In the late 90s, all of us had a FluxKit image on our laptops that would boot 
PLT Scheme on the raw machine. Matthew, with help from the Flux people, put it 
together in a relatively short time. I am sure more could have done with that, 
but we went in different directions. 

At Strange Loop I saw a talk from the first group. It was mostly about the 
networking part of the OS, the TCP stack. Strangely enough, the presenter did 
not know anything about the Fox project at CMU, which had done all of this in 
the mid 90s, following the X project from UofA. 

Computer science is the discipline of reinvention. Until everyone who knows how 
to write 10 lines of code has invented a programming language and solved the 
Halting Problem, nothing will be settled :-) 






On Feb 24, 2016, at 8:51 AM, Stephen De Gabrielle <spdegabrie...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

> Hi,
> Has anyone ever done a racket machine image like:
> • Mirage https://mirage.io
> • LING/Erlang on Xen http://erlangonxen.org
> • Rumprum https://github.com/rumpkernel/rumprun
> 
> I heard a podcast and recently saw an old  presentation [1] that was 
> interesting. I'm interested, but never had the motivation to do something 
> like LinuxFromScratch.
> 
> Stephen 
> 
> 
> [1]https://www.slideshare.net/mobile/AnilMadhavapeddy/mirage-ml-kernels-in-the-cloud-ml-workshop-2010
> 
> 
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