Bonus: Earlier this week the Rust Programming Language Blog openly announced that Rust had outsourced its financing to Microsoft.
CGNAT stops port-forwarding in its tracks, so I built a temporary and free RustDesk relay to give me back remote access.
Microsoft is applying lessons from Rust to C# in a planned redesign of the unsafe code model, continuing a years-long company focus on reducing memory-safety risks historically associated with C and C ...
A milestone for Rust: version 7.0 of the Linux kernel has been released with official support for the programming language. At the same time, Rust’s popularity appears to be leveling off somewhat, ...
Abstract: Rust-for-Linux (RFL) is a new framework that allows development of Linux kernel extensions in Rust. At first glance, RFL is a huge step forward in terms of improving the security of the ...
$ uname -a Linux pop-os 5.17.5-76051705-generic #202204271406~1651504840~22.04~63e51bd SMP PREEMPT Mon May 2 15: x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux $ ldd --version ldd (Ubuntu GLIBC 2.35-0ubuntu3) 2.35 $ ...
TL;DR: Facepunch Studios' Rust will not support Linux or Valve's Proton due to rampant cheating on the platform and limited user base, making anti-cheat maintenance unfeasible. This highlights ongoing ...
Greenboot, the health check tool originally written in bash, is getting a rewrite in Rust, courtesy of engineers at Red Hat. This useful tool started in mid‑2018 as a Google Summer of Code project for ...
Get ready for Tyr, a brand-new Linux kernel DRM graphics driver for your Linux system! Tyr isn't just another GPU driver. It's a port of Panthor, an existing driver, and aims to match all of Panthor's ...
To paraphrase an old joke: How do you know if someone is a Rust developer? Don’t worry, they’ll tell you. There is a move to put Rust everywhere, even in the Linux kernel. Not going fast enough for ...
The Linux kernel just hit a major milestone: on May 25, 2025, the first fully Rust-written DRM driver, dubbed NOVA, was officially merged into Linux kernel 6.15. This isn’t some forgotten experimental ...