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Google Fuchsia first popped up on GitHub in August 2016 with zero fanfare or explanation from Google. GitHub is an open source platform for developers that want to share and collaborate on projects. Like Android before it, Fuchsia is an open-source and free piece of software.
Unlike Android and Chrome OS, however, Google Fuchsia is not based on Linux, but rather Google’s own new microkernel called “Zircon” (which means “little kernel”). Zirkon, which was previously known as Magenta, is intended for embedded systems – meaning systems that perform a single job as part of a larger mechanism. Zircon was developed by a coder named Travis Geiselbrecht, who also created the NewOS kernel that powers Haiku OS.
Fuchsia also has the ability to run on smartphones, tablets and desktop computers, and scalability seems to be a core tenant of its design.
Despite its origins in embedded systems, Google Fuchsia also has the ability to run on smartphones, tablets and desktop computers, and scalability seems to be a core tenant of its design. In May of 2017, Fuchsia gained a user interface and one of the developers working on the projects teased that this was not just a “dumping ground” but a real project, leading to speculation that Google has larger things planned for it.
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