firmware is a pretty common term for things like this (code on chip that manages low level startup)
It’s still a stupid term no matter how common it is. It has little to nothing to do with firms.
firmware is a pretty common term for things like this (code on chip that manages low level startup)
It’s still a stupid term no matter how common it is. It has little to nothing to do with firms.
We pray for pacman to deliver as he often does.
All hail to pacman!
What concerns would those be, that the few US chip companies would have to be compete again?
For me, I would say around 2020 and knowing the US was responsible for blowing up the pipelines the around summer 2021, considering the news at that time I could already tell. Not in detail, but enough to know it a high likelyhood, with doubts in between.
Oh wait, I see that vmlinuz file has a version to it. I couldn’t remember if vmlinuz was the kernel or not, because I used to have multiples of them, but these days I only have one.
GRUB gets installed on your harddisk in your root partition, it’s configuration file on the boot partition and finally into your boot sector if I’m correct. UEFI is a standard for your firmware located outside your harddisk. You go from firmware -> partition layout -> bootloader (grub) -> kernel.
The firmware is closed source under BIOS or UEFI or if you’re hardcore open source, libreboot/coreboot/‘other options’ and is located somewhere on your motherboard on some chip.
Then there’s the partition layout and bootloader that are located inside /dev/sda
I believe, so inside the device itself, which can be read if you want to take a peek at it.
Now the bootloader located in the boot sector /dev/sda
loaded by the firmware located in some chip in the motherboard, has access to the boot partition, where it loads the bootloader’s configuration file usually located at /boot/grub/grub.cfg
for GRUB.
I remember UEFI having some kind of standard bootloader by itself, so it doesn’t even need a bootloader if I can remember correctly.
This what I recall as it was quite complicated for me too. Especially with software being called firmware and not being called motherbootware or pre-bootware or anything that indicates that this piece of software is the very first thing that starts running during boot.
But you look at /boot
and what you can find there. There will be at least two files there called initramfs and vmlinuz, which were also part of the boot process, but I forgot what role those two played.
No it doesn’t.
Since at the very least the dollar sign replacement is older than twitter.
And it was done by people who compared the company to nazi Germany.
Volunteers? I thought fedora/red hat was one of the few professional Linux OSes with this particular distro family focusing in on servers and security?
I could be wrong though.
It’s invincible against any adversary that still operates with 20th century technology, except for nations that had F-22’s prior.
I use Manjaro and little bit of Artix.
If I would recommend anything, it’s either EndeavourOS or Manjaro.
They’re Arch-based and friendlier.
I stopped using Arch because I got banned from their forum for changing my username.
Oh noes!
Does that mean they will start banning TikTok and Huawei soon?
I would say it’s not very different, just one league above all the others that I’ve come across.
The three things that stand out in my opinion is how much their package manager can query packages, it’s rolling release and the number of packages they have in the AUR.
It makes Arch the most complete and up to date Linux distro,
with the exception of a user friendly forum,
that doesn’t look like the nazi soup kitchen from Seinfeld,
and an installer.
Five mornings at Chucky’s