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I would have expected some 3dfx based GPUs to be on the top end of the list, considering their rarity, like the 5500 etc, but none are listed...ah D3D benchmark... explains it.

Edit: Realised its D3D benched...


As a long time Alpine user (bare metal, laptop, pi, servers) I can praise the low memory footprint, simple and consistent configuration and up-to-date packages.

Alpine runs great on older hardware. Things that bugged me over the years are the lack of armv5 support (understandably an architecture that is dying) and that their native firewall awall is somewhat limited. Despite being a pleasure to use awall with iptables, it is not capable of nftables exclusive features (eg cake) as far as I understand, yet.

The lack of obscure packages in Alpines repositories is not really an issue in my scenario. Or compiling against musl. Neither is the mentioned DNS over TCP issue.

Using wlroots and sway is a breeze on Alpine and having moved from gentoo > arch > alpine over the years, I am glad Alpine exists. Second choice for me is Void Linux musl and their optional armv5 support via xbps-src.

I hope Alpine will stick around and is not only known to be slim in docker containers.


FWIW they fixed the DNS over TCP issue. [1] The only DNS issue I've run into is a lack of IPv4/IPv6 DNS lookup ordering preference like glibc's /etc/gai.conf. Useful in data-centers where 100% of lookups on specific nodes/roles are and always will be IPv4

I too use Alpine on just about everything. I'm happy with it. I do wish it would keep one old kernel around after upgrades but I worked around that.

[1] - https://www.theregister.com/2023/05/16/alpine_linux_318/


The helicopter in the animation looks like a EC225 or AS332 "Super Puma"


The idea of achieving peace by drugging the population reminds me of Stanislaw Lem's book "The Futurological Congress", where this interesting concept was turned into a fun to read and thought-provoking SciFi novel.


The new release still works fine on a TP-Link TL-WR1043N/ND v1 (32MB RAM, 8MB Flash). This is an old router I got from the local reuse center for $10 a few years ago. It can handle a 100 Mbps fiber connection fine and has 5 gigabit ports. Thanks Openwrt !


Memories come back of the time when Phrack Magazine and digital copies of The Anarchist Cookbook were shared via IPXCOPY.EXE or floppies at 10Base2 LAN parties or other scene gatherings. Interesting ISDN hacks and also ntpwc.c and other things were published in Phrack back then. It's almost like looking at a vintage car magazine now.


Hey, what about Intel Xscale processors like the PXA2xx series ?

These do have Dynamic branch prediction/folding afaik and may be affected ?

Does somebody have a spectre.c tuned for generic armv5tel for example?

Current versions of spectre.c, like this one https://gist.github.com/LionsAd/5116c9cd37f5805c797ed16fafbe... still contain "_mm_clflush" and therefore do not compile on ARM at all.


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