- This is what happens to your computer if you allow Rust in the kernel. /s - To be fair Its lifetime had ended, so rust took the ownership. 
 
- deleted by creator - I’ve seen Linux kernels powering eletrical instalations control monitors. I’d risk we can say that if it runs on electric impulses, it can run Linux. - When will EVs be jailbroken? - Car infotainment systems already run on Linux. Tesla famously use Ubuntu. - The entire car. Not the infotainement alone. - You likely know this, but you really, really, really, really do not want stuff like your airbag controller to run a preemptive task switching operating system. - systemctl enable --now systemd-airbagd
 
 
 
 
 
- You guys run a motherboard? Im just running 2 diodes and a vacuum tube to manually type in all the 1s and 0s that make up the linux kernel /j - That’s nothing, I have a group of ravens who fly around in strict RISC-V formations, giving me shiny bits from time to time all part of the ramdisk boot sequence - I just use butterflies 
- I love this comment - BirdFS is a pretty efficient file system, in the sense that it retrieves items from an infinite disk that you didn’t even know you wanted. The read speed is several times a day, and the write speed I’m still currently waiting on a metric there 
 
 
 
- I didn’t think rust was required - Rust has been a part of the kernel since 6.8. 
 
- anyone else felt the impending finger slice in that photo? case looks pissed and out for flesh. - The PC will not boot without a blood sacrifice. This one is just extra thirsty. - There are people out there powering their PC with electricity … what a bunch of environmentally unfriendly weirdos. - I just top up my BSU (blood supply unit) daily and it purrs (in Latin) like a charm. 
 
- Yes, this one has tasted blood before. You can tell by the way that it is. 
- War makes you unrecognizable, buddy. 
 
- I think you’ll find that’s the recommended spec, not the minimum requirements. - Indeed, I see a gfx card in there, and cables. 
 
- Very funny, but I actually used to own a computer that didn’t meet the minimum requirements for Linux.  - (Not my pic, but the same model.) - #if _FP_W_TYPE_SIZE < 32 #error "Here's a nickel kid. Go buy yourself a real computer." #endif- LOL! - That isn’t the same limitation I was thinking of, though. - I wasn’t confident which requirement you were missing, but I love that error - I was under the impression that the main impediment to running Linux on a 286 was the lack of an MMU. I might be wrong about that, though. 
 
 
 
- What was it, the ENIAC? - Linux doesn’t run on anything below a 385 because it requires a MMU. - (Some people have made forks that can run on 286s etc., but those changes have never been part of the mainline kernel.) - You can if you emulate a CPU that does have an MMU. Someone has actually done this to get Linux booting on an Intel 4004. Another one got Linux to boot on a Commodore 64. 
- 386 support was dropped years ago. 
- What can I run on a Transmeta Crusoe? 
 
- They tried running Linux on their ENIAC, but someone accidentally tipped over one of the crates of punch cards which has unfortunately set the project back a few months. 
 
- We are Tandy buddies!  - Still looking for an original monitor. - I used to have one of those! Well before I ever knew about Linux, but it was great fun making little stuff in BASIC and playing with actually floppy disks. 
- I’m sad that my parents eventually forced me to get rid of it. At least I kept the keyboard, though. 
 
- What we had that couldn’t: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_PS/2_Model_30 - Work was getting rid of them so my dad bought it. Great machine, learned a ton. 
 
- I installed Tiny Core Linux on an old ass netbook laptop on which even Windows 7 kinda lagged. Went CLI only, no DE and made the laptop thousand times more usable. I’ve basically repurposed that laptop as an external hard drive for things I don’t need backed up but good to have a backup of. 
- Needs some work on the cable management but no other notes, 5/7 build. 
- I see a SATA cable, so I’m guessing it will work fine. 
- You do not need a case and discrete GPU. Way above minimum requirements! :) 
- Overkill. - I used to run a router on a 386 from a floppy disk. 
- Man I love Lubuntu, it’s such a tiny distro that makes even old as fuck machines semi functional for modern usage. - Even those weird ass atom netbooks work like a charm with it and you can actually do decent work on them! - And the best part is that the UI keeps being understandable by average windows users - Great distro,.10/10, would install on a Compaq laptop again - Xubuntu brought a garbage Vista era system to usable levels for me for a dumb video I made a while ago, wasn’t fast but definitely usable. 
 
- I must still have a Pentium S with Windows 98 back at my mom’s house. Now I am wondering if it could run Linux. - If you’re not planning to run GUI - I’ve seen videos of people running Damn Small Linux with a GUI on Pentium 1s. - None of them are very recent, so I don’t know how well ‘modern’ DSL would fare on a P1, but there are a few recent videos of people browsing the web using Dillo on Pentium 3s. - I installed Debian Buster and ran Firefox on my Pentium 3 750 a couple of years ago. It wasn’t very fast or very usable, but I ran it. - I mostly use that system for retro games in DOS 6.2 and Windows 98. The Debian installation is my utility OS for when I want to transfer new stuff to the DOS partitions, because it’s way easier to connect it to the network. 
 
 
 
- Linux is between the requirements of a raspberry pi pico and a raspberry pi zero I would say - Although some crazy person did get Linux running on an esp32 once - There is a number of crabs that can run linux 
 

















