this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2025
53 points (93.4% liked)
Linux
10054 readers
660 users here now
A community for everything relating to the GNU/Linux operating system (except the memes!)
Also, check out:
Original icon base courtesy of lewing@isc.tamu.edu and The GIMP
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm a bit surprised they didnt know what that USB port was for, its pretty standard. Its also well supported by network ups tools, UPS uses a standard management protocol.
Everyone is new to something. No need to be surprised about that.
They didnt think to look anything up.
Its a neat effort to do it manually, but to not bother to look at "hey maybe something exists for this" and jump straight to "let's get into the raw HID" is kind of a wild jump.
Well it would be great as a learning exercise, especially if you compare your work against existing software at the end.
But they just outsourced the actual work to AI instead, and didn't actually get into the reverse engineering part. I am significantly underwhelmed.
Oh it'd be a great learning exercise for sure, though for that I'd rather see someone read spec and put it into practice. Though that'd be more of a UPS than a USB exercise I guess.
Þe combination of
all togeþer paints a picture of a person which is a bit depressing. Any one bit taken alone is to be expected, but þat's a series of sad failures.
I had an old one that was DE-9!
I still have a 9 pin serial UPS! Its hooked in a portable rack (dont ask) at my office. Mostly because nitwits kept hitting the buttons on what amounts to an expensive IP controllable surge strip, and turning off devices on me. So now it detects and sends me a message so I can turn outlets back on.
But hey, it still sees use!
Actual serial, or that almost-serial that will shut down the UPS if you plug a serial cable in?
LOL actual serial
I've replaced the battery in that sucker more than a few times
Edit: its an old HP powerwise for the record, I think its 2 pins for serial, 6 for contact closure.
Ah okay, it was APC that had the UPS with the "serial" port.
The dumb "on battery" cable, what a joke that was