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There are well known open source microkernels, like Minix 3 and L4. Probably not that attractive.

Why something hasn't been done is always a hard question to answer, since to succeed a lot of things have to go right, and by default none of them do. But one thing is that microkernels were more trendy in the 90s - r&d people are mostly doing things like "the cluster is the computer", unikernel, exokernel, rump kernel, embedded (eg tock), remote attestation since then (I'm not up to date on the latest).




Thinking about it a bit more, QNX clones might suffer from something akin to second system syndrome. There's a simple working design, and it likely strongly invites people to jump right to their own twist on the design before they get very far into a clone.




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