8VIM
arm-trusted-firmware
8VIM | arm-trusted-firmware | |
---|---|---|
7 | 9 | |
411 | 1,823 | |
2.2% | 1.6% | |
9.5 | 9.9 | |
5 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Kotlin | C | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
8VIM
- The PocketReform is a made-in-Berlin Linux handheld
- Sto sviluppando un metodo di input alternativo per dispositivi Android: si chiama tOndO keyboard, è scaricabile dal link nei commenti in open beta e apprezzo qualsiasi tipo di feedback (e sì, è un'idea un po' strana).
- How you were introduced to toki pona?
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⟳ 2 apps added, 55 updated at f-droid.org
8Vim Keyboard (version iteration-8): A small screen keyboard inspired by VIM and 8Pen
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What is your favorite keyboard app?
8vim
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8VIM (ANDROID)
Source: https://github.com/flide/8VIM
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Android -- what's your Keyboard69 replacement?
I've thought about approaching this niche open source keyboard developer to see if it's a project he can handle, but I think he was having a hard time finalizing his main keyboard: https://github.com/flide/8VIM
arm-trusted-firmware
- A Close Look at a Spinlock
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This happens more than I'd like to admit.
I have a PinePhone Pro, and I'm trying to figure out a reasonable way to get more than one half of ten minutes of battery life out of it, while still receiving notifications. I figure the best route to go will be to create a service that holds ports open, while the CPU is completely asleep, and either run it on the modem's processor or, as an possibility for the PinePhone Pro, but not the original Pinephone, run it on the m0 core used for power management.
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Booting Modern Intel CPUs
Arm v7 was a Wild West, but with v8, Arm tried to standardize a lot. The Arm Trusted Firmware is the reference boot firmware implementation for v8+ CPUs: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware.
I'd think most of the referece documents can be discovered from that code base.
Relatedly, from the perspective of hands-on programming, the System Programmer's guide is the manual to start with.
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“Rust is safe” is not some kind of absolute guarantee of code safety
I assure you that there is no lack of skill; that is just what happens over the course of ten years in a 300,000 line code-base and multiple hundreds of contributors: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware/blob/master/Makefile
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The PocketReform is a made-in-Berlin Linux handheld
The ARM Trusted Firmware is what typically runs in the secure world, and it is indeed open source: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware
ROM code generally speaking is not open source, but has been dumped on occasion.
- Unpaid social media moderators perform labor worth at least $3.4 million a year on Reddit alone
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Will we ever get any coreboot / libreboot support or any PSP source code releases??
The reference Trustzone implementation for ARM is open source https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware , so I really can't think of some reason the ARM license would have to do with it.
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SMP support for aarch64
SMP support (at least as far as CPU suspend and hotplug goes) is usually handled by TrustZone firmware on aarch64, not by the kernel (see PSCI). If you write your own OS on a bare-metal platform you can of course do what you want, but if you're looking for existing sources that's where you'd have to look. https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware is a common reference implementation that supports a bunch of platforms, but many others (e.g. all Samsung and Qualcomm phones) also use their own proprietary stuff which is not publicly available.
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Dissecting the Apple M1 GPU, part III -- Prototype Mesa compiler can now spin a cube
Come again? https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware
What are some alternatives?
FlorisBoard - An open-source keyboard for Android which respects your privacy. Currently in early-beta.
lru-rs - An implementation of a LRU cache
behe-keyboard - A lightweight hacking & programming keyboard with material design
c2rust - Migrate C code to Rust
codeboard - Codeboard App
too-many-lists - Learn Rust by writing Entirely Too Many linked lists
Repeat - Cross-platform mouse/keyboard record/replay and automation hotkeys/macros creation, and more advanced automation features.
darwin-xnu - Legacy mirror of Darwin Kernel. Replaced by https://github.com/apple-oss-distributions/xnu
KISS - Lightning fast, open-source, < 250kb Android launcher
docs - Hardware and software docs / wiki
nusic - your new music (android app)
pinephone_modem_sdk - Pinephone Modem SDK: Tools to build your own bootloader, kernel and rootfs