# The Montauk Operating System MontaukOS is an operating system written in modern C++. It runs on bare metal and supports various applications, including DOOM, a Wikipedia client, and standard desktop utilities. ![MontaukOS screenshot](images/MontaukOS-2.png) ## Features * Modern preemptive multitasking kernel * Multi-user userspace with desktop environment and command line * PCI-e support and drivers for Intel GPU and e100e Ethernet for graphics and networking on real hardware * ACPI support with AML interpreter, including S3 sleep and ACPI shutdown * Support for USB including input devices (keyboard/mouse), along with PS/2 input support * Support for Intel High Definition (HDA) audio devices * Userspace and kernel audio support * Support for (some) Intel Bluetooth devices, userspace Bluetooth management app * Support for the GPT partition table * VFS using numbered drive identifiers with support for ext2 and FAT32 filesystems * Support for AHCI and NVMe SSD drives * Support for UEFI Runtime Services, including power management calls (shutdown/reboot) * Customizable desktop environment with 12+ graphical apps, including a terminal emulator, file manager, Wikipedia client, weather app, DOOM, and more * Modern icon pack (Flat Remix) used in desktop environment * Support for TrueType font, JPEG image, and SVG icon rendering * Networking including TCP/IP stack, UDP, DNS, DHCP and TLS via BearSSL * Command-line IRC client * Live viewable kernel log from GUI * Mandelbrot set renderer * PDF viewer app with full support for text (inc. baked-in TrueType fonts) and some graphics * Userspace Music app with support for MP3 and WAV files * 2D game engine and demo game with fantasy tileset ## Goal The goal of the MontaukOS project is to create a modern and unique operating system that runs on both emulators and on real hardware. The kernel and included userspace applications are written in modern C++. ## History and methodology Development started in early 2025, as a hand-written toy kernel. The first published Git commit was on Feb 27, 2025. In early 2026, Claude Opus 4.6 began being used to accelerate development of the kernel and userspace.