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BeBox
This BeBox has an aftermarket monitor.
ManufacturerBe Inc.
TypeWorkstation
Release dateBeBox Dual603-66: October 3, 1995; 30 years ago (1995-10-03)[1]
BeBox Dual603e-133: August 5, 1996; 29 years ago (1996-08-05)[2]
Introductory priceBeBox Dual603-66 US$1,600 (equivalent to $3,300 in 2024)
BeBox Dual603e-133 US$2,995 (equivalent to $6,000 in 2024)
DiscontinuedJanuary 1997; 28 years ago (1997-01)
Units sold1000 – BeBox Dual603-66
800 – BeBox Dual603e-133[3]
Operating systemBeOS
CPUPowerPC 603 @ 66 MHz, or
PowerPC 603e @ 133 MHz[4]
MemoryUp to 256 MB (Up to eight 72-pin SIMMs)
Power100–240 volt AC single-phase
Dimensions15.68 in × 8.28 in × 18.15 in
39.8 cm × 21.0 cm × 46.1 cm
WebsiteArchived 1996-10-20 at the Wayback Machine

The BeBox is a discontinued personal computer from Be Inc., running the company's operating system, later named BeOS.[5] It has two PowerPC CPUs, its I/O board has a custom "GeekPort", and the front bezel has "Blinkenlights".

The BeBox debuted in October 1995 with dual PowerPC 603 at 66 MHz.[6] The processors were upgraded to 133 MHz in August 1996 (BeBox Dual603e-133). Production was halted in January 1997,[7][8] following the port of BeOS to the Macintosh, for the company to concentrate on software. Be sold around 1,000 66 MHz BeBoxes and 800 133 MHz BeBoxes.[3]

CPU configuration

[edit]
Connectors of the I/O board

Production models use two 66 MHz PowerPC 603 processors or two 133 MHz PowerPC 603e processors to power the BeBox. Prototypes having dual 200 MHz CPUs or four CPUs exist, but were never publicly available.[9]

Main board

[edit]

The main board is in a standard AT format commonly found on PC. It used standard PC components to make it as inexpensive as possible.[10]

  • Two PowerPC 603/66 MHz or 603e/133 MHz processors
  • Eight 72-pin SIMM sockets
  • 128 KB Flash ROM
  • Three PCI slots
  • Five ISA slots
  • Internal SCSI connector
  • Internal IDE connector
  • Internal floppy connector
  • External SCSI-2 connector
  • Parallel port
  • Keyboard port, AT-style
  • Three GeekPort fuses
  • I/O Board connector
  • Front panel connector
  • Power connector

I/O board

[edit]

The I/O board offers four serial ports (9-pin D-sub), a PS/2 mouse port, and two joystick ports (15-pin D-sub).[11]

There are four DIN MIDI ports (two in, two out), two stereo pairs of RCA connectors audio line-level input and output, and a pair of 3.5 mm stereo phone jacks for microphone input and headphone output. There are also internal audio connectors: 5-pin strip for the audio CD line-level playback, and two 4-pin strips for microphone input and headphone output. The audio is produced with a 16-bit DAC stereo sound system capable of 48 kHz and 44.1 kHz.[10]

For the more unusual uses, there are three 4-pin mini-DIN infrared (IR) I/O ports.

GeekPort

[edit]

An experimental-electronic-development oriented port, backed by three fuses on the mainboard, the 37-pin D-sub "GeekPort" provides digital and analog I/O and DC power[12] on the ISA bus:

  • Two independent, bidirectional 8-bit ports
  • Four A/D pins routing to a 12-bit A/D converter
  • Four D/A pins connected to an independent 8-bit D/A converter
  • Two signal ground reference pins
  • Eleven power and ground pins: Two at +5 V, one at +12 V, one at -12 V, seven ground pins

"Blinkenlights"

[edit]
The LEDs

Two yellow/green vertical LED arrays, dubbed the "blinkenlights", are built into the front bezel to illustrate the CPU load.[13] The bottommost LED on the right side indicates hard disk activity.

