https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox_(computer_programmer)
Another famous person in the Linux community is Alan Cox. He originally worked at Swansea University
College in Wales. At first, he particularly likes to play computer games, especially MUD (Multi-User Dungeon
or Dimension). In the posts of games.mud news group in the early 90s you can find a lot of posts he posted. He
even wrote a history of MUD development (rec.games.mud news group, March 9, 1992, A history of MUD). As
MUD games are closely related to the internet, he slowly became fascinated with computer networks. In order
to play the game and improve the speed of the computer running the game and the network transmission speed,
he needs to choose a most satisfactory operating platform. So he began to contact various types of operating
systems. Because of the lack of money, he could not afford even the MINIX system. When Linux 0.1x and
386BSD were released, he took a long time to purchase a 386SX computer. Since the 386BSD requires math coprocessor support and the computer with the Intel 386SX CPU does not have a math coprocessor, he installed
the Linux system. So he started to learn Linux with free source code and started to have interest in Linux
systems, especially with regard to networking. In the discussion of Linux single-user mode of operation, he
even praised Linux for being beautifully implemented.
After the release of Linux 0.95, he began writing patches (modification programs) for the Linux system
(remembering that his two earliest patches were not adopted by Linus) and became the earliest users of TCP/IP
network code on Linux systems. one. Later, he gradually joined the Linux development team and became one of
the main responsible for maintaining the Linux kernel source code. It can also be said to be the most important
figure in the Linux community after relaying Linus. Later Microsoft invited him to join, but he simply refused.
Since 2001, he is responsible for maintaining the Linux kernel 2.4.x code. Linus is mainly responsible for the
development of the latest development version of the kernel (odd version, such as 2.5.x version).
Another famous person in the Linux community is Alan Cox. He originally worked at Swansea University
College in Wales. At first, he particularly likes to play computer games, especially MUD (Multi-User Dungeon
or Dimension). In the posts of games.mud news group in the early 90s you can find a lot of posts he posted. He
even wrote a history of MUD development (rec.games.mud news group, March 9, 1992, A history of MUD). As
MUD games are closely related to the internet, he slowly became fascinated with computer networks. In order
to play the game and improve the speed of the computer running the game and the network transmission speed,
he needs to choose a most satisfactory operating platform. So he began to contact various types of operating
systems. Because of the lack of money, he could not afford even the MINIX system. When Linux 0.1x and
386BSD were released, he took a long time to purchase a 386SX computer. Since the 386BSD requires math coprocessor support and the computer with the Intel 386SX CPU does not have a math coprocessor, he installed
the Linux system. So he started to learn Linux with free source code and started to have interest in Linux
systems, especially with regard to networking. In the discussion of Linux single-user mode of operation, he
even praised Linux for being beautifully implemented.
After the release of Linux 0.95, he began writing patches (modification programs) for the Linux system
(remembering that his two earliest patches were not adopted by Linus) and became the earliest users of TCP/IP
network code on Linux systems. one. Later, he gradually joined the Linux development team and became one of
the main responsible for maintaining the Linux kernel source code. It can also be said to be the most important
figure in the Linux community after relaying Linus. Later Microsoft invited him to join, but he simply refused.
Since 2001, he is responsible for maintaining the Linux kernel 2.4.x code. Linus is mainly responsible for the
development of the latest development version of the kernel (odd version, such as 2.5.x version).
📚 Cs/books/uwu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox_(computer_programmer) Another famous person in the Linux community is Alan Cox. He originally worked at Swansea University College in Wales. At first, he particularly likes to play computer games, especially MUD (Multi…
another chad who just wanted to play some games 😂
https://danlj.org/mkj/
Michael K. Johnson, author of The Linux Kernel Hackers' Guide, was also one of the first people to
contact the Linux operating system (from version 0.97). He is also one of the initiators of the well-known Linux
Document Project (LDP). He once worked for Linux Journal and now works for RedHat.
Michael K. Johnson, author of The Linux Kernel Hackers' Guide, was also one of the first people to
contact the Linux operating system (from version 0.97). He is also one of the initiators of the well-known Linux
Document Project (LDP). He once worked for Linux Journal and now works for RedHat.
📚 Cs/books/uwu
https://danlj.org/mkj/ Michael K. Johnson, author of The Linux Kernel Hackers' Guide, was also one of the first people to contact the Linux operating system (from version 0.97). He is also one of the initiators of the well-known Linux Document Project (LDP).…
www.linuxdoc.org
Linux Documentation Project
The Linux Documentation Project is working towards developing free, high quality documentation for the Linux operating system. The overall goal of the LDP is to collaborate in all of the issues of Linux documentation.
📚 Cs/books/uwu Chat
Will doo this weekend
sorry i got some urgent work i will do it next weak probably
Forwarded from Programming Deadlock
Learning Low-Level Computing and C++ by Making a Game Boy Emulator
https://byteofmelon.com/blog/2026/making-of-gamebyte
https://byteofmelon.com/blog/2026/making-of-gamebyte
Byte of Melon
Learning Low-Level Computing and C++ by Making a Game Boy Emulator - The Making of GameByte - Byte of Melon
Forwarded from Programming Deadlock
Interfaces and traits in C
https://antonz.org/interfaces-in-c/
https://antonz.org/interfaces-in-c/
antonz.org
Interfaces and traits in C
Implemented with structs and function pointers.
Forwarded from Programming Deadlock
Gathering Linux Syscall Numbers in a C Table
https://t-cadet.github.io/programming-wisdom/#2026-01-17-gathering-linux-syscall-numbers
https://t-cadet.github.io/programming-wisdom/#2026-01-17-gathering-linux-syscall-numbers
godump
https://github.com/goforj/godump
godump is a developer-friendly, zero-dependency debug dumper for Go. It provides pretty, colorized terminal output of your structs, slices, maps, and more - complete with cyclic reference detection and control character escaping.
https://github.com/goforj/godump
GitHub
GitHub - goforj/godump: A minimal, developer-friendly pretty-printer and debug dumper for Go structs, inspired by Laravel’s dump()…
A minimal, developer-friendly pretty-printer and debug dumper for Go structs, inspired by Laravel’s dump() and Symfony’s VarDumper. - goforj/godump
📚 Cs/books/uwu
https://yacy.net/
The only search engine i am falling for
my pc has tons of flatpaks apps man 😭
Here are the list of most usefull one :
1: Kiwix = offline wikipedia (space 119 gb)
2: Jan ai = offline ai model (space 3 gb)
3: organic map = offline map (depends of you)
4 : warehouse = flatpak apps maintenance
5: Hetairos AI = AI girlfriend (1 gb)😭
6 : Electronmail = to manage proton mails for free
7: freetube or noutube = youtube apps
8: fotema = gallery
9: i2pd = security and privacy
10: reco = capture audio
11: Astrogods = astrology related
12: localsend = share files
13: flatsweep = clean leftover flatpak data
14: Brief = get linux command
16: yt downloader = download offline youtube video and music
Here are the list of most usefull one :
1: Kiwix = offline wikipedia (space 119 gb)
2: Jan ai = offline ai model (space 3 gb)
3: organic map = offline map (depends of you)
4 : warehouse = flatpak apps maintenance
5: Hetairos AI = AI girlfriend (1 gb)😭
6 : Electronmail = to manage proton mails for free
7: freetube or noutube = youtube apps
8: fotema = gallery
9: i2pd = security and privacy
10: reco = capture audio
11: Astrogods = astrology related
12: localsend = share files
13: flatsweep = clean leftover flatpak data
14: Brief = get linux command
16: yt downloader = download offline youtube video and music
❤2