan 9-tan's genetic twin. Octopus-tan is Plan B's clone, which also means she's Plan 9-tan's sister. (Cause a copy of a copy is the same as a copy...)

Quote from: Chocofreak13 on April 22, 2011, 09:28:48 PM
i like point 2. point 1 is slightly confusing, but 2 is crisp and clear and easy to understand. :3 good theory bells, it makes sense. -w-

It's pretty simple to follow, if you stop thinking in terms of human families (since, we've established that human family structures sort of don't exist among OS-tans). I'm basically saying that, within OS-tan families, siblings can be created from one another.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 24, 2011, 05:44:30 PM
What do you guys make of this? http://www.acsa2000.net/randfsq-7.htm

It's about the AN/FSQ-7 computer (incorrectly referred to in the article as a Rand AN/FSQ-7 *facepalm*). I found it while googling "IBM AN/FSQ-7 and IBM 709", trying to find out if there's a connection between the two. (Since the 709 is vacuum-tube based and one of the ancestors of the 7090.)

The website's sketchy as all hell and I can point out glaring inaccuracies, but, it's strangely intellectually tantalizing at the same time:

-They keep referring to the AN/FSQ-7 as the Whirlwind II

-They call the AN/FSQ-7 the "Spiritual grandfather of all ... mainframe computer systems and the father of the machines that became IBM's primary mainframe offerings" and furthermore says "The FSQ-7 is the architectural forerunner, allegedly, of the RCA Spectra 70 and the IBM "stretch" 709/7090, duplicated by Xerox in joint efforts with MIT the Sigma 7 and the Sperry Univac 1170 series."

-At the same time, the author declares that "Many of the advancements introduced in the ...7090, 360 and 370 architecture mainframes were actually not developed by IBM nor RCA, but by the University of Manchester ... in the ATLAS Computer"

-Later on in the article, the author boldly states that SAGE was more-or-less responsible for pushing IBM into the mainframe business and creating the tech giant we've come to know and love/loathe; creating DARPANET; that its spinoff, SABRE, was the "backbone of the airline business"; and says that Ken Olsen was quoted as saying that Whirlwind was the first minicomputer and that DEC was entirely based off of technology garnered from it.

What do you think? Computer-history apocrypha? Conspiracy theorizing? Insane ramblings? I can't tell.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on April 24, 2011, 06:02:21 PM
Gotta type this up quickly, but either way, SAGE was the most influential system of its time. I really don't know how involved SAGE was with IBM, but have heard before about SAGE being responsible for DARPANET, its descendant SABRE shaping the airline industry, and that the first DEC computer was based off of the TX-0 project of Whirlwind, but were the rest of the DEC computers based directly off Whirlwind's architecture too?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on April 24, 2011, 06:28:24 PM
I'd go out on a limb and say that it all actually sounds pretty legit. But, well. Some more research on the matter is advisable.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 25, 2011, 12:12:51 PM
@Aurora: IBM seems to want to forget about/ignore SAGE, for some reason. Which baffles me, considering it was one of the most impressive technological feats ever pulled off, and raked in tons of money for IBM... moreso if it actually influenced the other IBM systems so heavily. I've heard several sources link the IBM 709, 7090 and AN/FSQ-7; I'm now curious how the 7090 relates to the other IBM mainframes...

@Nej: Yes, most of the technical details sound correct... it's an odd article, though. (SAGE seems to have a lot of strange anecdotes and folklore surrounding it, so this isn't exactly anything new).
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on April 25, 2011, 10:47:05 PM
The /360s were completely new creations, semi-related to the independently created /360 OSs.

Well, anything with SAGE referred to as Whirlwind II kind of puts me off enough.  And saying it was built by Rand.... who backed out on the whole deal. 

SAGE definitely didn't propel IBM to technical dominance, though she certainly laid the foundation for their eventual success.  IBM built it's success on the back of it's 700/7000 series mainframes and up which really didn't have have much to do with SAGE at all.  Neither did their wildly successful System/360 units.

I remember reading somewhere else about the AN/FSQ-7 RCA Spectra 70 connection but I can't for the life of me remember where that was.

As for Whirlwind: Yes, she made DEC and too many computer advances to count possible.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on April 25, 2011, 10:53:49 PM
But the 7000 (7090?) series is supposedly a solid-state AN/FSQ-7... and it's also supposedly a solid-state 700, so I always assumed the chain of ancestry went FSQ-7 -> 700 series -> 7000 series. *shrugs*

Rand was originally supposed to build it?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on April 26, 2011, 02:23:26 AM
They defaulted on the contract, as I recall from yet another article I can no longer find.

