Sujet : Re: "A Forth OS In 46 Bytes"
De : no.email (at) *nospam* nospam.invalid (Paul Rubin)
Groupes : comp.lang.forthDate : 31. May 2025, 08:04:30
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <87o6v91csh.fsf@nightsong.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/27.1 (gnu/linux)
anton@mips.complang.tuwien.ac.at (Anton Ertl) writes:
T-Mobile commenced the shutdown of 2G on 9 Feb 2025...
I'm on T-mobile and my old phone definitely stopped working when they
shut off 3G here. Is it possible that the phone didn't have 2G? I have
some other old phones I could try.
On my laptop I have a web browser running that has JavaScript enabled,
with hundreds of open tabs. On this laptop currently 11GB of ram are
used. I am sure it could run in 8GB using some swap space
Yes, 8GB isn't bad at all, 4GB works ok, but with 1GB it's a problem.
I think my laptop in 2005 was a Pentium 3 with 512MB of ram.
It would be almost unusable now.
>
The Pentium 3 was introduced in 1999, with new models introduced up to
2003.
I probably bought it before 2003. The one after that had a Core 2 and
4GB(?), and I think I got it in 2007. Yes, by 2015, stuff was almost as
good as stuff made now. I'm currently using a 2013-era machine (Core
i5) though I got it secondhand, more recently. It's working ok and I
don't have any pressing need to upgrade. When I want to do something
compute heavy, I use remote servers.
As for using it, you might look at ...
I can run older and smaller distros on those machines reasonably well, I
think. That's fine for text editing but it's not so feasible to browse
the web with them. It's also hard to get PATA solid state disks for
them, so they'd still have spinny drives of quite low capacity by
today's standards. The main use I could think of for them is as console
terminals for otherwise headless machines.