dude, he just posted facts to support his claim, and you just say "nope, it had DOS so it had a DOS kernel"
bullshit
A Corvette with a Mopar starter is not a Dodge.
Did you know that you can make Linux boot from the DOS command line? it was a common practice about a decade ago, back when HDs were still small, for a lot of people to install distros like Slackware on a DOS partition and then start it with a DOS command. You can do the same with BeOS, or, really, any OS. Once you get its kernel in memory, it takes over. This is what Windows 9x did. DOS booted the machine, then loaded the Windows kernel. The difference is that 9x simply did not unload the DOS kernel from memory if memory serves.
If you start Linux or Be from DOS, does that mean that they're "using a DOS kernel"? No.
Stop going around flaming people because they're right.
edit: Thank you Anphanax, BTW.
[ July 27, 2004: Message edited by: JimmyJames: GenSTEP Founder ]