I just got my hands on one of these through the indiegogo campaign. Really cool! I just got micropython running, going to sit down with it this weekend
It seems like the ThunderX chips from Cavium are the most prevalent 64-bit arm marketed as server platforms. Very high core count, high memory capacity.. I've been hoping that these things take off because I love the idea: http://www.cavium.com/ThunderX_ARM_Processors.html
I've been beating my head against the wall for weeks trying to compile rustc/cargo on Openindiana. I want it so that I can compile a recent version firefox and/or thunderbird for Openindiana, both of which require rustc and cargo.
Well, the idea is that maybe the command 'go' is different on different build systems/targets and if you need to change it to something else (go-x86, or something like that) then it's going to be more difficult the way you wrote things.
I discovered the Illumos project about a year ago and was extatic to see that Open Solaris had come back to life. I've been using OpenIndiana as my daily driver at work for a while now.
I'm in the process of recovering from a serious addiction to furanyl-fentanyl. I don't really care to get too into it, I really can't explain the pain that stuff has caused me. I've been through a lot in life, but I've never been through anything so traumatic.. This stuff is a nightmare like you can't possibly understand without being there yourself, I hope none of you ever find yourself in that position.. I've been in a methadone program for the past 6 months now. We really need to put money into treatment, the program that I'm in literally saved my life. I'm lucky enough to have insurance that actually covers most of the cost, but most people in my situation don't have that luxury.
He did a perfectly fine job of reading your comment... you implied that you only cared about certain variables, "peripherals, power, tools, size, price". vertex-four points out that "x86 IoT devices" (ie these Intel chips we are talking about) are a bad choice in regard to those things that you care about...
Is it just me or am I the only one who is a bit hesitant to submit the public IP/hostname to some random service on the web. I'm not trying to say that the creator of this has any ill intent, but I also don't know that they aren't cataloging addresses of potentially vulnerable ssh daemons.
Anyway.. just to reiterate I'm not trying accuse you of anything OP. Very cool utility, nice work!
I almost guarantee the damage is done immediately once the browser tries to read that file.. The reason it took a moment for your system to crash is because it took a moment for whatever the process was that actually hung to try to read from disk.
If that's the case then you should just go buy a sparc server off of ebay. I bought a Sun t1000 for $80 with shipping that has a 6 core sparc t1 with 24 threads.. and for a few hundred more you can get 128 threads in one 2u server! I suppose not everyone wants to write code for sparc (or keep a noisy server in your home office), but if all you're doing is web dev like the guy in this post then it doesn't really make much of a difference.