Kernel Planethttps://planet.kernel.org/
with all other computers in the universe, delegate work to them, and control them (this was very futuristic in 1978, pre-Internet as we know it). Orac was considered the most valu
Wii U Architecture | A Practical Analysishttps://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/wiiu/
yet, three independent computers: Firstly, we’ve got DRC-WUP which is a System-on-Chip (SoC) hiding yet-another ARM926EJ-S (the same one from the Wii , how many of these do they h
An in-depth analysis that explains how this console works internally
Links 29/4/2020: TDE 10th Anniversary, Sailfish OS 3.3http://techrights.org/o/2020/04/29/tde-10th-anniversary/
– Learning about Computers for Kids – Week 27 This is a weekly blog about the Raspberry Pi 4 (“RPI4”), the latest product in the popular Raspberry Pi range of computers. With so m
Links for the day
RFC 1480: The US Domainhttps://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1480
In the past, the computers registered in the US Domain were primarily owned by small companies or individuals with computers at home. However, the US Domain has grown and currentl
History of Microchess - Peter Jenningshttp://www.benlo.com/microchess/
program sold for home computers. After six months of development, the first copy was shipped on December 18, 1976. In preparation for the 2002 Vintage Computer Festival , I powere
The Early History of Microchess
The Oldskool PC Carnival Sideshowhttp://www.oldskool.org/shrines/carny
low-cost home computers at the time, most had a cartridge slot. I can just imagine the development meeting: "Atari, Timex, Texas Instruments, Commodore--they've all got cartridge
Online BYTE Archivehttps://halfhill.com/bytelink.html
the most crash-prone computers ever built is that reliability has never been a high priority — either for the industry or for users. [Cover story: April 1998] Why Mainframes
Jose Explains Why Not Monohttp://techrights.org/o/2008/11/25/jose-on-mono/
even people's home computers Cost-Cutting and Book-Cooking at IBM It's like cutting salaries by more than 50% Over at Tux Machines... GNU/Linux news for the past day IRC Proceedin
Our reader Jose explains the dangers of embracing Novell's Mono
SmartFilter - I've Got A Little Listhttp://sethf.com/anticensorware/smartfilter/gotalist.php
mystique attached to computers. They're too often thought as mysterious entities, with inner workings which are beyond comprehension. But in fact, the operation of computer progra
Why censorware blacklists are inherently inaccurate, both technically and politically, with SmartFilter as a case study
"That Deep Romantic Chasm": Libertarianism, Neoliberalism, and the Computer Culturehttps://www.uvm.edu/~tstreete/romantic_chasm.html
of the culture of computers. On the one hand, this essay confirms and elaborates an argument made or suggested by others, notably by Barbrook and Cameron in "The Californian Ideol
Resume -- Chip Morningstarhttp://www.fudco.com/chip/resume.html
devices, and personal computers, used by both consumers and enterprises. During my tenure there the system had around 200 million registered users worldwide. Most of my work at Ev
Linux FAQhttps://www.linfo.org/faq_linux.html
Linux on as many computers as desired. Q: I have a book about Red Hat Linux 8 which contains the installation CDROMs. Would it be better to buy a new book for a more recent versio
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