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The Doctor drwho at virtadpt.net
Wed Jun 9 19:01:19 BST 2021
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‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Wednesday, June 9th, 2021 at 07:40, Jason McBrayer <jmcbray at carcosa.net> wrote:
My guess is that, using real retro hardware, the minimum would be an
80386 or a 68020. OpenSSL will build for 386, but you have to specify
you want it at compile time, because the default x86 32-bit build
requires a 486.
This makes me wonder if anybody's written a version for the 6502 or 6510. It seemslike a thing that could be run on, say, a C64 (which is what I'm thinking).
Anything older than that, especially 8 or 16 bit micros, you'll need to
either use a TLS-terminating proxy on a modern small machine (like a Pi
Doable.
Zero) that speaks either Gopher or a non-TLS Gemini variant (Mercury) to
the client, and Gemini to the server; or, as someone else suggested,
offload the TLS to a modern microcontroller somehow.
Or, maybe the core of a Zimodem running an ESP32 or ESP8266 (https://github.com/bozimmerman/Zimodem)?
The Doctor [412/724/301/703/415/510]WWW: https://drwho.virtadpt.net/The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.