Market

[edit]

Be called the BeBox: "the first true real-time, portable, object-oriented system that features multiple PowerPC processors, true preemptive multitasking, an integrated database, fast I/O, and a wide range of expansion options — all at an extremely aggressive price that is well below that of any competitive offering."[5]

BeBox creator Jean-Louis Gassée did not see the BeBox as a general consumer device, warning that "Before we let you use the BeBox, we believe you must have some aptitude toward programming – the standard language is C++."[14]

Prototype

[edit]

As of 1993, prototypes (at the time called Be Machine) had two 25 MHz AT&T Hobbit processors and three AT&T 9308S DSPs.[15] In 2009, a rare prototype of the BeBox with Hobbit processors was sold at an auction.[16]

Linux

[edit]

Craftworks Solutions developed Be_Linux for the BeBox. Craftworks and Be Inc. announced in 1996 that they would work together to bring Be_Linux to the BeBox.[17]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The BeBox was a dual-processor personal computer developed and briefly manufactured by Be, Inc., specifically designed to demonstrate the capabilities of the company's innovative BeOS operating system for multimedia and real-time applications.[1] It featured two soldered PowerPC 603 (66 MHz model) or 603e (133 MHz model) RISC microprocessors clocked at 66 MHz or 133 MHz, respectively, up to 256 MB of RAM via 72-pin SIMM modules, support for both IDE and SCSI storage devices, and expandability through three PCI slots and five ISA slots.[2] Notable hardware innovations included the custom "GeekPort" for digital and analog I/O experimentation, four serial ports, a parallel port, integrated 16-bit stereo audio with MIDI support, and front-panel "Blinkenlights" LED indicators to visualize CPU load.[2] Be, Inc. was founded in 1990 by former Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassée and Steve Sakoman in Menlo Park, California, with the goal of creating a next-generation operating system optimized for digital media, 3D graphics, and multiprocessing.[3] The BeBox debuted at the Agenda '95 conference in October 1995 as a showcase for BeOS, which was first publicly released for the platform in April 1996, emphasizing its object-oriented design, multithreading, and efficient handling of high-bandwidth tasks.[3] Production of the initial 66 MHz model ran from October 1995 to December 1996, followed by the upgraded 133 MHz version from October 1996 until its discontinuation on January 30, 1997, as Be shifted focus to porting BeOS to standard PowerPC Macintosh and Intel hardware to broaden market reach.[4] In total, around 1,000 units of the 66 MHz model and over 800 units of the 133 MHz model were sold, with most going to developers and a smaller number to early adopters.[4] Though commercially limited, the BeBox exemplified Be's vision for media-centric computing and influenced subsequent open-source projects like Haiku, which continues the BeOS legacy.[3]

Development

Origins

Be Incorporated was founded in 1990 by Jean-Louis Gassée, a former president of Apple's product division, and Steve Sakoman, Apple's former director of hardware engineering, along with a team of ex-Apple engineers seeking to innovate beyond the limitations of existing operating systems.[5][6][3] From its inception, Be Inc. focused on developing BeOS, a new operating system designed specifically for multimedia applications and optimized for multiprocessor hardware to handle demanding tasks in digital content creation, such as audio, video, and 3D processing.[7][8] In 1994, following AT&T's discontinuation of the Hobbit processor that Be had initially targeted, the company decided to design and build its own custom hardware platform, the BeBox, to independently demonstrate BeOS's capabilities without relying on third-party systems like Apple's Power Macintosh.[9][10] The early design goals for the BeBox emphasized affordable multiprocessing to enable true parallel computing, high multimedia performance for real-time media handling, and developer accessibility through the use of standard components, aiming to make advanced hardware viable for personal computing.[7][9]

Prototype

The development of BeBox prototypes accelerated in 1995 following Be Inc.'s decision to abandon early AT&T Hobbit-based designs due to the processor's discontinuation, shifting focus to PowerPC architecture to better align with emerging industry standards. These efforts built on prior conceptual work at the company, founded in 1990, to create hardware optimized for the multimedia-oriented BeOS operating system. Initial prototypes were single-board configurations designed specifically to validate BeOS functionality on PowerPC, enabling early software-hardware integration testing.[11][12] A limited number of these prototypes, designated as Revision 5 boards, were hand-assembled by Be Inc. engineers and distributed to select developers starting in late 1995 to gather feedback and expand the ecosystem. These units closely resembled the eventual production form factor but lacked final enclosures and regulatory certifications, prioritizing rapid iteration over polish. The prototypes featured basic I/O integration, including serial and parallel ports, to support essential development tasks without complex peripherals.[13] Central to the prototypes' design were dual-processor experiments using PowerPC 603 chips clocked at 66 MHz, demonstrating proof-of-concept for symmetric multiprocessing in BeOS and highlighting the OS's ability to leverage multiple cores for responsive, real-time multimedia workloads. This configuration allowed developers to explore threading and resource allocation, core tenets of BeOS's architecture, in a dedicated hardware environment.[13][12] Testing phases emphasized internal demos that showcased BeOS stability and performance benchmarks on the multiprocessor setup, culminating in a public unveiling at the Agenda 95 conference on October 3, 1995, where the prototype successfully ran multitasking demonstrations to enthusiastic reception. Feedback from these sessions informed hardware refinements, bridging the gap to production models by resolving integration challenges and scaling for limited manufacturing runs beginning in late 1995.[11][14]

