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North Korea's "Red Star" OS.

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cntr

Banned
North Korean Red Star operating system details emerge
from BBC News
Details of a home-grown computer operating system developed by North Korea have emerged.

Information about Red Star, as it is known, was made public by a Russian blogger studying in North Korea, who bought the program off the street.

Further analysis by a government institute in neighbouring South Korea said the operating system is aimed at monitoring user activity.

However, very few North Koreans own a computer or have internet access.

Web content is also heavily censored.

It is designed "to control [North Korea's] own information security", a report by South Korea's Science and Technology Policy Institute (STPI) said.

"Due to few applicable programmes available, Red Star will not even be easily distributed in North Korea," it added.

The Russian blogger, identified only as Mikhail, said Red Star could be bought in Pyongyang for around $5. He has also posted a series of screenshots on his blog.

Pigeon mail

The operating system represents the determination of North Korea to advance its own computer technology, based on its "Juche" self-reliance philosophy.

The Red Star operating system uses a popular Korean folk song as its start-up music and numbers years using a calendar which starts counting from the birth of state founder Kim Il-sung, making 2010 the 99th year.

It is Linux-based but is heavily influenced by Microsoft with versions of the software giant's Office programmes, including several familiar games.

It runs only in the Korean language and takes 15 minutes to install, reports said.

It has games, an e-mail system known as Pigeon and a Mozilla's Firefox internet browser - which has the North Korean government website as a home page.

The US government has banned the uploading and downloading of open source code to residents of a handful of countries on its sanctions list, which includes North Korea.

The STPI report also said that North Korea has launched a cyber-war unit that targets sites in South Korea and the US.

In July last year South Korea experienced a wave of cyber-attacks which attempted to paralyse a number of websites. US websites including the Pentagon and the White House were also targeted.

Reports suggested that the attacks might have originated in North Korea.​
 

Raydeen

Member
Lol at the screenshots. Nice to see the glorious leader making good use of Western software to underpin it.
 
This reminds me of the times when East Germany was world leader in manufacturing microchips. They not only produced the biggest microchips but also the heaviest.
 

aoi tsuki

Member
Looks like any other flavor of Linux with KDE and Korean support. i wonder if it'll have restricted codecs out of the box. :lol

The operating system represents the determination of North Korea to advance its own computer technology, based on its "Juche" self-reliance philosophy.
:lol
 

mre

Golden Domers are chickenshit!!
_47591351_003405011-1.jpg
 

otake

Doesn't know that "You" is used in both the singular and plural
E-phonk said:
desktop looks clean though

2d7ekd5.jpg


2evghtj.jpg


Lol, that's just KDE. Makes sense, I guess it's built on Linux and X11? :lol
 
Shanadeus said:
That did pique my interest a bit, wonder if it's less buggy than windows (probably is)
Well it is Linux based, the install time isn't too surprising, but I don't expect this to be any more special than any other distribution of linux out right now, unless you're some fan of heavy censorship.
 

otake

Doesn't know that "You" is used in both the singular and plural
LethaL ImpuLse said:
Well it is Linux based, the install time isn't too surprising, but I don't expect this to be any more special than any other distribution of linux out right now, unless you're some fan of heavy censorship.


It uses KDE. The file browser is Konqueror, it will be clunky, a bit slow and it the UI will not make sense most of the time. It will be just as bad as it's ever been, every linux distro has a kde package, the difference is version.
 
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