*shrug*

I didn't think the 700s were involved at all.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on April 28, 2011, 09:49:28 AM
from all i've read from you guys, i think the only connection SAGE would have with others (besides ancestors and descendants) would be the military or parent company. if you want to try to connect it though, would SAGE have a code number like the others? (it's possible.) start there maybe?

@bells: if the site has inaccuracies, try emailing the webmaster. if there's one thing i can't stand, it's blatant mistakes. >__<;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on May 25, 2011, 10:07:58 PM
Look what I finally started on the wiki!

http://ostan-collections.net/wiki/Life_and_Death (http://ostan-collections.net/wiki/Life_and_Death)

This could go on the wiki thread, but given that this is still about conjectures and theories, and that Choco really wants this thread alive again (I do too!), thought it'd be better to post it here. :)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 25, 2011, 11:36:03 PM
i should mention that i found a pic of XP, ME, and 2000 weeping over the grave of an outdated version of IE. (didn't edit the article, since i figured i'd better leave it to you to decide whether that's worth a mention).

btw, certain things on wikipedia are collected into series (such as the "series on capital punishment" i was reading earlier today). is there any way we could gather various pages into a series? if we could, we could separate the different theories discussed here into their respective pages and link them in a series.

also, while we're on the topic, i think that in order for an os-tan/-kun (or any sort of -tan/kun, including hardware and programs) to be declared officially "dead", it must fufill one of these two conditions:
1. there must be no userbase, whether it be in person or through emulation.
2. it was NEVER open-source, and is no longer in use (this would apply more to mainframe computers that blurred the line between hardware and software, and never made it to the net; this would render -tans like Hollerith and GENIAC dead).

if they were not to fulfill one of these, they could be considered "alive"--but just barely, depending on user base. (for instance, a REEEEALY obscure OS might survive as a zombie, a ghost, or on the brink of death).

little morbid, but i think we should have slightly stricter guidelines for 'dead' and 'alive'. :\

EDIT: ps. thanks for reviving this thread. :3
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on May 26, 2011, 12:18:44 AM
Okay. In -most- cases, a discontinued system can still be considered alive if it still has a userbase.

GENIAC is one of those exceptions, apparently although there's no real userbase left, there are still working GENIAC units out there! It's such a simple computer that it's not that prone to hardware failure!

Systems such as Xenix, Apple I, ARX, and CTSS are 'dead', and are deceased OS-tans even though they live on through emulation. As I said, some deaths are for storyline purposes. But then again, emulation generally isn't practical and I don't expect anyone to use an emulated system for anything more than casual, hobbyist use. So there's no full-time, dedicated userbase for these.

If a deceased system has emulation available, it's not -completely- dead, and those characters live as ghosts. There's only one or two deceased OS-tans that completely came back from the dead.

Some systems are completely dead, with no emulators, the system dismantled, etc. This was the fate of many early computer-tans.

There are some borderline cases, such as C65-tan and System 3.4-tan (both extremely obscure, short-lived systems with no known emulators or viable userbase), but I consider them alive. Incidentally, both of them have cheated death many times in-story!

Another borderline case is SAGE-tan, since the SAGE OS is lost forever, and its hardware was shut down in '83, but much of the hardware is still in existence, including an intact computer in a museum. She didn't die when the last SAGE computer was shut down, but she went blind and lost much of her sanity.

The definition for death needs to be a bit more lenient:

*An OS-tan is (in most cases) deceased if there's not enough of a userbase using just original, unemulated hardware and software to keep the system alive.
*If emulation is available, the OS-tan still lives as a ghost in a dead-alive limbo state.
*OS-tans are completely dead if there's nothing of their system (hardware or software, and there's no emulation available) left in existence.



Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 12:38:17 AM
eh, alright, let's go with that.

btw, if i can find that pic of IE 6's (?) funeral, i'll send it to you to put on the life/death page.

i'd like a repost of the guidelines nej made for os-tan death, those were specific enough to not leave any ambiguity, but still fair enough that most os-tans weren't officially "dead".
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on May 26, 2011, 12:43:25 AM
Sounds good! I'll have to dig around, but I know that Nej's really insightful post about life and death is somewhere in this thread.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 01:06:59 AM
i agree with his guidelines, since the line between life and death is kind vague with the -tans, and that made things pretty clear.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on May 26, 2011, 04:16:09 AM
Quote from: Life/Death Guidelines, by the Demon OverlordIn my view of OS-tan death, there are 4 stages.
1: Operation death - there are no longer any pieces of hardware running the OS. This gives the -tan a few moments to say some last words (length dependent on the size of the final code pool and the maintenance/power level needed to sustain her equipment), whereafter she goes into a "dormant state" resembling a coma. This of course under the condition that any external power supplies have also kicked the bucket; a -tan with still-operative direct descendants, subordinates or a sizeable code pool available through other means (in possession of a family company, for example, that is willing to supply the -tan with power) will not cease operation until these link(s) are gone.

