On 15 January 2002, author of Polit has been hosted to talk about Polit OS at the «Night zone online» (Ukrainian: Зона ночі online) late night TV-show on the Novy Kanal.[6]
On 4 July 2002, CaesarAgency, one of Ukrainian domains registrators, gifted Polit with a free hosting and polit-os.org.ua domain.[7] Polit named as "the first Ukrainian operating system" because it has Ukrainian interface mimiced to Microsoft Windows UI.
On 21 August 2002, Yury Benesh,[8] author of the StormDOS shell in Assembly,[9] ported Polit to Virtual Pascal, which resulted in a small improvements of execution speed and decreasing size of distribution files. Source code and both 16-bit and 32-bit binary builds of this port available on the official Polit OS website.
On 30 August 2005, Ivan Kozak released the last version of the Polit shell, commemorating it to the 14th Anniversary of the Independence of Ukraine. It has a new the "Blue Bird" default theme.
During all of the time of active development, there was at least 6 contributors (from Kyiv, Kharkiv, Odesa and Belarus), including author, who joined the Polit OS development.[6]
Configurable interface with various modern looking specialvisual effects, changeable themes and fonts, changeable position and look of UI elements using configuration INI files.[12]
Distributed with a set of default software and games.
Compact file size (< 1 MB).
Low requirements for computer hardware (VESA driver, mouse with a driver for DOS, and 1-3 MB of free space on the harddisk or floppy).
Free license for free use and modifying.
Open source code with developer documentation for it.
App Wizard — a Pascal program template (.pas) generator, intended to help users to start creating own software for Polit (similar to file template generator in Geany IDE).
Settings — a setting dialog for configuring system options and look (also, could be configured by editing configuration INI files in Notepad).
ScrSetup — display settings manager.
Tasks panel — includes "Start" menu (like Windows Start menu), and system tray with keyboard layout indicator, analog and digital clocks (if move mouse cursor over it it also shows actual date).
Polit Pascal 1.0 (Ukrainian: Політ Паскаль 1.0) — an open-source interpreter and IDE with own implementation of Pascal-like object-oriented programming language, written in Pascal (similar to PyPy).[13]
Minesweeper (Ukrainian: Сапер) — an open-source implementation of the Minesweeper game in Pascal.[13]
Pascal Graphical Environment (also PGE) — wa an open-source GUI DE project for DOS in Pascal, developed by Colin Alston (UK).[18][19][20] Project stalled since 2002.[21]
StreamOS — is a Ukrainian open-source 32-bit GUI shell for DOS in Object Pascal, developed by Oleksandr Natalenko, being a student at the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, during 2005-2009.[22] Later Natalenko moved to the Czech Republic, and on 15 June 2024 republished all the sources of StreamOS.[23][24][25]
Many other operating systems and DOS shells in Pascal and Free Pascal created without GUI, but with CLI/TUI instead (FPOS, TORO Kernel, StreamOS. etc.).[26]
Proolix — is another Ukrainian (but without Ukrainian locale) open-source POSIX-compliant and DOS-compatible operating system for i8086+, developed by Ukrainian programmer Serge 'Prool' Pustovoitoff since 1996. As of November 2023, the project still is active.[27][28]
^Горбенко, Роман (18 April 2002). "Хронология одного "Полета"" [The chronology of the one "Flight"]. Русский Журнал. Москва: Русский институт. Archived from the original on 6 May 2003.
^"ПОЛІТаємо?" [Lets FLIGHT?]. caesar.kiev.ua. 2002-07-05. Archived from the original on 2002-08-06. CaesarAgency стала спонсором унікального проекту - сайту першої української операційної системи нового покоління ПОЛІТ. [CaesarAgency become a sponsor of a uniqie project - the website of the first Ukrainian operating system of the new generation POLIT.]
^Kiliç, Fatih. "elera0/elerais". Bitbucket. Retrieved 2024-08-19. Elera Operating System; Aiming to involve all other programmers, especially assembler programmers, it started to be coded as a hobby in order to write a common operating system.
^Natalenko, Oleksandr (15 June 2024). "Post by @oleksandr@natalenko.name". natalenko.name. And yes, it's Free Pascal on top of FreeDOS. Not as fancy as things like PolitOS (it's beautiful, and its site is still intact: bespin.org/~polit/), but it gave me a possibility to invent many things I was not aware already existed like state machine, call recursion etc.