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What big projects do you know about that never hit the mainstream?

I feel sorry for haXe and OpenLaszlo because people put so much work into them and they never got a user base large enough to become big hits.

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make this question a "community wiki" please. – Dave Markle Feb 1 '09 at 17:30
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Hey, who says haxe has a small user base ;) – artificialidiot Feb 1 '09 at 18:20
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I remember the OpenLazlo presentation from XTech2006. They apologised that the class hierarchy was written by someone whose only previous experience of a widget toolkit was MFC, and the presented a 'declarative' XML sample with sequentially executed 'if' statements. Don't waste your pity that the ecosystem doesn't have a niche for Neaderthals. – Pete Kirkham Jun 27 '09 at 18:56
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Plan 9 from Bell Labs

The same people who invented UNIX did it again some twenty odd years later. It does not suffer from the second system syndrome. Its design is actually much cleaner than UNIX ever was.

Unfortunately, the first versions were not available to the general public. You had to be a university and pay a few hundred dollars for a CD-ROM. When it was eventually open-sourced, it was too late.

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Does Duke Nukem Forever count?

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I'm glad it's dead. This game's hype was Θ(n!), which would result in 100% chance of disappointment had it been released. – Andrew Keeton Jun 21 '09 at 18:46
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n being time, of course. – Andrew Keeton Jun 21 '09 at 18:48
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@Andrew Keeton - Just look at Spore for a perfect example of this! – johnc Jun 22 '09 at 22:41
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I'm not really sorry about this one. Not at least wrt the question. The problem was that the developers didn't get a product out. It failed not because it gained enough interest, but because it didn't interest its own creators enough to complete in a reasonable time frame. – TokenMacGuy Jun 25 '09 at 18:00
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Hey, if you were the guy that made Sim City, entire planets and ecosystems wouldn't seem like such a big deal to you either. – Sneakyness Jul 26 '09 at 7:38
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BeOS.

I loved using that OS, it was much snappier and quicker than anything else I could find at the time, and more stable as well.

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You might want to try Haiku which is an Open Source version of BeOS. It's still in pre-alpha though, so don't be surprised if it crashes on you. – mnuzzo Jun 23 '09 at 21:07
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It's been pre-alpha for years. I just don't have the time to monkey around with it anymore, sadly. – mmr Jun 24 '09 at 18:16
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Windows Vista?

;-)

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Call me heartless. – Tom Hawtin - tackline May 29 '09 at 0:37
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Uhhh SkyNet? Anybody? – David Robbins Jun 21 '09 at 16:48
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What about windows me? – Sneakyness Jul 26 '09 at 7:27
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Even it was once hit mainstream, I deeply feel sorry for ICQ. MSN Messenger never deserved to take over.

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Let's be clear: ICQ sucked. The bigger disappointment is the vast disaspora of instant messaging protocols. There is no http:// for IM, and there should have been since forever – Jeff Atwood Feb 3 '09 at 9:17
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I think this would be smtp. It's just like http, it's not what we want, but what we have got. – dummy Feb 4 '09 at 0:02
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The http:// of IM is xmpp: – Joachim Sauer Feb 5 '09 at 0:20
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ICQ was a strange beast, your contact name was a number, it said "Uh OH" every time you got a message and ate up your memory.. apart from that, yeah sad to see it die out. – Kyle G Feb 7 '09 at 18:44
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ICQ was my favorite of the IMs. So many of the other early IM programs were frusrating because they wouldn't buffer messages if one of the communicators was offline. Over and over I'd see someone online, start typing, and have them log off. There's as nothing I could do with the message! ICQ would send it anyhow. – Nosredna Jun 16 '09 at 15:52
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Chandler. A brilliant book was written about this project, which was supposed to revolutionize personal information management software. Unfortunately millions of dollars were poured into endless meetings about every little aspect of the system whilst Google (and others) came along and actually released working software.

A very good demonstration that design-by-committee is full of pitfalls and that delivering stuff is of paramount importance.

Something like 7 years later (7 years!) the project's funding was eventually - and quietly - dropped.

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Check out Joel Spolsky's review of Dreaming in Code: joelonsoftware.com/items/2007/01/21.html – Jim Ferrans Jun 21 '09 at 16:42
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Actually, I think the book is unintentionally brilliant, as the author presumably approached it with a view to documenting the process whereby a great, game-changing application was written. He should have realized a bit more that he was instead writing the tome on how not to go about designing software. – oxbow_lakes Jun 21 '09 at 17:05

The GIMP. It's a decent tool and a lot of people use it but it will never be out of photoshop's shadow.

