If I remember correctly mnt is for static media that you expect to always be present and media is for removable media which may come and go.
iMac G3
wow, an operating system on a computer, sounds so improbable :P
Oh yeah, didn't even think about that. Isn't using userspace network pretty common these days anyway?
Actually was looking into this some more, and came across this article.
https://hackaday.com/2019/06/10/running-linux-on-a-thermostat/
It doesn't have as much to do with where the network stack is running, but that they're leveraging hardware offloading. Their CPUs generally aren't powerfull enough to switch packets at gigabit speeds let alone on many interfaces at gigabit or multi-gig speeds. Its by leveraging ASICs and maybe even some using FPGAs for hardware offload that they can switch packets at line rate. I understand how they do it, I still just find it kind of weird and cool.
I didn't list HDDs as someone else had mentioned that already. I was just listing a few devices that weren't mentioned in other comments yet.
Look up barrier instead
Tangentially related, SDF is prepping to do a Plan9 bootcamp starting in September. https://sdf.org/plan9/
Praise Bob
Pretty certain I linked the new one. Shows created January 2022 and last updated May 2023.
EDIT: Weird the last updated cell does show 2019, but looking at the docs metadata through Google drive shows Jan 2022 and May 2023. You may be right though, this could be stale.
Dude still seems to be updating this; though, there doesn't look to be a column detailing port forwarding. Maybe look into a few of these that look good?
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1s_o8QioqAILThKD04FYT95jI1siTOX5L/edit?pli=1#gid=1387289544
You probably just need to chow. The directory