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NetBSD can be successfully installed and run on vintage Chyron TV hardware.

TechnologyOperating SystemsApr 20, 2026score 0.272 posts · 0 replies across 2 instances
The thread discusses the successful installation of NetBSD on vintage Chyron TV hardware, highlighting the significance of running modern operating systems on obsolete equipment. It references the Chyron Maxine broadcast computer and its Motorola 68040 processor, emphasizing the technical achievement and the niche interest in retro computing.

Claims

NetBSD can be successfully installed and run on vintage Chyron TV hardware.
Parent: TechnologyEntity: NetBSDSub-entity: vintage hardware compatibilityImpact: positiveDate: Apr 20, 2026Target: NetBSD's compatibility with vintage hardware

Source posts

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Vintage Chyron TV Hardware? Of course It Runs NetBSD Perhaps at this point, getting NetBSD running on an obscure piece of hardware is a dog-bites-man story, and not worth reporting– their motto, after all, is “Of course it runs NetBSD”. So, the fact that [RetroComputingRanch] has got NetBSD running on a vintage Chyron Maxine broadcast computer is perhaps remarkable only for the fact that few people have even heard of Chyron before. He’s already done a series of videos in which they explore this odd, old computer, which is powered by a Motorola 68040 on a VME bus and was once used to generate digital overlays– text and the like– on broadcast TV. NetBSD does have a port for the Motorolla VME SBCs, so he was able to vibe it onto the specific vme168 board that the Chyron is based on. It happens off screen, but apparently it was AI agent work that went into condensing the documentation for this machine as well as getting the NetBSD port set up. That’s a bit ironic, since NetBSD would never allow that in its commits. Again, the Chyron Maxine was never intended to be a general-purpose-computer, and certainly never intended to run UNIX– it was meant to overlay text onto TV signals. With 4 MB of RAM, NetBSD leaves very little free once booted in single-user mode, but he realized that with a few extra chips the proprietary RAM board could become an 8 MB module. It seems like a pittance nowadays, but anyone who’s played with classic UNIX knows you can do a lot in 8 MB– even if only about 3MB is ‘free’ according to TOP. There’s work still to be done– right now, it boots, but he wants to use NetBSD to really own this machine, so that’ll mean getting the vintage video hardware set up. Last time we saw a NetBSD user, they were doing game dev on a G4 Macbook, but nothing will ever match the legendary NetBSD toaster– not even toaster-shaped callbacks. youtube.com/embed/6ne2Ya20KVY?… hackaday.com/2026/04/20/vintag…
0 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 20, 2026
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📰 Vintage Chyron TV Hardware? Of course It Runs NetBSD Perhaps at this point, getting NetBSD running on an obscure piece of hardware is a dog-bites-man story, and not worth reporting– their motto, after all, is “Of course it runs …read more 📰 Source: Hackaday 🔗 Link: https://hackaday.com/2026/04/20/vintage-chyron-tv-hardware-of-course-it-runs-netbsd/
0 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 20, 2026
@[email protected]
Vintage Chyron TV Hardware? Of course It Runs NetBSD hackaday.com/2026/04/20/vintage-chyron-tv-hardware-of-course-it-runs-netbsd Perhaps at this point, getting NetBSD running on an obscure piece of hardware is a dog-bites-man story, and not worth reporting– their motto, after all, is “Of course it runs …read more
0 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 20, 2026