On 22/02/2017 14:11, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote:
crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 1:33 PM, Michael Howard mike@dewberryfields.co.uk wrote:
On 21/02/2017 23:19, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote:
On Tue, Feb 21, 2017 at 9:00 PM, Paul Boddie paul@boddie.org.uk wrote:
On Tuesday 21. February 2017 21.16.54 Eric Duhamel wrote:
On February 21, 2017 3:52:12 AM PST, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
lkcl@lkcl.net wrote:
btw i didn't hear from anyone about the offer to send out pre-production cards.
I'm tempted but I have nothing to bring to the Linux effort; zero experience hacking or installing the kernel and not much time to learn.
I'm probably not the kind of person to bring much to the table, either, but what kind of equipment would one need to actually attempt anything with such a card at this point?
a standard 12v dc power supply with a 5.5mm pin-positive jack, usb-otg and micro hdmi cables, and a vga monitor.
the main thing i need from people before i send them $300 to $350 worth of equipment is a 100% committment that they'll be doing active development of some kind which helps the other backers directly or indirectly, or helps further the goals of the eoma68 project.
u-boot development, kernel development, os preparation, packaging, upstreaming - anything like that.
l.
I'd be happy to put work into os prep, packaging (desktop environment - I package up Trininty for my ARM devices here) and anything else that might be helpful. I can't add my name to the list, I'm not registered.
added. i *really* like trinity desktop as it's amazingly lightweight and highly functional. i may actually put it as the default instead of xfce.
i have it installed and tested on one of the microsd cards, it works really well: if you could test it out to make sure it's functional that would be _really_ handy.
btw if you've not got a server where you can upload packages as a repo i'm sure one can be found somewhere.
I have server capability to host packages.
I'm a big fan of trinity too, behaves really well on the ARM devices I've used.