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I think there's probably no good reason to say that The GIMP could never exceed photoshop from the point of view of features and usability, but once it does, it'll have to stay that way for a while before photoshop starts hurting. – TokenMacGuy Jun 25 '09 at 18:06
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It's going to be a very, very long time before GIMP will be anything close to photoshop. It's "easy" to catch up to the functionality of Photoshop 7, but everything they continued to add after that were huge increases in complexity. – Sneakyness Jul 26 '09 at 7:30
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There's no program i hate more than The GIMP. Serious. – Jeff Oct 4 '09 at 4:02
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The GIMP can never go mainstream because no one can ever take it seriously while it's called The GIMP. – womp Oct 4 '09 at 4:15
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@Jeff As long as Lotus Notes will be out there, that's impossible – Pascal Thivent Oct 4 '09 at 4:15
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Intel Itanium processor, especially the C++ compiler for Itanium. It could have been a mainstream CPU, and a mainstream compiler.

I am sure much of the headway that Intel has made is reused, but it's unfortunate that it never hit the markets in a BIG way.

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Abandoning X86 would've been a great move and not doing it costs everyone dearly each year that we fail to move on! – Jimbo Oct 14 '09 at 20:36
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React OS, they never update that!

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I feel sorry for the D programming language. It's great. You really should hear of it as much as you do C.

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Boo Programming Language. Great tool that just doesn't seem to get the publicity / IDE it needs (not a big fan of #develop).

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It's got to be Iridium, the satellite-based mobile phone system available anywhere on earth. The technology was wonderful, with seamless cellular handoffs between low-earth orbit satellites travelling at 17,000mph. Awesome hardware and software, but a business plan that turned out to be very wrong. The original investors took a bath, but the system is still operated by Iridium, LLC.

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Iridium is still around. I have used its signals for testing antennas and pre-amplifiers. There is a also a Iridium pager channel which seems pretty busy and was told is used by the US Military. – IanW Jun 27 '09 at 19:05
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It's actually owned by the US Military now, iirc. – Sneakyness Jul 26 '09 at 7:28
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RISC OS

It was a joy to use and for a time it was more advanced than competing operating systems in many areas.

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Xanadu. Ted Nelson's 1960s vision of a world of hyperlinked documents, doomed to failure by his ambitions. Much later Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web as a lab-internal documentation scheme and accidentally scooped Ted.

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If you go to Xanadu.com, you can read about the history of the project. There's been a number of attempts to build it. But I don't think it was impossible, any more than Multics was impossible in the 60s. I stil think of Multics as being the OS we could have had, and what we got was Windows. – Ira Baxter Feb 24 '10 at 21:28
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WinFS, it had great concepts behind it...

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Hmmm... Actually, no. There are good reasons for its failure :) The intended result was awesome, but the underlying technological stack was doomed to fail. – wazoox Jul 1 '09 at 15:46
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HURD - HIRD of Unix-replacing daemons, where HIRD stands for HURD of interfaces representing depth

Sounds good on paper, but probably even Microsoft will have something comparable on the market before its finished.
I personally don't get why an OS supposedly based on a slim micro-kernel with modularized components can take that long to finish - it should be easier with that architecture.

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Here's a question for you - If Linus was a HURD hacker, would it have gotten done before now? – new123456 Oct 21 '10 at 11:19
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The lesson of Linux and the HURD is that it is actually harder to get a microkernel OS feature-complete and usable than a large-kernel OS. – Zack Dec 8 '11 at 2:45

I don't think there is any need to pity projects that aren't popular. Sometimes it's better that way, there's more freedom when you don't have to worry about users. You don't have to have a large user base to derive satisfaction from developing software.

For example, I'm busy making backwards-incompatible changes to one of my projects. The changes might inconvenience my users, but it's only used by a few people. If I was working on something as popular as the Linux kernel, making backwards-incompatible changes would likely trigger a deluge of vitriolic blog posts and a lot more grief than I would want to deal with.

It used to be the unofficial motto of the Haskell community to "avoid success at all costs". That attitude can be frustrating if you're a user, but it can be liberating for a developer.

