These are websites that have not yet been parsed for content to add to the wiki. They need to be parsed!
Many different old computers, bits of hardware, and obscure OSes here.
Various feature and flip phones running KaiOS. Some phones are easier to hack than others, and a few are unhackable.
Another github wiki of various interesting pieces of software that may belong here.
What Linuxgizmos was before March of 2012. Heavy documentation of an absolute device cornucopia, with many EOPs possible or at least theoretical.
One of the most comprehensive documentations of devices that run Linux. Basically an endless mine of potential devices that may have EOPs.
Invaluable piece of documentation from a kernel maintainer, demonstrating a bunch of old and obscene architectures barely supported by the Linux kernel. Some have recently been depreciated in the 5.10 LTS, while some are barely hanging on by a thread. Absolutely worth parsing.
A bunch of relatively obscure 32 bit devices that Linux supports in some capacity, including certain devices that still exist in the modern day, but simply as 64 bit (eg. ChromeOS)
Often times, interesting EOPs and exploits can be found here. Good place to search and parse for things, at times.
This is a large array of little devices that support Linux in some capacity. Some are natively supporting Linux, while some are hacked to support it. Worth parsing.
https://old.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/4biamr/a_list_of_handheldpocket_linux_computers/
A serious amount of Linux embedded devices, with a primary focus on networking hardware. However, there are some other device categories included also. Furthermore, the website serves as a reference for device specifications, hardware capabilities, OS ran, and possibilities of installing various flavors of WRT (community verified).
Very similar to TechInfoDepot. Tons of Linux embedded devices, primarily networking hardware but with occasional forays into other categories. It’s a good reference tool also.
Look into this more. Large variety of boards, PDAs, tablets, and other such devices which support this port of Linux+GUI libraries.
A huge assortment of computer architectures known to support the Linux kernel. Absolutely invaluable, and practically begs parsing, as it in essence demonstrates every possible CPU/CPU variant that runs Linux in some capacity, including homebrew projects.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Linux-supported_computer_architectures
This is very similar to itrunsunix in scope and pre-existing inclusion.
While not everything offered here is new to EOP, some of the selections are worthy of inclusion.
Many Unix-related OSes documented on a little GitHub page.
A highly comprehensive archive of Operating System betas, with it’s information spanning over several decades.
If the OS can run emacs, it has a web browser.
There’s many MP3 players supported here, supporting various levels of features at varying levels of stability.
https://www.rockbox.org/ https://www.rockbox.org/wiki/TargetStatus https://www.rockbox.org/wiki/PluginChip8 supports CHIP-8!
Smartwatches supported by the Linux-based AsteroidOS distribution.
Devices supported by the Maemo Leste mobile Linux distribution.
A website which compiles smartphones, smart watches, etc. that are supported by one of the various “mobile” Linux distributions.
Sailfish OS-based OS with a large assortment of phones and tablets supported.
A very comprehensive database for mobile phones, serving primarily as a reference of specifications and devices that exist. However, it also documents information about the operating system, plus other EOP-related tidbits.
Phones, tablets, and iPod touch style devices which all feature a native Linux install.
Various phones and tablets with an Ubuntu Touch port, ranked by progress and refinement.
A few phones and devices supported by the WebOS distribution, plus some unofficial ports.
Similar to crappygameswiki, except it’s for the good things and good parts of things.
A bunch of console and revision info might be available here. Plus, it’s an entertaining site.
The consoles and implementations on offer here may add more depth to EOP Video Games.
https://emulation.gametechwiki.com/index.php/Strange_and_Forgotten_Console_emulators
Some secrets held in these games may be the key to cracking their respective consoles to improved EOP style hacking.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_commercial_video_games_with_available_source_code