Yeah, 64 bits isn't working on bare metal (wd0 problems, seems to be the disk from the netbsd drivers), 32 bits is tho, trying dwm right now hahaha.
É um Thinkpad x220, com 4gb de ram, Intel I5 2400m. Bem basicão mesmo, o config.scm é o básico do ultra básico de instalação do guix, tive que rodar sem o IP estático pra conseguir rodar agora, vou adicionar essa parte amanhã, talvez rodar a instalação com uns pacotes a mais, gcc, make, vi, essas coisas pra poder usar o básico kkkk.
o config.scm:

Edit: o curioso é que pra desligar, precisa dar o sudo shutdown, esperar ele falar que pode e daí desligar a força, se não o sistema de arquivos quebra kkkkkkk.
Seria uma boa ideia rodar o doom nele kkkkk
Ainda não tem o openbox, nem o X, compilados pra ele, vou tentar sofrer umas torturas auto infligidas pra tentar configurar kkkkkk.
Look at my other comment, there's something cooking at GNU, idk but i'm hyped. I think Windows and MacOS (darwin/XNU) are hybrids, some parts in userspace, other parts in the kernel.
Edit: the macos kernel
I just discovered pth (not the new one npth), yielding threads in 1999, wtf happens at GNU? 20 years before anyone applied that and said "holy shit". 1999.
Edit:
The thread scheduling itself is done in a cooperative way, i.e., the threads are managed by a priority- and event-based non-preemptive scheduler.
1999
It seems x86_64 is finished, the article cites that too:
Similarly, Hurd for the longest time was predominantly x86 32-bit only but the x86_64 port is now essentially complete and there is even eyes toward AArch64 support.
Now it's arm64.
I'm more hopeful, I wrote a very basic userland thread scheduler in rust, like tokio, for full virtual threading (yielding instead of blocking), from a Java Virtual Thread inspiration and damn, the performance is amazing, just changing kernel scheduling to userland scheduling. I think Hurd would be the perfect kernel for that kind of next generation performance bump, a global scheduler with userland virtual processes and virtual threads. A microkernel has some advantages that weren't event thought if not for recent developments, imagine what it could do, docker, kubernetes, podman, (the containers, not the engines) all inside subhurds or virtualized in a thin layer without cgroups or anything.
I think it's the future, but it's the future since the 80s hahaha.
Edit: the virtual thread scheduler is just a toy project, but I was impressed.
GNU Guix with the GNU Hurd kernel? A full GNU/GNU system, or GNU + GNU.
On Elon Musk, it's funny because he never put a profit, like tesla isn't the biggest, X is draining money, his robotics shits are just that: shit, only spacex is relatively successfull, but it's not on the same level of half trillion dollars.
There isn't much that he's done, all of his companies are making less profits (or losing more money if i'm being correct), he is just a jake paul that fakes being a fake intelligent person.
Edit: Deleted my edit, i'm drunk
Oracle makes the worst database system ever imagined by anyone ever. Can't even insert multiple rows in the same statement, you have to put multiple insert statements and Oracle sues you for dreaming about any other database.
potatoguy
0 post score0 comment score
It came in like that. I did nothing.