- Joined
- Jan 2, 2016
Problem is, no one actually runs TempleOS on the hardware, do they? I thought even Terry runs it in a VM, which means the host could still get hacked and someone could snoop on God's flat 64-bit address space.
TempleOS doesn't support UEFI at all, only classic BIOS. It's increasingly difficult to find motherboards that do that anymore, there was a pretty slim area in history where you could buy an x64-supporting motherboard with BIOS instead of UEFI. A lot could still emulate classic BIOS through a setting, although even that's becoming a relic now.
I'm still very confused why Terry was so obsessed with x86_64 when it has a huge barrier to entry for OS development when regular old 32-bit x86 is pretty trivial and extremely well-documented. UEFI is a bitch to work with.
I imagine he was just going through the stages of grief, but he eventually proclaimed that TempleOS should just be run in an emulator. This was after he proclaimed TempleOS should be installed in a dual-boot with your main OS, which, I imagine, was said after TempleOS should just straight-up be your main OS.
I still wonder if he's still mad no OS wants to support RedSeaFS or if he's too schizophrenic to care about that anymore.