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The linux kernel is a bad example, because they tend to do a lot of b/w-incompatible refactorings, leading to vitriolic blog posts from 3rd party vendors with closed-source code. – Torsten Marek Feb 1 '09 at 19:20
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The Linux kernel keeps a compatible interface to user-space programs for the most part -- but they feel free to change things up inside the kernel in a way that breaks device drivers at any time. They prefer device drivers to be open-sourced and added to the kernel tree. Drivers that are included in the tree are fixed as needed. It's the closed-source drivers that break. If you write a device driver, your choices are either to get it included with the kernel so the public can update it, or to update it yourself as each new version of the kernel comes out. – Kevin Panko Aug 25 '09 at 14:49
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OS/2 2.0 and upwards

It was really great at its time, unfortunately they couldn't manage to get developers to write applications for it, and had to depend on it's windows support.

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Like I said here, which, BTW, is very similar to this question:

"There's no platform that's more under-appreciated than the Ecere SDK.

It was created by a guy in ##programming on freenode, its official channel is #ecere on the same network.

He's been working on it for years, it just never got noticed.

Don't be deceived by its website's old look; it's really amazing, you can find examples of it along with a sample code here.

I hope you guys like it. GB"

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Burroughs. Beautiful Algol machines in hardware, no assembly code, OS ("MCP") coded in a high level language from day 1. Overwhelmed by IBM salesmen selling to the suits. Burroughs lost this war and then went on to produce the 1700, a machine that would run any language you cared to define, by swapping in the necessary microcoded HLL interpreter on a task switch. Finally eaten by loser hardware vendor Unisys. Poor Burroughs. Poor all of us. If they had won the marketplace, nobody would have ever had an Intel PC or instruction set to contend with.

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Delphi

I love the product. Sadly, it is now in the shadows. Some people keep predicting increase in Delphi popularity in the future, but I am just afraid it won't happen.

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I've not heard that prediction for about 10 years. Who is doing the predicting? – Nosredna Nov 11 '09 at 16:32

SkyOS

Seems to be having a few problems being a one-man show at this time.

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It would have a lot more users if it were free and open source... – Zifre May 9 '09 at 21:55

Solaris
Hmm is there a minimum answer length?

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I feel sorry for Daikatana - surely one of the most anticipated video games ever? 3 years overdue and it just about made enough money to cover production costs. What a flop!

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As Yahtzee pointed out in Zero Punctuation, Duke Nukem: Forever makes that game's delay look spot on. – mnuzzo Jun 23 '09 at 21:09
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If you haven't read the book about those two, I would suggest you grab it IMMEDIATELY. It's an amazing read. Masters of Doom is the title iirc. – Sneakyness Jul 26 '09 at 7:31

Mifos.

While it won't hit mainstream as such given that it addresses the relatively specialised niche of microfinance, I nevertheless think it deserves far more attention and spare time from hobbyist developers. Contribute to free software and help alleviate global poverty in one package...

(Disclaimer, I was contributing professionally (to the extent of my capability, though not with code) to this project at a point)

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Jaiku

it was (still is) a very nice alternative to Twitter, much prettier, more organized, more scalable and with more features. I must say that it wasn't used by too many people, maybe that's why Google has abandoned it. and Twitter was in its hype, so Jaiku wasn't getting much new users.

too sad, I liked it...

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The Commodore Amiga. I remember learning to program in C on mine and it was such a great OS, with fantastic computer architecture.

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Multics. Symmetric multiprocessing with world-wide addressing (18 bit segment + 18 bit offset would have gorgeous with 24 bit segment and 40 bit offsets on modern 64 bit CPUs) and robust security, running in the 1960s. Used in the WhiteHouse until a few years back because it really was secure! We could have had Multics. Instead we got Eunuchs :-( and what stormed the market was a really bad OS called MSDOS. Now all we have are flat-space Linux and Windows. What has this devolution cost us? (I suppose I'm really feeling sorry for us all).

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The Atari 1450XLD. It was announced with the other XLs, but this top-of-the-line model never came out.

The other XL model (1850XL) was to use the Amiga technology.

The unreleased XEM was to feature the crazy high-end AMY chip--an allegedly groundbreaking sound chip that was never quite ready for silicon. The Atari ST line was also to get the AMY chip when it was ready.

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Rock Processor from Sun Microsystems

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