Production Models

The BeBox was publicly announced on October 3, 1995, by Be Inc. founder Jean-Louis Gassée at the Agenda conference in Scottsdale, Arizona,[15] marking the company's entry into the personal computing hardware market with a focus on multimedia and parallel processing capabilities. Initial shipments of the first production model, the BeBox Dual603-66, began in October 1995. This model featured two PowerPC 603 processors clocked at 66 MHz and was offered at a price of $2,195 for the fully configured version, which typically included 32 MB of RAM, a 3 GB SCSI hard disk drive, and an ATI Graphics Pro Turbo PCI graphics accelerator.[16][4][17][18] In August 1996, Be Inc. introduced the upgraded BeBox Dual603e-133 model, with shipments commencing in late September of that year. Priced at $1,995 for the customizable developer edition and up to $2,995 for fully configured systems, it utilized two PowerPC 603e processors at 133 MHz and offered enhanced options such as 64 MB of RAM and a 4 GB hard disk drive, more than doubling the performance of the original model while maintaining compatibility with the BeOS operating system.[18] Be Inc. manufactured the BeBox in limited production runs at its facilities in Menlo Park, California, within Silicon Valley,[19] emphasizing U.S.-based assembly to maintain strict quality control over the dual-processor design and custom components. Overall, fewer than 2,000 units of both models were produced before hardware manufacturing ceased in January 1997, allowing the company to shift focus exclusively to software development.[4][20]

Hardware

CPU Configuration

The BeBox featured a dual-processor configuration utilizing two PowerPC 603 or 603e microprocessors, which are 32-bit reduced instruction set computing (RISC) architectures with integrated floating-point units (FPU) and memory management units (MMU).[21][1] The initial production model, the Dual603-66, employed two 66 MHz PowerPC 603 processors, while the later Dual603e-133 model upgraded to two 133 MHz PowerPC 603e processors, both soldered directly onto the main processor board for enhanced reliability and compactness.[1][2] This setup implemented a symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) design, where both processors shared a common 33 MHz processor bus with a 64-bit data path and 32-bit address bus, operating in big-endian mode.[2] The MPC105 system controller chip managed bus arbitration and ensured cache coherency through a snooping protocol, allowing the processors to execute parallel tasks efficiently by accessing shared system memory.[2] This architecture enabled the BeBox to handle concurrent operations, such as multimedia processing, more effectively than typical single-processor systems of the era. Power and thermal management were optimized for the dual-processor load through 3.3 V operation, derived via custom voltage regulation circuitry on the main board from the 5 V power supply.[2][21] The PowerPC 603e design incorporated low-power modes, including doze, nap, and sleep states, to minimize heat generation and energy consumption during varying workloads.[22] In terms of performance, the dual 66 MHz configuration achieved up to 120 SPECint92 in SMP mode, roughly doubling the single-processor score of 60.6 SPECint92, which underscored its advantages in multitasking and multimedia applications compared to contemporary single-processor rivals like the Intel Pentium at similar clock speeds.[23][24] The 133 MHz model's higher clock rate further improved integer and floating-point throughput, though specific dual benchmarks emphasized the system's scalability for real-time media tasks.[21][1]

