Looking to upgrade from an old Latitude, curious as to what mobile hardware you folks use for writing your open source projects?

  • jet@hackertalks.com
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    It’s an open source operating system, that looks for the best level of practical paranoia using virtual machines as a form of isolation between processes

    Because of virtual machine workloads, and the security requirements, it can be quite demanding on hardware, and also open source support. So if a laptop supports qubes it’ll support anything else

    • GolfNovemberUniform
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      6 months ago

      Qubes is not fully FOSS afaik. Try something FSF-recommended to really test the compatibility

          • jet@hackertalks.com
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            7
            ·
            6 months ago

            I admire your level of purity, but your distinction is not helpful in laptop selection.

            I’m not aware of any FOSS operating system that only uses totally open source hardware drivers. even GNU HERD would run proprietary drivers if they actually ever finished.

            For Qubes, I’m not sure how you can have a better approach to isolating binary drivers, then running them in a totally contained virtual machine.

            Which operating system are you referring to without drivers?

            • Telorand@reddthat.com
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              2
              ·
              6 months ago

              I’m not super informed about the kernel layer, so forgive me if this is a silly question, but how does that approach compare to atomic distros like Fedora Kinoite, UniversalBlue, or NixOS?

              • jet@hackertalks.com
                link
                fedilink
                English
                arrow-up
                1
                ·
                6 months ago

                It’s all about where you draw the abstraction layer in the hardware stack.

                For Qubes / Xen its done at the Virtual Machine layer (pretending to be totally independent CPUs/RAM/Networks)

                For Nix et al I believe they are using containers which draws the line of abstraction inside the Kernel (pretending to be different clean name spaces, but the same kernel is aware of what is running everywhere).

                There are tradeoffs and different efficiencies for every different level of abstraction, for the most security sensitive applications you would want to run them on physically different computers, then the next step would be inside of different virtual machines (Xen/Qubes), then next step would be in different kernel name spaces (Containers/Nix), then process isolation with different virtual memory spaces (standard linux type processes you know and love)

                • GolfNovemberUniform
                  link
                  fedilink
                  arrow-up
                  2
                  ·
                  6 months ago

                  I’m not familiar with it at all so can’t tell. It seems to be a virtualization system?

                  • jet@hackertalks.com
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    arrow-up
                    2
                    ·
                    6 months ago

                    I’m rather annoyed your acting as a purity commissar in a hardware recommendation thread and you didn’t bother to familiarize yourself with the thing your nay-saying. If your going to drop a its not FOSS purity bomb - you should know why!

                    Xen is a GPLv2 microkernel, https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Xen

                    Qubes runs on Xen, and you can run whatever operating system you like inside of Qubes VMs.