Many in open source are still unaware of how the Cyber Resilience Act will impact projects and businesses. This blog breaks it down.
The initial set of speakers and talks for ER is now published. A few highlights:
- @gregkh on the EU Cyber Resiliency Act (CRA)
- barriers to security on embedded systems
- Steam OS impact on Linux ecosystem
- Functional Safety on Linux
- writing real-time applications
- fully open source CNC and 3D printing
and many more: https://embedded-recipes.org/2025/speakers/
Registration is now open for ER 2025! We hope you can join us this year in Nice, France.
https://embedded-recipes.org/2025/attend/
At least once a day I'm reminded of this slide from @bagder last year at FOSDEM
What comes after world domination?
This is the abstract for my scheduled talk at foss-north 2025 in April. What do you think is next?
Where's all the commentary and speculation for good kernel rust stories? https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.14-Faux-Bus-Merged
how to change the kernel[1]
1. assemble a sufficient coalition of willing fools
2. do it
3. if it works, ask for forgiveness, if it fails, quietly bury it and try the next thing
the more public success you pile up, the easier this gets. but if you fail at step 1, because your ego gets in the way, or you lack the political skills, or you think talking about anything non-technical is verboten, it will be endless amounts of pain and frustration
1: anything you want to change really
https://www.linuxfoundation.org/blog/navigating-global-regulations-and-open-source-us-ofac-sanctions
TL;DR: Maintainers can accept patches from sanctioned entities, but not request more details, or suggest changes for a v2...