Spyke
lemmy.world

This is what happens to your computer if you allow Rust in the kernel. /s

186

To be fair Its lifetime had ended, so rust took the ownership.

53
qyronreply
sopuli.xyz

I've seen Linux kernels powering eletrical instalations control monitors. I'd risk we can say that if it runs on electric impulses, it can run Linux.

When will EVs be jailbroken?

24
qyronreply
sopuli.xyz

The entire car. Not the infotainement alone.

6
faerbitreply
sh.itjust.works

You likely know this, but you really, really, really, really do not want stuff like your airbag controller to run a preemptive task switching operating system.

7

You guys run a motherboard? Im just running 2 diodes and a vacuum tube to manually type in all the 1s and 0s that make up the linux kernel /j

56
tetris11reply
lemmy.ml

That's nothing, I have a group of ravens who fly around in strict RISC-V formations, giving me shiny bits from time to time all part of the ramdisk boot sequence

39

BirdFS is a pretty efficient file system, in the sense that it retrieves items from an infinite disk that you didn't even know you wanted. The read speed is several times a day, and the write speed I'm still currently waiting on a metric there

5

anyone else felt the impending finger slice in that photo? case looks pissed and out for flesh.

36
Sabatareply
ani.social

The PC will not boot without a blood sacrifice. This one is just extra thirsty.

26

There are people out there powering their PC with electricity ... what a bunch of environmentally unfriendly weirdos.

I just top up my BSU (blood supply unit) daily and it purrs (in Latin) like a charm.

9

War makes you unrecognizable, buddy.

7
feddit.uk

I think you'll find that's the recommended spec, not the minimum requirements.

34
lemmy.world

Very funny, but I actually used to own a computer that didn't meet the minimum requirements for Linux.

(Not my pic, but the same model.)

28
gruereply
lemmy.world
#if _FP_W_TYPE_SIZE < 32
#error "Here's a nickel kid.  Go buy yourself a real computer."
#endif

LOL!

That isn't the same limitation I was thinking of, though.

21
lemmy.world

I wasn't confident which requirement you were missing, but I love that error

3

I was under the impression that the main impediment to running Linux on a 286 was the lack of an MMU. I might be wrong about that, though.

3
gruereply
lemmy.world

Linux doesn't run on anything below a 386 because it requires a MMU.

(Some people have made forks that can run on 286s etc., but those changes have never been part of the mainline kernel.)

6

You can if you emulate a CPU that does have an MMU. Someone has actually done this to get Linux booting on an Intel 4004. Another one got Linux to boot on a Commodore 64.

3

They tried running Linux on their ENIAC, but someone accidentally tipped over one of the crates of punch cards which has unfortunately set the project back a few months.

4

I'm sad that my parents eventually forced me to get rid of it. At least I kept the keyboard, though.

3

I used to have one of those! Well before I ever knew about Linux, but it was great fun making little stuff in BASIC and playing with actually floppy disks.

3

I installed Tiny Core Linux on an old ass netbook laptop on which even Windows 7 kinda lagged. Went CLI only, no DE and made the laptop thousand times more usable. I've basically repurposed that laptop as an external hard drive for things I don't need backed up but good to have a backup of.

22

Needs some work on the cable management but no other notes, 5/7 build.

20

I must still have a Pentium S with Windows 98 back at my mom's house. Now I am wondering if it could run Linux.

10
drosophilareply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I've seen videos of people running Damn Small Linux with a GUI on Pentium 1s.

None of them are very recent, so I don't know how well 'modern' DSL would fare on a P1, but there are a few recent videos of people browsing the web using Dillo on Pentium 3s.

2

I installed Debian Buster and ran Firefox on my Pentium 3 750 a couple of years ago. It wasn't very fast or very usable, but I ran it.

I mostly use that system for retro games in DOS 6.2 and Windows 98. The Debian installation is my utility OS for when I want to transfer new stuff to the DOS partitions, because it's way easier to connect it to the network.

1
lemmy.world

Man I love Lubuntu, it's such a tiny distro that makes even old as fuck machines semi functional for modern usage.

Even those weird ass atom netbooks work like a charm with it and you can actually do decent work on them!

And the best part is that the UI keeps being understandable by average windows users

Great distro,.10/10, would install on a Compaq laptop again

10

Xubuntu brought a garbage Vista era system to usable levels for me for a dumb video I made a while ago, wasn't fast but definitely usable.

2

Linux is between the requirements of a raspberry pi pico and a raspberry pi zero I would say

Although some crazy person did get Linux running on an esp32 once

7

I revived a friend's old laptop by installing Linux on it, and I told her that using Linux entitled her to a small amount of "nerd creds". Years later, she told me that it did end up eliciting mild approval from a woman who ended up being her partner for multiple years. The system works!

5
lemmy.ca

But can you run Linux on hard drive controller chip?

3