• @pedz@lemmy.ca
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    9010 days ago

    I’m always a bit amazed of how things have progressed and on what Linux can still run.

    This is an extreme example, but it’s also possible to run a modern Linux OS on SBCs like a Raspberry Pi Zero, and still have something somewhat usable depending on your needs.

    To have a computer half the size of a credit card with more RAM than my full tower rig from 2001 is amazing. And it can even run software from that era with dosbox or wine.

    My 15 years old laptop is still supported and can still read 1080p on YouTube, using Linux.

    Linux devs just recently decided to drop support for 486 CPUs and some early Pentiums.

    There’s just no competition.

    • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      2310 days ago

      Pretty much the only place it doesn’t run is where you have hard real-time requirements and on extremely small embedded micro controllers.

        • @Colloidal@programming.dev
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          10 days ago

          Technically yes. But it can’t support many hard real-time use cases. For that you need a true RTOS, thought from the ground up for that purpose. Something like VxWorks, QNX, some flavors of L4.

            • @Colloidal@programming.dev
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              29 days ago

              Only ever interacted with 6.0 beta. It was a great microkernel system. Even its GUI, Photon, was of a microkernel design, each module operating as a separate process. And it looked so good.

        • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          1410 days ago

          Sort of. There’s realtime builds, but the Linux definition of real time is more relaxed than dedicated RTOS’s in exchange for a much more feature-filled OS. You should not use Linux if people could die when you miss a deadline. You want a simple system where it’s easier to prove that can never happen.