After a period of silence, Google's self-developed new operating system Fuchsia OS has new developments.
In short, Fuchsia OS is now open to the public. Allow anyone to create new mailing lists for project discussions; add governance models, clarify how to make strategic decisions, open issue trackers, help developers view the work being performed, etc.
In addition, Fuchsia has also updated its technical roadmap, including a driver framework that allows the kernel to be independently upgraded, interface definition language, file system performance, accessibility and input improvements.
Regrettably, even though it has been developed for 4 years, Fuchsia OS seems to have a long way to go before completion.
According to data, Fuchsia OS is an operating system developed by Google based on the Zircon microkernel (non-Linux). It supports two processor architectures of arm64 and x86-64. It can be used in mobile phones, computers, smart watches, car entertainment systems and other embedded devices.
The code of Fuchsia OS was originally hosted on Github and later migrated to its own googlesource website. Currently, it supports the installation experience on Pixelbook and Intel NUC.
It is worth mentioning that Fuchsia means fuchsia, which is Pink+Purple. These two code names have appeared inside Apple. In the end, Pink evolved into macOS and Purple evolved into iPhone.