2: Hardware death - there are no longer any hardware in good enough condition to run the OS. This marks a deepening of the "dormant state", where only porting can give the -tan a true return to life.

3: Software death - there are no longer any pieces of the original installation mediums left, and the -tan starts to effectively decay into bits of code.

4: Code death - the final stage of the deceased, when all vital pieces of code (source or not) is gone from existence. This is effectively the final death of a -tan.

More later, for off to dinner nao.

From glorious olde page 5 in this thread. Was some good debates there.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 01:58:18 PM
too bad the debates fizzled. just because we reached an agreement on life/death, doesn't mean there aren't other things to talk about.

i still liked the discussion about 'classes' of os-tan society. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on May 26, 2011, 02:12:14 PM
I could use some help writing the life/death article, but it'd also be good to get back to classes debate. Did we reach a consensus for that yet?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 02:58:03 PM
yes and no; we were working our way through it, by starting with the vague stuff and getting more detailed from there. i'll take a minute and try to find what we had decided on.

EDIT: i believe we got as far as this before it derailed:

Quote from: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 02:58:03 PM
IT IS DONE.

OS-CLASSES ARE AS FOLLOWS:
WINDOWS
MAC
DOS
LINUX
UNIX
OTHERS

MOVING ON, NEXT TOPIC:
SOFTWARE CLASSES.

Application
Website
Program
Antivirus (could fall under program, so this one's up for debate)
Other (sidebar gadgets, ect)
i feel that's getting too specific too quickly. i use "software" as the term because 1. it matches ^^ and 2. it's an umbrella term so we cover anything we might have missed.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on May 26, 2011, 05:46:07 PM
Wouldn't it be much, much easier to just drop the whole question of "classes"? I mean - the existing systems of Factions and Lineages/Families pretty much sum all the necessary data up without making any unnecessary generalizations.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Aurora Borealis on May 26, 2011, 05:48:09 PM
That part's fully agreed on, but I think she meant the differences in class between OSes, other software, hardware, and hybrid systems.

I worked on the life and death article a bit more, and included a link in it to a new article on the OS-tan Code Pool Theory.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 06:33:47 PM
when the topic came up, it was for 2 things:
1. to determine the different species of -tan (such as antivirus-tan, ram-tan, or mainframe-tan)
2. to give a loose guideline on the different social classes in the os-tan world (such as would they all be equal, or would some os-tans considered programs/hardware/etc 'beneath' them).

so....yeah. everyone cool with those classes/species of software? anything you feel should be amended?
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: NejinOniwa on May 26, 2011, 07:48:36 PM
Hmmmm
Amendments are needed. Not enough time. I needs to sleep now. Will write more tomorrow.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 08:52:26 PM
kk. will wait for response.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on May 26, 2011, 09:02:15 PM
A few days ago I found a piece of official DEC literature that outlines a history of early MIT systems that, if released, would turn our entire knowledge of MIT computer-tan history on its head. Or not. Probably not. Hint: it has to do with Whirlwind.

So, yes. Let us NEVER SPEAK OF IT AGAIN. Or at least until Stew comes back again, since we'll need his tacit knowledge of Whirlwindology to know what course of action to take concerning aforementioned nugget of info and whether said nugget should be made into a new OS-tan character. Oops, I've said too much. .__.;
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on May 26, 2011, 09:09:27 PM
bells, that's better suited to the "new ibm-tans" thread. :\
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: stewartsage on June 04, 2011, 11:29:45 PM
Whoa, we have a new IBM thread?

(http://i52.tinypic.com/dxfvuq.jpg)
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Bella on June 04, 2011, 11:35:36 PM
There is no new IBM-tan thread. It's the old thread, for new IBM-tans. .__.
Title: Re: OS-TAN THEORY 101
Post by: Chocofreak13 on June 05, 2011, 12:02:46 AM
why is this here? :\

i thought this thread died again. :\