circle
duckduckgo-locales
circle | duckduckgo-locales | |
---|---|---|
31 | 2,080 | |
1,733 | 94 | |
- | - | |
8.9 | 0.0 | |
11 days ago | about 12 hours ago | |
C | Perl | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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.
circle
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MiniScript on a bare-metal Raspberry Pi
If you're a developer and feeling adventurous, you can also try building it yourself. The source is all on GitHub. It uses the circle-stdlib project (which is circle plus some additions to support much of the C and C++ standard libraries) as a submodule; hopefully I've set that up correctly, but you could always clone that separately and place it in the MiniScript-Pi folder. Check out circle's build instructions for info on setting up your toolchain. (Mac users: be careful with the configure script, which does not work properly on MacOS; find me on Discord and I'll help you fix the script or configure manually.)
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Bare Metal Emulation on the Raspberry Pi – Commodore 64
I suggest checking out circle https://github.com/rsta2/circle since it's basically a library for the pi hardware. I'm doing some experiments with it myself now.
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Assembly coding without OS
You can also run a Pi without an operating system, programming it in C or C++ probably. See for example: GitHub - rsta2/circle: A C++ bare metal environment for Raspberry Pi with USB (32 and 64 bit)
- Bare Metal Emulators and launcher for RetroFlag GPI v1
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Help with C64 Emulation (never used a C64 before in my life)?
BMC64 is VICE in a trenchcoat unikernel / bare-metal framework called Circle: https://github.com/rsta2/circle
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Smalltalk-80 on Raspberry Pi: A Bare Metal Implementation
It uses the circle library (https://github.com/rsta2/circle) to provide a minimal runtime (mainly to interface with the hardware).
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How do I get started with making my own Linux based OS on Embedded Hardware?
I experimented with circle the other day (https://github.com/rsta2/circle) Looks promising, and most likely within your knowledge of C/C++ development.
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EmuTOS: A Modern FOSS Replacement OS for the Atari ST – and the Amiga Too
Natively would be amazing but a vast amount of work.
The way Apple moved classic MacOS from 680x0 to PowerPC was to write a tiny kernel emulator, with an API to run native stuff on the metal, and run more or less the whole OS under emulation, profile it and just translate the most speed-critical bits.
That's a lot of work for a FOSS project but given the performance delta between 1980s 680x0 and 2020s ARM, total emulation of the whole thing should be perfectly fine. It's how the PiStorm Amiga upgrade works.
https://amigastore.eu/853-pistorm.html
So all I envision is something like Aranym:
https://aranym.github.io/
... running on top of Ultibo, say:
https://ultibo.org/
Or maybe Circle:
https://github.com/rsta2/circle
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Solutions for >1GHz microprocessor with option for bare metal or freeRTOS
Circle is a C++ bare metal programming environment for the Raspberry Pi.
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New in this sub, some questions…
The only other reasonable option would be to port it to a new platform which is popular that has a few well documented hardware interfaces so as not to create a hellish nightmare writing drivers. Maybe then you could do a one-off port to that platform (though you might have to re-target the HolyC compiler to target it instead if it is not x86_64). The Raspberry PI seems like a decent option here since there is already a baremetal C++ library supporting USB, keyboard, mouse, sound, video, and as an added bonus UART, I2C, SPI, GPIO. You would have good code examples for porting all the necessary drivers. But obviously this would still be a lot of work and the compiler would need to be re-targeted and user space adapted for running on ARM. That being said backwards compatibility is strong, ARM seems actually interested in keeping it that way (at least for now). The library I'm talking about is here: https://github.com/rsta2/circle
duckduckgo-locales
- 87.7% of entrepreneurs struggle with at least one mental health issue
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Alice's Adventures in a Differentiable Wonderland
No, I think the inspiration is more direct https://duckduckgo.com/?q=lewis+carroll+alice+in+wonderland+...
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Biden signs TikTok 'ban' bill into law, starting clock for ByteDance to divest
Yea caught me, I self reported to try and trick everyone. Jokes aside my comment was based on net neutrality if you don’t remember https://duckduckgo.com/?q=net+neitrality+bot+comments
Some of the stuff that really chipped at our privacy as our isps got to sell our dns pings to advertisers and social media. Have a good day citizen.
- A24's New AI-Generated 'Civil War' Ads Generate Controversy
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DuckDuckGo AI Chat
AI Chat is separate from the search engine. On the search engine we have DuckAssist, which is currently grounded in Wikipedia (more sources coming): https://duckduckgo.com/?q=what+is+the+stoichiometric+ratio+b...
- Collection of notebooks showcasing some fun and effective ways of using Claude
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Microsoft killed my favorite keyboard
that one is good, but I detest keyboards with their own magic little dongle since it's a damn fine thing to misplace
I'm surprised OP didn't enjoy https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/d/surface-ergonomic-keyboard... which is currently listed as out of stock but I dunno if that means "permanently" or what, but they seem to be available via 3rd party channels
Its "klacking" aside, pour one out for https://duckduckgo.com/?q=microsoft+natural+elite+keyboard&t... which I loved, although I'll be straight that I love the Surface Ergonomic better because I think its keytravel is much, much nicer and no weirdo + shaped cursor keys, the inverted T like $diety intended
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Ask HN: Where are all the touch-based art forms?
Sculpture can be tactile. I know it's not purely tactile, but thinking of it in that way is becoming a lot more common (eg at the Louvre). And then I went to find a URL for the tactile dome at the Exploratorium in San Francisco (https://www.exploratorium.edu/visit/tactile-dome) and it turns out there are lots of tactile galleries now:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=tactile+gallery&t=fpas&ia=web
- Show HN: QR Builder
- Find My Device on Android
What are some alternatives?
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
Searx - Privacy-respecting metasearch engine
raspberry-pi-os - Learning operating system development using Linux kernel and Raspberry Pi
hn-search - Hacker News Search
MiniDexed - Dexed FM synthesizer similar to 8x DX7 (TX816/TX802) running on a bare metal Raspberry Pi (without a Linux kernel or operating system)
brave-browser - Brave browser for Android, iOS, Linux, macOS, Windows.
rpi4-osdev - Tutorial: Writing a "bare metal" operating system for Raspberry Pi 4
Tutanota makes encryption easy - Tuta is an email service with a strong focus on security and privacy that lets you encrypt emails, contacts and calendar entries on all your devices.
dts2hx - Converts TypeScript definition files (d.ts) to haxe externs (.hx) via the TypeScript compiler API
SimpleLogin - The SimpleLogin back-end and web app
8821cu - Linux Driver for USB WiFi Adapters that are based on the RTL8811CU, RTL8821CU and RTL8731AU Chipsets
torsocks - Library to torify application - NOTE: upstream has been moved to https://gitweb.torproject.org/torsocks.git