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by 1337p337 5150 days ago
Inferno seems to do fine on BSD, OSX, Windows. It had a little trouble coping with CLang but a makefile tweak to make it use gcc fixes it.

If you want to try runnong Plan 9 on an EeePC, 9atom is tuned for that. I have one of the older ones (701 is the model, I think) and it does boot Plan 9.

1 comments

I just ran across No Execute on your blog. I can't believe I never found that before (I've chased up all the Plan 9 stuff before).

I've also been an Atlast user for a few years. Can't believe I never heard about your fork of it. John Walker's writeup on Atlast should be required reading for all programmers.

I'm going to try 9atom. I have a newer Eee with no CD drive. With BSD I can convert iso to img, add boot code and be up and running quick. But I guess it won't be so simple with 9atom? If this works, I'll be very happy.

No Execute is one of my favorite (semi-) blogs!

I couldn't agree more about the Atlast writeup. I'm glad for the vast proliferation of Lua, if for no other reason than it has made scriptability a library. I can certainly believe you've never heard of my fork. I actually feel bad because it's still "in beta", being a work in progress. I've been meaning to send a patch to Mr. Walker for the 64-bit issues, but there's always another bug or feature in the way, and I've held off on a "real" (tarballs on a server, documentation) release until I ping him and fix some bugs.

Regarding 9atom, I don't recall any difficulties booting from USB, but it was a while back, and I didn't quite get it installed. I've been running 9front for the most part when I run Plan 9.

I'm reading through No Execute now and it's fantastic so far.

Thanks again for redirecting our attention toward some quality stuff.

I'm psyched to get some version of Plan9 running on a netbook. Plan9 is work of art.

Your profile is fairly sparse; I wonder if you'd mind emailing me; there are a couple of things I wanted to chat about. (Address is on my site.)