@PawelK Atropa Belladonna, the deadly nightshade, has the anticholinergic alkaloids but not barbiturates. Barbiturates can be synthesized from urea.
I had a second thought about the port and my induction hypothesis. I need to get passive scan working first. Transmission is too easy to mess up and cause interference. For passive mode the modem would need to be initiated and communication established.
All of this could prove that the stack isn't magical.
@PawelK I was on barbiturates before the benzo and it improved the quality of my life when I swapped. Benzos are far safer than the barbiturates.
@PawelK I already know of him and Sick.
@PawelK I don't believe that Twitter is safer than Mastodon.
@trinsec I think I'm allergic to peanuts. Never had this reaction before and the last thing I did before I broke out was eating a large peanut butter sandwich.
This is day 3 and I'm still covered in a bad rash.
@PawelK I think it could.
"The ‘substantial contributions’ Intel has promised to boost #RISCV adoption"
https://www.theregister.com/2022/05/17/intel_riscv_contributions/
@PawelK I have ADHD and seizures so I don't have a choice in what I can take. Nicotine does help me sometimes but it has to be snus.
@PawelK Eastern Bloc perhaps?
@PawelK That's a good one. My full name is Amphetamine Benzodiazepine fueled Scientist.
Okay so the port is going very well. The code being ported isn't full of features and it uses a different RTOS. I really don't want to have to deal with capstones or integration into that RTOS.
If this has a USB or PCI connection, there would be a WNIC in a short period of time. I haven't noticed anything in the proprietary stack that would prevent me from ignoring it exists and controlling it with good code.
This has taken many edits to get rid of most of the insults.
@PawelK I didn't know that they worked on anti-malware.
@PawelK It was designed for this but based on computers. The load is handled on the client side and can be sent server side. This is a better option as the server is barely working, a tough job could always be handled by the server.
One can't really use it without a full laptop or desktop anyway. Dual or triple monitor workstations are what it excels on.
From my experience with Ghidra, I had to compile from source, modify code and make changes that I couldn't have done with a cloud service.
@PawelK There could be but the cost of cloud hosting a machine like that would be better spent on a physical machine. In my use of the SRE I allocated 6 to 8GB of ram to the JVM to keep it running smoothly.
An older Virtualization Server would be the bare minimum hardware I would attempt it with and it could be hosted for less money.
The licensing of Ghidra might not allow for cloud hosting but it was developed to run on networks with servers.
My projects are going well. The communication stack is a bit different but similar. The firmware being ported is from a WNIC to a MCU WNIC thing. The stack is similar and shouldn't be difficult to get going.
The other project is the analysis part of a scrapped project. I just need to run it on the code of each device. I really hope this works.
@PawelK Briar is definitely good.
One of my projects is coming back from the grave and it will be used in the port I am attempting.
If I can get this MCU to work with the modifications and operate the subsystem in the desired way, this will be a success.
If it was just as simple as Hello World. There will be a lot of code for just a recognizable sign of success. I'm still confident that this is the best bet.
Toughbook fan, Mathematician and Locksmith with limited success in other areas.
Political stance is far right and far left. Proponent of First Aid Kits and PPE. Easily disheartened by big tech. Partially hinged personality and stubborn enough to not write this in the First Person.
Distrust of Psychology and a fan of satire. I love a good joke and contradict myself. Somewhat serious but easily distracted.