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RT Linux Patches

sally bitter writes "Linux 2.6 kernel Real-Time? It is going to happen soon. Montavista developers submitted patches today to LKML to begin testing all the low latency task preempt and interrupt stuffs they're introducing."

4 of 170 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Good news, folks by sn0wflake · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    This is not a troll post. I don't think Linux will dominate the world as long as some games, like The Sims 2, doesn't work. Check out Transgaming for more information.

  2. O/T: Linux gaming by WillerZ · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It may not be a troll, but it is off-topic.

    Continuing the same off-topic-topic, I have a question: Are there figures on the percentage of PCs used to play games? I get the feeling most of the companies pushing linux are pushing it for business use, which suggests that the business market is larger...

    Phil

    --
    I guess today is a passable day to die.
  3. Re:Wait a sec by WillerZ · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    How did he get 0, Troll and not +4, Funny?

    Okay it might mislead newbs, but this is /., AOLers are gonna be confused enough anyway.

    Phil

    --
    I guess today is a passable day to die.
  4. Damn, I miss working there... by cduffy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...though I don't miss the Bay Area at all.

    [Abridged version: I took a two-week vacation to Austin TX, and never got around to going back. The "oh, hey, I'm a remote employee now" bit was, entirely understandably, not well-received]

    MontaVista's engineering department is absolutely the best place I've ever had the privilege of working. Really, really good people; clueful management (though I hear they've lost their VP of Engineering since I left -- that's a shame; I still haven't had a better manager); lots of opportunities to learn and do new things and come up with (and follow through on) R&D projects.

    Not that my new job sucks, by any means -- I'm now the (pretty much only) systems-level generalist at a Java shop making a next-generation EMR system -- but it's not quite the same as spending ones' days hacking and debugging C (and Python, for some internal tools) surrounded by folks doing the same.