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I'm building a parallel internet, and it's called The Thinnernet
Since 2020, I've taken on a Steve Jobs alter-ego (on a very, very part time basis, and often for humor purposes). The first essay I wrote wasn't even related to hardware, or solar powered-conscious operating systems that began around the same time. It was actually about one of my former jobs, regarding Knowledge Bases.
OpenBSD 7.9 arrives, a diamond in the rough proud of every sharp edge
OpenBSD 7.9 has been released, maintaining its reputation as a highly secure Unix-like operating system. This version introduces modest features, including support for up to 255 processor cores on amd64 machines and improved CPU scheduler understanding for heterogeneous cores. Additionally, it features "delayed hibernation" to manage low battery power and includes updates to LibreSSL and OpenSSH.
Is anyone here interested in contributing to this OS?
A clean-slate x86_64 microkernel operating system built from scratch. No POSIX baggage, no legacy Unix assumptions. The kernel stays minimal: scheduling, memory management, IPC ports, and hardware abstraction.
Use your Nvidia GPU's VRAM as swap space on Linux
Use your NVIDIA GPU's VRAM as swap space on Linux. Built for laptops with soldered memory and no upgrade path. If you have an RTX card sitting there with 8GB of VRAM and you're getting swapped to SSD, this puts that VRAM to work.
PlayStation Architecture
Supporting imagery A quick introduction Sony knew that 3D hardware could get very messy to develop for. Thus, their debuting console will keep its design simple and practical… Although this may come at a cost!
Openrsync: An implementation of rsync, by the OpenBSD team
This system has been merged into OpenBSD base. If you'd like to contribute to openrsync, please mail your patches to [email protected]. This repository is simply the OpenBSD version plus some glue for portability.
Ask HN: What are tools you have made for yourself since the advent of AI?
I've made a number of ceramic molds for slumping fused glass into bowls. As well as wooden templates for ceramic mugs. I've devised a few carrying tools to move glass frit paintings from my studio down to my barn where the kilns sit without spilling the glass.
History of CentOS: How a biochemist's Linux hobby project became the enterprise world's default operating system
INTERVIEW Gregory Kurtzer, CentOS's founder, tells the story of how the Red Hat Enterprise Linux clone was born of a small group of rebuild hackers and Linux fans who were angry that Red Hat Enterprise Linux had replaced Red Hat Linux and convinced they could do better. Back in 2003, Linux fans were ticked off at Red Hat because they were replacing the end-user-friendly Red Hat Linux with the business-oriented Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). It was a smart move for Red Hat, but users were...