The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
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@fishidwardrobe
I'm glad most tend to be BDFLs.
@Khrys -
@lori @Khrys i've recently been thinking about — and this is beyond my skills, so i should really say "fantasising about" — some sort of common retrocomputing platform, maybe based on an esp32 or something, which is completely incompatible with commercial computers and so can't be used commercially.
but it would also be missing all the spy-firmware (minix in the cpu, tiny computers in usb plugs etc). maybe we could start our own replacement for the internet!
… yeah, right. sorry.
Open hardware would be incompatible with modern day commercial aspirations.
Coupled with FOSS of course.#ESP32 is more for IoT than regular computing – but you can use it for #meshcore (and other #LoRa-based projects), wish is an interesting, albeight very basic, alternative to common (controlled) networks.
@lori @Khrys -
Open hardware would be incompatible with modern day commercial aspirations.
Coupled with FOSS of course.#ESP32 is more for IoT than regular computing – but you can use it for #meshcore (and other #LoRa-based projects), wish is an interesting, albeight very basic, alternative to common (controlled) networks.
@lori @Khrys@0x0 @lori @Khrys folks are, amazingly, building tiny computers that run python or basic around esp32. surprised me too!
you need another chip to handle vga, and some external static RAM, it appears.
here is a project emulating i386 that runs windows 98! on an esp32!! https://hackaday.com/2021/07/28/emulating-the-ibm-pc-on-an-esp32/
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This is not giving away your freedom.
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@0x0 @lori @Khrys folks are, amazingly, building tiny computers that run python or basic around esp32. surprised me too!
you need another chip to handle vga, and some external static RAM, it appears.
here is a project emulating i386 that runs windows 98! on an esp32!! https://hackaday.com/2021/07/28/emulating-the-ibm-pc-on-an-esp32/
It really says a lot when we can use low end hardware (for today's standards) to run simpler software that suffices for most tasks.
Maybe RAM prices will bring that ingenuity back.
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It really says a lot when we can use low end hardware (for today's standards) to run simpler software that suffices for most tasks.
Maybe RAM prices will bring that ingenuity back.
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@Khrys @fishidwardrobe @0x0 Everything I do other than surfing the web I could retrocompute. Both of the two (2) viable web layout engines are bloatware because the web standard is bloatware.
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@fishidwardrobe @0x0 @lori @Khrys The Motorola 68000 powered a generation of pretty awesome machines, I'd happily fall back to my STe as a daily driver for most tasks if I won the Lotto.
(Of course I would have to be paying the idiot tax for that scenario to have any possibility of happening
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@Khrys @fishidwardrobe @0x0 Everything I do other than surfing the web I could retrocompute. Both of the two (2) viable web layout engines are bloatware because the web standard is bloatware.
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@joschi
The article is as much about the multi-layer organisational failure as it is about the "contribution" - which indeed is not just one "I don't like". Please take your framing and go elsewhere. Thank you.The title focuses on ‘the engineer’, the top level sentence calls him out by name and calls him an ‘idiot’
There are later some thoughts on organisational failures. But to me it mostly reads as a personal attack.
You can read it anyway you want, frame it anyway you want. But please give others the same courtesy. -
The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
Dylan, useful idiot with commit access, pushed age verification PRs to systemd, Ubuntu & Arch, got 2 Microslop employees to merge it, called it 'hilariously pointless' in the PR itself, then watched Lennart personally block the revert. Unpaid compliance simp.
Sam Bent (www.sambent.com)
The lasting damage was knowing it could happen at all: that a single contributor with no stated organizational backing could submit compliance infrastructure for surveillance law directly into the software that boots your computer, get it merged by two Microsoft employees, and have the creator of systemd personally block the removal.
@Khrys that's called harassment