oqs-demos
unix-history-repo
oqs-demos | unix-history-repo | |
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3 | 51 | |
112 | 6,434 | |
4.5% | - | |
6.9 | 0.0 | |
17 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Dockerfile | Assembly | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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oqs-demos
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Iran's 'Quantum' Computer is Apparently Powered by an Arm Development Board
No. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-quantum_cryptography and you can even test that at home with e.g https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/oqs-demos , it's basically "just" switching to the right "settings" (namely what algorithms to use, going away from the typical ones use today to the post quantum ones where computational complexity STILL makes it impractical to crack) in the right part of your stack (e.g here OpenSSL used pretty much all over the Internet already) and voila, even on cheap hardware, like a RaspberryPi or even lower (depending on your needs) you are still confident than the encryption will hold.
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I made a YT video showing how to host your own super accurate (microsecond) network time (NTP) server using the PPS output of a $12 GPS module
Love this kind of project. To me this is just like https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/oqs-demos/ or https://github.com/OpenMined/PySyft or even k3s so often mentioned in this sub in the sense that I personally don't have a need for it. Yet I find it amazing that us, random curious geeks, have access to this kind of mind blowing technologies for basically free.
- Post-quantum demos of services (OpenSSH, nginx, HAProxy, etc) as containers
unix-history-repo
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F/OSS Comics: 8. The Origins of Unix and the C Language
There is also https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo (Continuous Unix commit history from 1970 until today)
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Kernighan and Pike were right: Do one thing, and do it well
FWIW, ls in Research-V6 back in 1975 had 10 options. https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/Researc...
By BSD 3 in 1980 it had 11 options. https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/BSD-3-S...
The thing is, we can see even from the 1970s 'ls' how the Unix model doesn't meet the goal "to chain these simple programs together to create complex behaviors".
There is no option to escape or NUL terminate a filename, making it possible to construct a filename containing a newline which makes the output look like two file entries.
The option for that was added later.
There's also the issue that embedded terminal codes will be interpreted by the terminal.
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The original source code of the vi text editor, taken from System V
This is what it looked like about 7-8 years earlier: https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/BSD-1/e...
- Continuous Unix commit history from 1970 until today
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50 Years in Filesystems: 1974
RA92 (1989): 16 ms / 8.3 ms.
Note that the RL02 (and V7) and RA92 mentioned in the article are separated by about a decade.
[1] https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/Researc...
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Unix: An Oral History
The earliest version I could find [1] is already written in C.
[1] https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/Researc...
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Linux is not as smooth as windows
Here's a 1997 citation for "top cpu processes." It's not as close to the original 1984 release as I would like, but it's better than Wikipedia. https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/commit/aee34003d7964653c44c31f5bf6bcf136b32c4f3
- GitHub was Founded in 2008 But...
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GPT based tool that writes the commit message for you
> The “why” goes into the PR and more importantly, engineering documentation and inline comments
This just ensures that the “why” is lost when someone comes looking years later.
From experience, SCM metadata is far more durable than just about any other work product we produce. Five decades later and RCS commit info was still available for the Unix sources, and history could be reconstructed: https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo
I’ve used 35-year-old commit messages to help understand a long-standing issue, decades after all other related organization tooling and data had disappeared.
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What should be included in a history of the Rust language?
P.S. I remember I looked into early versions of C (they survived in Unix historic releases) and that, finally, revealed to me why C does something really stupid and conflates arrays and slices (pointers). Initially C had no arrays! Or, rather, what it called arrays were, actually, pointers. “Normal” arrays were added at some point, but because these weird slices/pointers were already there that caused endless confusion. It wasn't resolved before C became popular and after that it was too late. Go repeated that mistake with slices, of course.