Peter Horvath
Entwickler, Linuxer, Vater
- 0 Posts
- 31 Comments
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•If Current Trends Continue, Linux Will be a Dominant OS in ~10 Years
0·2 days ago@sbeak Problem of the BSD license is that it can be forked and closed… macos was once a BSD…
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•If Current Trends Continue, Linux Will be a Dominant OS in ~10 Years
1·2 days ago@Sxan @Johnnyvibrant I installed linux to my company laptop as an “emergency” because my windows became unbootable, then somehow it remained, sadly ;-)
I know it was risky, but there was a point of the revolt.
I knew that the same stupidity and generally depressive mentality, which prevents my boss to directly call me about it (I actually did not even had a boss), so the same won’t likely tolerate it.
Until I do not make it too open. Doing the same well visibly, it had probably not been tolerated.
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•If Current Trends Continue, Linux Will be a Dominant OS in ~10 Years
1·2 days ago@sbeak @Logical_Error Yes. And the sad truth is, being open source, gpl2, it is still possible to do with it the same evil as iSatan does. :-( We must fight!
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•Someone emailed Ken Thompson about the UNICS to UNIX namechange. Actually got a reply
01·3 days ago@victorz They are not even similar on English.
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•Someone emailed Ken Thompson about the UNICS to UNIX namechange. Actually got a reply
0·3 days ago@auntieclokwise @victorz :-) What is the language on which you are thinking on?
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•We should push other phone OEM's such as Fairphone and Samsung to work with PostmarketOS, GrapheneOS, and Ubuntu Touch
0·4 days ago@furtiveParalysis I summarize your answer: “Yes it is closed hardware, you badass linux guy. Here can you crack it, like of a f…ing samsung: <link>”
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•We should push other phone OEM's such as Fairphone and Samsung to work with PostmarketOS, GrapheneOS, and Ubuntu Touch
11·5 days ago@furtiveParalysis @viov Fairphone should start the “fairness” that I can reinstall its OS like of a PC. It does not do that, IT IS CLOSED HARDWARE LIKE A SAMSUNG, so do not buy it!!!
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•We should push other phone OEM's such as Fairphone and Samsung to work with PostmarketOS, GrapheneOS, and Ubuntu Touch
07·5 days ago@GamingChairModel @Glitch How about formulating meaningful content? Your question is bullshit!
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•service-lookup v0.3.0 - Run your Spring microservices locally with ease
1·7 days ago@iByteABit It helps a lot to the Java guys not knowing what is a tcp port.
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•It seems Linux Mint is dropping GNU coreutils in favor of rust-coreutils following Ubuntu.
1·10 days ago@forestbeasts @p4rzivalrp2 Quite honestly, I am a bit disappointed on wayland - it promises a fast X, but it does not provide it. The cause of the slow X was not that it is an old monster, the cause was the much lesser developer resources. Wayland has even much lesser.
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Self-hosted, booru-style gallery for a personal image collection written in Go
12·12 days agoRemoved by mod
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•Bugs Rust Won't Catch | corrode Rust Consulting - Analysis of Rust Coreutils (uutils) Bugs
1·12 days ago@davidgro That was a different thing. You can write or read from the physical memory address 0 even on the systems of the today - except that practically all the OS-es are using their paging or memory management to make that address unreeachable. Actually, as far I can remember, on Linux, the addresses between 0 - 65535 are mapped unreachable. If try to write them, you will get SIGSEGV. This is because a memory page is 4K, that is the granularity of the memory permissions. Beside that, we also need SIGSEGV (which would map to a “null pointer dereference” or analog) if it actually tried to access the part of a larger struct (what would be visible as an access to a non-zero, but very small memory address).
C64 had no memory protection, you could read or write anywhere where you wanted. Although it had memory-mapped I/O, meaning that instead of bus-level port communication, all the IO, i.e. communication of the CPU with the chips of the mainboard, happened as if they would be memory. Some chip happily crashed the system on such writes, particularly the CIA did it (general purpose I/O chip and hw clock) for not enough well thought memory operations in the $DC00 - $DFFF range.
You could happily write into 0 on C64. Actually, on the address 1, you could access the chip select pin of some RAM chips, meaning that you could with that switch from the basic ROM into an additional RAM area. Writing to the 0 byte did not had any on the spot visible effect on my experiments, but today I read in the docs, it had actually effect to the GPIO ports related to the memory chips managed at the address 1.
Actually, c64 went even more: the first page, i.e. the addresses between 0-255, very accessible a bit faster, because they required a lesser amount of CPU and data bus cycles. Very important registers, used for important operations, were there.
However, this all is about the C64 hardware. The C64 basic v2.0, which was written by the microsoft, quickly evaporating all my youth nostalgy, had nothing similar to the NULL (of C) or null (of Java). It not even had an “unset”, “undefined” or similar type. The 3 types it had, were: 32-bit floating point, 16-bit integer and 0-254 byte long string.
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Self-hosted, booru-style gallery for a personal image collection written in Go
26·12 days agoRemoved by mod
Peter Horvath@mastodon.deto
Linux@programming.dev•PS5 Linux project released, turning some PlayStation 5 consoles into Linux PCs
1·14 days ago@misk I think these modchip are exactly what would also really need in the android or iEvil world. Although I am not very sure, how could they be attached into a machine.

@auzy1 @spicehoarder Apple is far more evil as microsoft was ever… it is only smaller.