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Comment Re:Need emulation for drivers! (Score 1) 147

Not an endorsement but, from what I read, Libre Computer seems better on the software side than many. They went to the trouble of compiling u-boot with the UEFI option so they can support multiple products with the same image.

https://hub.libre.computer/t/l...

I believe Qualcomm's Snapdragon bootloader uses UEFI internally. It's how they supported Android and Windows 10 Phone on the same SoC.

Comment Re: Resourcing (Score 3, Insightful) 42

It has been mentioned that the maintainer was struggling to cope with processing requests, hence he appointed a helper as co-maintainer - some random guy on the internet he had never met in person with a random email address.

Had the project been managed by, say, Red Hat then any last minute pull request - particularly something that interfaces ssh with systemd I would expect to be better scrutinized. That's not to say that a hostile actor couldn't become an employee a big vendor but you'd have a consistent process across multiple libraries.

Comment Resourcing (Score 2) 42

xz was a compression tool maintained by one guy in his spare time.

If you're wanting to include something as a core library in a major software release such as Fedora or Ubuntu, maybe remunerating the project admin and bringing essential software under an umbrella or foundation is the best course of action to ensure rogue actors don't hijack it.

Comment Re:Windows is Linuxifying (Score 1) 49

Yeah, the standout for me is Microsoft implementing a Mesa shim for the OpenGL graphics stack on top of Direct3D for WSL-G. Meanwhile, Wine devs have been reverse engineering Direct3D to run on top of the Linux stack.

A lot of wasted effort when both parties could pool their resources to implement access to these APIs on top of Vulkan. With the many eyes theory, drivers from the major vendors might improve if there were a single implementation across Windows, Android and other assorted *nixes.

But MS need to keep their implementation proprietary, I hear them say? SteamOS exists, regardless. A middle management MBA
  ought to determine if it's worth the millions of dollars a year in developer salaries.

Comment Re:Upgraded, al is good (Score 2) 37

As an end user, probably nothing.

The article hints at an application appliance with Xen where you build just enough OS to run your program without needing a full OS like NetBSD or Linux. And people like tinkering outside the *nix paradigm - Genode, as it mentions and HURD import various drivers instead of re-inventing the wheel.

Comment Re:complete bullshit (Score 2) 36

Well it's unclear why 'Linux' would ever become end of life'd if Google were to upstream any drivers and firmware to kernel.org

Let's assume they go a step further and isolate the ChromeOS-specific bits in a container.

I hear ChromeOS is build on top of a Gentoo derivative. Can't they have an unsupported* Konami code to unlock a minimal Gentoo/Portage environment to upgrade the core OS indefinitely? i.e. stuck on version X of the UI forever but if there's a security bug in the wifi or USB-C controller then it gets automagically patched.

Comment Re:So... (Score 1) 13

I stopped using Linkedin in earnest even before the MS acquisition when it became less of a platform to network with former colleagues & potential business partners and more for recruitment agency staff to share memes - despite none of these data harvesting vultures ever having placed me in a job via that website.

Recruiters will be posting their travel videos now? They can go fuck themselves.

Comment Re:Powerful democrats (Score 1) 143

In pondering what would be an appropriate sentence, how do you rehabilitate a 57 year old in 2049 back into civilization? His parents will be well into their 80s, he won't have any friends and at that age no one will hire him even at Starbucks. (sure ---- him but assuming he doesn't have millions stashed in a vault, he becomes a burden on social security)

I understand the anger - the scale of his theft is unfathomable but to me it speaks of a failure of regulation.

How does an American citizen relocate a business to Hong Kong and onto the Bahamas without anyone from Big Government auditing his shady financials? His star only rose in a post Panama Papers world - were US federal agencies napping?

Comment Re:Makes sense (Score 2) 97

Old stock can sit in a warehouse for a year and still have the newest software by putting it in the toaster when it arrives at the Apple store.

But launching new hardware too. Ship an iPhone 16 globally without any version of iOS installed on the device that only activates on launch date. No leaks to the press and any rogue supply chain employee will just get a brick that won't power on.

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