Tux Machines

Leftovers: nzyme, OpenBSD, and QNX

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Mar 27, 2023

=> “Why a European mobile operating system can’t challenge Android and iOS” | Twitter Source Code Released (UPDATED)

=> ↺ nzyme

A New Chapter Begins

=> ↺ A New Chapter Begins

You can expect many more blog posts with development updates, but, in summary, I am taking the existing WiFi-focused core of nzyme and am extending it to support Ethernet data. Along with this huge addition, I am adding critical features like multi-node support and a proper authentication model.

Theo de Raadt at CanSecWest: Synthetic Memory Protections

=> ↺ Theo de Raadt at CanSecWest: Synthetic Memory Protections

We recently reported that Theo de Raadt (derradt@) was scheduled to present at CanSecWest. That's now happened, and slides of Theo's presentation, Synthetic Memory Protections, can be found in the usual place. Video is available on the bird site.

How we built our Embedded World Demo on Rust for QNX

=> ↺ How we built our Embedded World Demo on Rust for QNX

At Embedded World 2023, Ferrous Systems had a joint booth with AdaCore, to talk about our new joint-venture: Ferrocene. Ferrocene is a qualified toolchain for building safety-critical systems in Rust.
Florian noted that our booth was next to the Blackberry/QNX booth, and that “we should do a demo using QNX Neutrino”, the POSIX-compatible real-time operating system that’s popular with our target audience in the automotive sector. That’s pretty much all we had to go on

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