"Whose?" white horse 112 1:19pm ring a bell?
On Oct 1, 2016 1:19 PM, "Marshall Conover" wrote:
> > I was browsing of my old plan 9 mail and this conversation from 2000
> made me think of your thread here: https://goo.gl/PO85oD
>
> That conversation was interesting! It seemed Matt was a pretty p
> I was browsing of my old plan 9 mail and this conversation from 2000 made
me think of your thread here: https://goo.gl/PO85oD
That conversation was interesting! It seemed Matt was a pretty prescient
guy. The "supports the latest standards...whose?" bit gave me a chuckle.
There wasn't too much
Oh, and for anyone who hates web pages but were on the mailing list back
then, it is the "[9fans] Gecko based web browser" thread from 2000-07-18.
:-P
On Sat, Oct 1, 2016 at 8:03 AM James A. Robinson wrote:
> I was browsing of my old plan 9 mail and this conversation from 2000 made
> me think o
I was browsing of my old plan 9 mail and this conversation from 2000 made
me think of your thread here: https://goo.gl/PO85oD
Wow,
That sounds cool.
Thanks,
Chris
> On Sep 22, 2016, at 6:49 PM, michaelian ennis
> wrote:
>
> Not exactly what you meant but Coraid did implement a something like this
> that had 9p on it. Sort of. It was an ARM based PCIe card spoke 9p over
> something like IL without the IP (bwc cal
Not exactly what you meant but Coraid did implement a something like this
that had 9p on it. Sort of. It was an ARM based PCIe card spoke 9p over
something like IL without the IP (bwc called it EL) using network ports on
the card.
Sometimes they appear on ebay as "coraid mass storage NIC" or som
> Would this be fast enough for what we experienced back then with early
> websites, however? What with the stats on how people close or click away from
> a tab within N seconds if it hasn't fully loaded yet, I'd think that having
> to compile at all could've been prohibitive to people taking t
It's all based on their new language go.
On 9/20/16, Marshall Conover wrote:
>> Ken and rob are currently working at google trying to
> make sure it stays so - the idea being that if the stupid people that
> control the real OS can't be made to learn at least they'll make
> themselves an abstrac
I was thinking more along the lines of hardware implementation of 9P minus any
OS. For example, a disk serves up a filesystem via 9P or an Ethernet device
serving a /net with 9P.
Chris
> On Sep 20, 2016, at 2:16 AM, David Pick wrote:
>
>> On 19/09/16 21:55, Chris McGee wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> M
> Ken and rob are currently working at google trying to
make sure it stays so - the idea being that if the stupid people that
control the real OS can't be made to learn at least they'll make
themselves an abstract environment that can hide the past and all the
pain, to then work on interesting, mo
> Well, since everyone is trying to make the web the OS - see the chrome
> boxes, for example - why not cut out the middleman and just have the OS
> doing things? It seems like it's going to happen no matter what.
Well, it's happened, so now we have two shitty OS: chrome on top of
mac os x. Natura
> Also, external storage (hdd, ssd) with a built in filesystem exposed as 9P.
> UTF-8 file names, of course.
already exists, see coraid.
On 19/09/16 21:55, Chris McGee wrote:
>
>
> Maybe 9P could be implemented in a SoC.
It already has: the Raspberry Pi is built round a SoC...
...all that's needed is to boot from SoC ROM instead of the SD card.
--
David Pick
Network Security Manager, IT Services
Queen Mary University of London
> Mounting a bin directory from some remote servers is a potential vector
for malicious code and requires all services to provide binaries for all
platforms (arm, x86, riscv,...). Instead, serving the source code and
mkfile allows for audit ability (what did I just run?) and support for
their own p
If plan 9 had taken off I wonder if there would be peripherals with built-in 9P
support.
For example, a network adapter that you can mount into /net/etherxyz over USB,
PCI using a 9P connection. No driver needed, except to communicate with the bus.
Also, external storage (hdd, ssd) with a built
>
> > You just mount search engine, route planning tool, or even shopping site
> > and echo commands into the ctl file.
>
> I hadn't thought of this - was more thinking on the user union mounting, say,
> google.com/bin into their bin directory and running a google operation. The
> concept of
On Sat, Sep 17, 2016 at 11:51 AM, Jules Merit <
jules.merit.eurocorp...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Troff + net,
>
This spring (in the northern hemisphere) I had toyed with the notion of
using troff as an intermediate format for publishing public record data
sets. This was however because I wanted to cal
Thanks, Chris! That was a lot more detailed than I had thought into it.
> You just mount search engine, route planning tool, or even shopping site
and echo commands into the ctl file.
I hadn't thought of this - was more thinking on the user union mounting,
say, google.com/bin into their bin direc
Troff + net, I added ideas from vrml's for AR glasses I use for HUD
documents as I look off monitor still bashing the keyboard. Web proxy for
format translation.
On Sep 17, 2016 10:06 AM, "hiro" <23h...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It's hard to have a technical argument about this, because technical
> con
It's hard to have a technical argument about this, because technical
consideration was never a big driver of web "technologies".
> Web programming would have also have started off with far greater ability
There is nothing wrong with the web having a limited scope of features.
> Web games, video-s
Hi,
I have been pondering the same kind of thing myself lately. In an alternate
bizarro universe, what would the web look like that is modelled more around
plan 9 concepts. Here's my fantastic take on this.
First, there is a focus on simplicity of implementation and interface over
flashiness o
Hi all,
For context, I am a plan 9 novice - I've played around just enough to
add jury-rigged background-image support for rio (for better or worse),
implore sl - if I remember correctly - to add the ^B option to 9front's rc
that brings the cursor to the current input place, and, for what it's
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