Main Board

The main board of the BeBox is a custom-designed printed circuit board (PCB) that forms the central hub for the system's processing, memory, and expansion capabilities. It utilizes a 6-layer PCB construction with all components mounted on the top surface, including surface-mount ICs and passives alongside through-hole connectors for durability and ease of assembly. The board incorporates the MPC105 as an integrated northbridge, which manages PCI bus operations at 33 MHz and controls up to eight banks of memory, enabling efficient data flow between the processors, RAM, and peripherals.[2] Memory on the main board is provided through eight 72-pin SIMM sockets, allowing for a maximum capacity of 256 MB using EDO DRAM modules rated at 60 ns or faster in fast page mode. SIMMs must be installed in matched pairs to fill the 64-bit data path, with support for both 32-bit non-parity and 36-bit parity configurations; mixing sizes is possible as long as pairs are consistent. The initial production model shipped with 32 MB of RAM installed, while the updated model featured 64 MB as standard to accommodate more demanding applications under BeOS.[2] Graphics functionality is not integrated directly on the main board; instead, it relies on user-installed PCI graphics adapters for display output, supporting a range of resolutions from 640x480 to 1600x1200 at depths of 8 to 32 bits and refresh rates up to 90 Hz. Storage interfaces include a single internal ATA (IDE) port via a 40-pin ribbon cable for hard disk drives and a single internal SCSI port using a 50-pin ribbon, alongside an external SCSI II port managed by the onboard NCR 53C810 controller, enabling connectivity for CD-ROM drives and up to seven SCSI devices total. These interfaces facilitated preinstalled SCSI or IDE hard drives for immediate BeOS operation.[2][1] Expansion options on the main board comprise three 32-bit PCI slots operating at 33 MHz and 5 V, compatible with bus-mastering cards including full-length variants, alongside five 16-bit ISA slots for legacy peripherals. The board is designed as an ATX form factor variant, integrating connectors for a 240 W ATX power supply unit that provides regulated 3.3 V, 5 V, 12 V, and -12 V rails, with fuses protecting the power pins to ensure stable operation across the system's components.[2]

I/O Board

The I/O board of the BeBox serves as a dedicated modular riser that provides essential peripheral connectivity, separating standard input/output interfaces from the main processor board to enhance expandability and serviceability. Implemented as a compact 4-layer printed circuit board measuring approximately 4.25 by 7 inches, it connects directly to the main board via a gold-edge finger connector, allowing for straightforward integration without a full custom backplane. This design houses a range of conventional ports, including an NCR 53C810 SCSI controller for fast/narrow SCSI II functionality with an external 50-pin connector, a 10BASE-T Ethernet interface supported through compatible ISA or PCI cards, and four 9-pin D-sub serial ports using 16550-compatible UARTs and a standard parallel port for printer and peripheral attachment.[2][25][1] The audio subsystem on the I/O board features an integrated Crystal CS4231A codec, delivering 16-bit stereo audio with support for line-in and line-out jacks, microphone input, and connectivity for multimedia applications such as recording and playback at standard rates like 44.1 kHz. This setup emphasizes practical audio handling for developers and users engaging in sound-intensive tasks within the BeOS environment.[25] Video output is facilitated through a VGA port connected to the installed PCI graphics adapter, complemented by an S-video connector for TV-out, enabling display resolutions suitable for both computer monitors and consumer television sets. These interfaces route signals from the main board's PCI subsystem to the rear panel via the I/O board.[1] Power distribution is managed through dedicated connectors on the I/O board for external drives and networking hardware, ensuring stable supply from the system's 240 W power unit to support attached devices without requiring separate adapters in typical configurations. The board also includes a custom expansion port for specialized peripherals, as detailed in the GeekPort section.[1]

GeekPort

The GeekPort is a specialized expansion interface unique to the BeBox, designed to facilitate hardware experimentation and prototyping for developers and hobbyists. It utilizes a 37-pin female D-subminiature connector located on the rear I/O board, providing direct access to digital and analog signals as well as DC power without requiring custom printed circuit boards. Be Inc. supplied a breakout cable and comprehensive documentation to simplify connections to external components, enabling rapid integration of sensors, actuators, and other peripherals.[2][26] The port's interface specifications include two bidirectional 8-bit digital ports, offering up to 16 TTL-compatible I/O lines configurable as all inputs, all outputs, or a split 8-in/8-out arrangement, with signals operating in the 0-5 V range. It also features four 12-bit analog input channels via an integrated ADC for reading sensor data, four 8-bit analog output channels via DACs for control signals, and dedicated reference pins for analog operations, all grounded to minimize noise. Power delivery encompasses multiple +5 V pins (up to 500 mA total), single +12 V and -12 V pins, and several ground connections, with fuses on the main board protecting against shorts to power or ground; the connector shell ties to chassis ground for electromagnetic shielding. These elements are accessible via the ISA bus on the I/O board.[2][27] Intended for the BeBox's core audience of "geeks," the GeekPort supported creative applications such as environmental monitoring through sensor integration and LED control for visual feedback, as well as simple robotics projects. Early demonstrations included software like MrThermistor, which leveraged the port's analog inputs to measure temperature via thermistors connected to the breakout cable. Other usage examples encompassed developing custom input devices, such as bespoke controllers or interfaces tailored for BeOS applications, allowing users to extend the system's interactivity without specialized hardware design tools.[28][29]

