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#os — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #os, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Would it be crazy for me to take my Abject project and turn it into a proper OS?

    Think something like firefox OS which was based on linux. Boot into Abject. Then get a machine and install it. Am I taking "personal" computing too far if I do that?

    abject.world

  2. :firefoxnew: El botón VPN de mi Firefox se volvió enorme y aterrador de repente. :eyeroll:

  3. The Virtual OS Museum: A Time Machine Made of Bootloaders, Dust, and Bad Fonts

    A nostalgic dive into the Virtual OS Museum, where DOS prompts still blink, GEM still feels futuristic, Linux still smells faintly of 1997, and every boot menu is a trapdoor into another strange, brilliant future we almost got.

    schulz.dk/2026/05/26/the-virtu

  4. The Virtual OS Museum: A Time Machine Made of Bootloaders, Dust, and Bad Fonts

    A nostalgic dive into the Virtual OS Museum, where DOS prompts still blink, GEM still feels futuristic, Linux still smells faintly of 1997, and every boot menu is a trapdoor into another strange, brilliant future we almost got.

    schulz.dk/2026/05/26/the-virtu

  5. The Virtual OS Museum: A Time Machine Made of Bootloaders, Dust, and Bad Fonts

    A nostalgic dive into the Virtual OS Museum, where DOS prompts still blink, GEM still feels futuristic, Linux still smells faintly of 1997, and every boot menu is a trapdoor into another strange, brilliant future we almost got.

    schulz.dk/2026/05/26/the-virtu

  6. The Virtual OS Museum: A Time Machine Made of Bootloaders, Dust, and Bad Fonts

    A nostalgic dive into the Virtual OS Museum, where DOS prompts still blink, GEM still feels futuristic, Linux still smells faintly of 1997, and every boot menu is a trapdoor into another strange, brilliant future we almost got.

    schulz.dk/2026/05/26/the-virtu

  7. The Virtual OS Museum: A Time Machine Made of Bootloaders, Dust, and Bad Fonts

    A nostalgic dive into the Virtual OS Museum, where DOS prompts still blink, GEM still feels futuristic, Linux still smells faintly of 1997, and every boot menu is a trapdoor into another strange, brilliant future we almost got.

    schulz.dk/2026/05/26/the-virtu