Soo, booting your computer from someone else's computer?
I mean we've had thin clients and PXE for ages?
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Soo, booting your computer from someone else's computer?
I mean we've had thin clients and PXE for ages?
And bootp before that, and tftp before that. So I think roughly... 35 years?
PXE specifically uses tftp doesn't it?
yep
More being able to use cloud storage and not need a full physical secondary computer. In theory the cloud can be accessed anywhere, even if a portion is down, not the same for a single physical PC.
is the non physical cloud in the room right now?
Nope! That's the point. It's in someone else's room!
Do thin clients and PXE require a server specifically configured to serve a boot image? (Genuinely asking.)
I'm not sure whether this project is doing something new by just accessing network resources that are nothing more than shared files, without any specific software running on the server (beyond just a server serving files).
So it's a thin client remote booting extremely slowly over a really high latency connection. Cool, the 1980s called and they want their tech back.
However, the dev also boasts that “the possibilities are endless” and would welcome any companies or individuals who wish to get in contact and discuss commercializing this project or something related to it.
"We're looking for dumb investors that don't understand technology so we can sell them a bridge."
Bro forgot to liberally sprinkle blockchain and AI dust on his project before offering it to investors
It's basically booting and running the OS from inside the AI in the cloud!! The system doesn't "use" blockchain, it's made of blockchain! Every file is an NFT by default which provides a built in system for profit for everything you do on the computer!
Take my money
So they reinvented terminals, but worse
Put a swap file on that bad boy boy and they've invented downloading ram!
This is a revolution.
Aw yiss, all of my information on Google’s servers siiiiiicc
Wow this sounds useless. Congratulations or whatever.
Interesting experiment, but I'd rather have a personal machine that isnt completely useless when/if the internet goes out. Also would be nice not to depend on a centralized service that could easily revoke access.
Seems like it's better suited for company work computers.
when/if the internet goes out.
Or worse, when it basically sends a different image...
Looks like a new CVE dropped lol
Boot from IPFS!
Good luck booting when Google nukes your account
I can see two issues here:
It’s not really a storageless computer. It’s using EFI as storage to build the ramdisk.
What happens if you need to change things because of a change of cloud account, change of cloud API etc etc
the thing that gets me is that said dev tried it first with amazon S3 and it worked infinitely better there
y tho
“Primarily a silly pursuit”
Yeah, but it then goes on saying
"However, the dev also boasts that “the possibilities are endless” and would welcome any companies or individuals who wish to get in contact and discuss commercializing this project or something related to it."
And that's what I'm saying "y tho" to.
I mean, shit. If I did something stupid for fun and some idiot business major wants to pay me for an implementation, regardless of how useful It actually is, I’m not turning it down.
Funny
funny
Reminds me of the image macro about using drive as your swap
So we’re back to ~~PXI~~ PXE? Everything old is new again.
Neat technical problem to solve though just for fun
I set up a PXE image for the Arch installer and scripted the whole installation. The idea was to switch the boot order and have it auto-reimage, such as for a IOT device deploy.
Once I built it, I never used it again. But it was a fun afternoon.
I wonder if it’s still used for POS such as registers?
Maybe in larger orgs. I'm guessing it's also used in public computers like in city and university libraries, as well as quick imaging of corporate computers at larger companies.
Was gonna say. Has no-one heard of diskless boot (PXE on x86).
I've done it in the past with OpenBSD: https://man.openbsd.org/diskless
Netboot.xyz ?
One of my duties in my first job was to build diskless computers. I’d record an EPROM in the station and boot from a Novell server.