Features

Blinkenlights

The Blinkenlights on the BeBox refer to the pair of vertical LED arrays integrated into the front bezel of the enclosure, designed to provide immediate visual feedback on system performance. Each array consists of 16 LEDs aligned in a column, with one array dedicated to each of the dual PowerPC processors to illustrate real-time CPU utilization. The number of lit LEDs in a given array corresponds directly to the load on its associated processor, where low activity illuminates only the bottom few LEDs and high activity lights up progressively more, culminating in all LEDs illuminated for maximum load.[28][30] These indicators employ yellow and green LEDs to create a bar-graph style display, emphasizing the symmetric multiprocessing nature of the hardware without the need for on-screen monitoring tools. The bottom LED of the right array also signals hard disk activity, flashing independently during read/write operations. This hardware-driven visualization serves an educational purpose by allowing developers and users to observe load balancing and processor activity intuitively, while also adding an aesthetic element reminiscent of classic computing aesthetics.[31][2] The design draws inspiration from the "blinkenlights" of vintage mainframe computers, where front-panel lights offered diagnostic insights, repurposed here to highlight the BeBox's innovative dual-processor architecture in an accessible, non-intrusive manner. The LED arrays connect directly to the main processor board via the system's bar-graph LED driver, ensuring low-latency updates tied to hardware interrupts and CPU metrics.[32][2]

Enclosure Design

The BeBox featured a compact mid-tower enclosure constructed from black metal, measuring approximately 16 by 8 by 18 inches (40 by 21 by 46 cm), designed to house its dual-processor motherboard and multimedia-oriented components.[33] This form factor included four internal drive bays: two exposed 5.25-inch half-height bays suitable for CD-ROM or other optical drives, and two internal 3.5-inch half-height bays for hard disk drives or floppy drives, along with screw-free mounting for drives enabling easy installation and servicing.[33][34] The enclosure's horizontal internal layout facilitated straightforward maintenance, with the power button prominently placed on the front panel alongside the signature blinkenlights for CPU activity indicators.[34] Cooling was achieved through passive CPU heatsinks without dedicated fans on the processors, supplemented by case airflow, enabling quiet operation suitable for multimedia and creative workflows.[35] Aesthetically, the BeBox adopted a minimalist industrial design ethos, featuring the Be logo on the chassis and evoking a sense of a "magic box" tailored for creative professionals in digital media production.[36][37] This unadorned, functional appearance emphasized reliability and expandability over flashy consumer styling, aligning with Be Inc.'s focus on high-performance computing for developers and content creators.[36]

Software Support

BeOS Integration

The BeBox was designed from the outset to run BeOS as its native operating system, with hardware components tailored to leverage the OS's architecture for multimedia and multithreaded applications. The first version of BeOS shipped with the BeBox to developers in October 1995 as a preview release, followed by BeOS Release 1 (R1) in 1996 as the standard version preinstalled on production units, providing full driver support for onboard hardware, including the dual PowerPC 603 processors, PCI-based video controllers, and 16-bit stereo audio hardware.[2][38] This integration included symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) capabilities, allowing both CPUs to handle parallel tasks efficiently, as well as hardware acceleration for multimedia processing such as audio mixing and video decoding.[39] The BeBox hardware was optimized around the BeOS kernel to enable real-time threading and low-latency handling of audio and video streams, reflecting Be Inc.'s focus on digital media workflows. The dual-processor setup facilitated seamless multitasking, with the kernel's lightweight design contributing to boot times of approximately 10 seconds from power-on to a fully usable desktop. Later versions like BeOS R5 (released in 2000) could also be installed on the BeBox for enhanced features. This synergy allowed the system to prioritize media-intensive operations without the overhead common in contemporary operating systems, such as interruptions from disk thrashing or memory swapping.[1][40][41] Developer tools were bundled with BeOS on the BeBox to encourage application creation, including the Metrowerks CodeWarrior IDE for C++ development and access to the BeOS Application Programming Interface (API), which emphasized object-oriented design for rapid prototyping. Demonstration applications showcased the Tracker file manager interface, highlighting interactions with dual-CPU parallelism and the GeekPort's I/O capabilities, such as real-time sensor data polling or MIDI sequencing. These tools and demos illustrated how developers could exploit the system's hardware-software alignment for custom media applications.[42][43] In performance benchmarks, the BeBox running BeOS demonstrated superior multitasking compared to single-processor Power Macs of the era, such as the Power Macintosh 7500, due to its native SMP support and efficient kernel scheduling, which minimized latency in concurrent tasks like video editing and audio rendering. For instance, the dual-processor model achieved smooth playback of multiple video streams without stuttering in standard resolutions, outperforming equivalent Mac configurations in media throughput by leveraging hardware acceleration and optimized drivers.[44][41][45]

