Linux On A Commodore 64 (UPDATED)
We are used to seeing Linux running on almost everything, but we were a bit taken aback to see [semu-c64] running Linux on a Commodore 64. But between the checked-out user name and the caveat that: “it runs extremely slowly and it needs a RAM Expansion Unit”, one can already start piecing together what’s happening here.
Also: Fanless embedded PC offers three 2.5 GbE LAN ports
UPDATE
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The Commodore Is Keeping Up with Linux, as a Clever RISC-V Hack Brings Support to the Commodore 64
Developer Onno Kortmann has brought Linux to a device few would have imagined capable of running it: the eight-bit Commodore 64, released nearly a decade before Linus Torvalds' groundbreaking kernel.
"'But does it run Linux?' can now be finally and affirmatively answered for the Commodore C64," Kortmann writes of his work. "There is a catch (rather: a couple) of course: it runs extremely slowly and it needs a RAM Expansion Unit (REU), as there is no chance to fit it all into just 64KiB."