Tag computing
18 bookmarks have this tag.
18 bookmarks have this tag.
Tools Snapshots of NiLuJe's hacks Kindle Developer's Corner
This aims to be an up-to-date version of @geekmaster's original "JailBreak Index" thread. It will recap what you can and cannot do with your device, and how to proceed, in a step by step process.
My home computer in 1998 had a 56K modem connected to our telephone line; we were allowed a maximum of thirty minutes of computer usage a day, because my parents — quite reasonably — did not want to have their telephone shut off for an evening at a time. I remember webpages loading slowly: ten […]
In short, I use the command line because it's fun, it's logical, expressive, and because it lets me avoid planned obsolescence and arbitrary restrictions.
In this blog post, you will learn everything you know to setup a secure and low maintenance email server
For this article, we will setup a mail server for hypno.cat, a small website for my thriving (hypothetical) hypnotherapist activity. I registered the website years ago because I liked the name, but never done anything with it beyond hosting an awesome animated file.
VETUSWARE.COM - the biggest free abandonware collection in the universe
A large contributor to the "feel" of an Operating System comes from the software it chooses to include by default. There are entire linux distributions that differentiate themselves just based on the default configured software. There is room for so many options of base software because there are in general many different options to pick. Linux being just a kernel itself specifically creates an environment which encourages this (to some extent). This is both a blessing and a curse, for people wanting to write software targeting linux there now is some matrix of options they must test under if they want it to work with all the various software choices. BSD systems, unlike Linux, tend to include more than just a kernel by default, generally including some "blessed" c library, c compiler, libraries and programs. This makes targeting the system a bit easier, in the sense that you can assume there is a larger set of software on a BSD machine than you could with some system that uses a Linux kernel. Even with BSD however, not all of the software is in control of those in charge of the system itself, there is still a large amount of shared code between these systems for things like the c compiler. There are some pros and cons to this situation. On the plus side these systems get to reap the benefits of the work put in to these other projects (gnu, llvm, and so on), but this also does lead to there being some differences in design. Put in another way, if someone wanted the ability to touch every line of code (in the upstream sense), they would have to be a member of some non trivial amount of communities.
Matrix Brandy - fork of Dave Daniels' Brandy BASIC interpreter
Classic Macintosh ROMs.
E-Maculation is dedicated to emulation of the classic Macintosh computer in MacOSX/macOS, Windows and Linux. This is possible through the use of emulators such as SheepShaver, Basilisk II, Mini vMac, Qemu and PearPC.
This repository is a collection of programs, tutorials and other resources on GW-BASIC for the PC, Tandy and PCjr.
It focuses on source code, supporting files and documentation only. Compiled binaries and sources in other BASIC dialects are generally omitted.
The Old Computer Challenge announcement for the year 2024. Grab your old hardware and have fun for a week.
Yon is a little UI for knowledge designed to be used every day. Add your notes, write your diary, and connect thoughts with bidirectional links. Explore your text through an acme-inspired interface to dive deep or go wide and always find your way back. Yon code and your notes are contained in a single standalone html file with no dependency, so that you can open the lid and tweak any part of it and make it your own.