And then the biblical TempleOS which is an even more unusual suspect.
"According to Davis, God said to create the operating system with 640x480, 16 colors display and a single audio voice. The operating system was coded in a programming language developed by Davis in C/C++ called "HolyC"."
not sure why you'd want to run TempleOS on a NAS. It's an incredibly impressive piece of software from a very intelligent (and sadly, very schizophrenic) man but it's not very practical.
I don't have experience here but can those boards practically power anything meaningful? Is there any success story out there of someone moving all their data to the pi?
I really respect what the author tried to do with ArkOS. He got a working open source product out the door that put a premium on usability and ease of installation. There aren't a lot of volunteer-run open source projects that are able to do that.
Did anyone ever host their own email "at home" using ArkOS?
> Did anyone ever host their own email "at home" using ArkOS?
arkOS is generally aimed at tinkerers/hobbyists. So, it's not really meant for people to use it for serious stuff. It's always fun to run email at home except most of the ISPs block mail traffic.
I seem to remember the "genesis" (hee hee) was the author having a hard time configuring a self-hosted server despite being knowledgeable as an admin. So I thought email was part of that goal.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 44.3 ms ] thread"According to Davis, God said to create the operating system with 640x480, 16 colors display and a single audio voice. The operating system was coded in a programming language developed by Davis in C/C++ called "HolyC"."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TempleOS
http://www.templeos.org/
I also use it as a NAS with Resilio Sync.
Did anyone ever host their own email "at home" using ArkOS?
Edit: typo
arkOS is generally aimed at tinkerers/hobbyists. So, it's not really meant for people to use it for serious stuff. It's always fun to run email at home except most of the ISPs block mail traffic.