Linux Port

The community-driven effort to port Linux to the BeBox hardware began in 1997, coinciding with the maturation of PowerPC architecture support in the Linux kernel. By late 1997, developers had achieved a bootable kernel based on the 2.0.3x series, allowing initial operation on the system's dual PowerPC 603e processors.[46] This port provided basic symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) support for the dual-processor configuration, enabling console-mode execution along with partial drivers for SCSI storage controllers, Ethernet networking, and onboard graphics hardware. Early versions lacked a full graphical user interface, focusing instead on core system functionality without advanced peripherals. Development faced significant hurdles due to the scarcity of official hardware documentation from Be Inc., which prioritized its proprietary BeOS operating system and offered minimal assistance to third-party efforts; developers thus relied on reverse-engineering to map the BeBox's custom components. By 1998, progress enabled basic X11 windowing support, though installation processes remained cumbersome, often requiring multiple boot floppies.[46][47] Subsequent ports of Unix-like operating systems to the BeBox, such as NetBSD/powerpc, built on this foundation, with NetBSD support officially merged into the project on October 14, 1997. These efforts remained niche, attracting limited adoption and providing only partial compatibility with specialized interfaces like the GeekPort, which saw incomplete driver implementation.[48]

Reception and Legacy

Market Performance

The BeBox was initially targeted at developers and multimedia professionals as a platform to showcase the capabilities of BeOS, with direct orders handled through Be Inc. beginning in late 1995. The first production run of approximately 1,000 units of the 66 MHz model sold out rapidly upon availability in early 1996, reflecting strong early interest from this niche audience.[49] Overall sales remained limited, totaling around 1,000 66 MHz BeBoxes and over 800 133 MHz units before discontinuation in January 1997, constrained by small-scale production and a focus on software development rather than mass-market distribution.[49] Priced at $1,600 for the base 66 MHz configuration (excluding monitor, keyboard, and mouse), the BeBox was positioned competitively against high-end Power Macintosh systems, which often exceeded $3,000 for comparable performance, though its bare-bones setup highlighted availability challenges for essential peripherals.[15] Marketing efforts emphasized the system's innovative dual-processor architecture and real-time multimedia features, with live BeOS demonstrations at major trade shows such as Agenda in 1995 and Macworld Expo, drawing attention to its potential for creative workflows.[50][51] Contemporary reviews praised the BeBox for its groundbreaking multithreaded operating system and hardware design tailored for parallel processing, earning accolades as a forward-thinking alternative in multimedia computing.[52][17] However, critics noted drawbacks including the relatively high cost per specification compared to off-the-shelf components and the scarcity of compatible peripherals, which limited broader adoption beyond developer circles.[52]

Discontinuation and Impact

In January 1997, Be Inc. discontinued production of the BeBox after selling approximately 1,800 units, primarily to developers and early adopters.[4] The company shifted its focus to software development, licensing BeOS to third-party PC manufacturers such as Power Computing and DayStar to leverage existing PowerPC hardware ecosystems.[9] This pivot stemmed from several challenges: as a small firm with only about 50 employees, Be Inc. struggled to compete in hardware against larger players like Apple in the PowerMac market, where multiprocessing capabilities had become commoditized and affordable through mass-produced clones.[9] Custom manufacturing of the BeBox incurred significant financial losses due to poor economies of scale from low sales volumes, while growing demand for BeOS on standard PowerPC hardware like Mac clones encouraged a strategic emphasis on software over proprietary hardware to avoid conflicts with OS licensees.[53] The BeBox's introduction of affordable symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) in consumer hardware demonstrated the viability of dual-processor systems for multimedia tasks, influencing subsequent operating system designs that prioritized native multithreading for parallel processing in modern environments.[54] Its legacy endures through BeOS's inspiration for the open-source Haiku operating system, which continues to develop compatible features for contemporary users. As of November 2025, Haiku remains actively developed, with monthly activity reports detailing kernel, application, and driver enhancements.[55][56] Today, the BeBox's rarity—owing to limited production—makes it highly collectible, with functional units typically selling for $500 to $2,000 on secondary markets depending on condition and included accessories.[57] Preservation efforts include emulation via projects like Bochs, allowing virtual runs of BeOS on the original hardware architecture.

References

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