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#qemu

3 messages3 participants2 messages aujourd’hui

Recently we reported on the cross-platform QEMU front end "Kyvos" released by George Sokianos, which is designed to make it particularly easy for users to set up and start AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS.
Now version 1.1.0 is available, and the manual has been extended by another 26 pages, including a brand new section on AmigaOS 4.1 FE and all the steps required to update it with the latest available software.

amiga-news.de/en/news/AN-2025-

www.amiga-news.deamiga-news.de - QEMU frontend for booting AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS: Kyvos V1.1.0
Suite du fil

George Sokianos has released Kyvos, a new application that serves as a user-friendly front end for QEMU. The cross-platform tool for Linux, macOS, and Windows is designed to make it easy for users to set up and start AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS with just a few clicks, without having to delve deeply into the configuration.
Additionally a manual of 70+ pages is provided with all the details and the steps to setup AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS.

amiga-news.de/en/news/AN-2025-

www.amiga-news.deamiga-news.de - Kyvos: New QEMU frontend for booting AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS
#QEMU#AmigaOS4#MorphOS

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A whole afternoon playing around... ok, no, that's not the word... It's been a whole afternoon banging my head against the wall that libvirt and its cousin virt-manager are.

I ended up going back to the ol' trusty shell script I use to fire up my FreeBSD and OpenBSD VMs. This is a desktop, not a server, so the VMs are on just for what I need to run on them (mostly checking portability of code I write) and then, they're shut down. No need for a socket listening in the background or a service to do who knows what.

The thing that really pissed me off was the permissions situation libvirt/libvirt-qemu got me into. I mean... wow, it silently set an ACL entry on my $HOME on its own to unilaterally give itself permissions inside my $HOME. Wow.

The #QEMU contribution policy is being updated to make it clear we don't currently accept #llm generated code: patchew.org/QEMU/2025060314252

Where's the legal line between LLMs trained on vast copyrighted codebases and human developers who've read copyrighted code? The #law hasn't caught up to clarify this distinction yet. There are certainly arguments the process of generation might not be novel or human enough that the result can be copyrighted anyway.