2013-03-17 00:04 jekhor has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 2013-03-17 00:12 pcercuei has quit [Ping timeout: 248 seconds] 2013-03-17 00:52 rz2k has quit [] 2013-03-17 00:59 Freemor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 01:10 wej has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 01:15 wej has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 02:13 methril has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 2013-03-17 02:14 Freemor has left #qi-hardware [#qi-hardware] 2013-03-17 03:04 gbraad has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 03:04 gbraad has quit [Changing host] 2013-03-17 03:04 gbraad has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 03:30 Calyp has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 2013-03-17 03:31 Calyp has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 04:04 DocScrutinizer05 has quit [Disconnected by services] 2013-03-17 04:04 DocScrutinizer06 has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 04:04 DocScrutinizer06 is now known as DocScrutinizer05 2013-03-17 04:13 kristianpaul has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 2013-03-17 04:13 kristianpaul has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 04:13 kristianpaul has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 04:46 megha has quit [Ping timeout: 246 seconds] 2013-03-17 05:01 megha has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 06:14 megha has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 2013-03-17 06:52 megha has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 06:57 megha has quit [Quit: WeeChat 0.4.0] 2013-03-17 07:05 jekhor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 08:35 gbraad has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 2013-03-17 08:36 jekhor has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 08:44 kilae has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 08:55 gbraad has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 08:55 gbraad has quit [Changing host] 2013-03-17 08:55 gbraad has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 09:08 viric: i just submitted a patch for "mark all as read" button. For now it's per feed. If it goes well, i'd like to have the same button on the main page to mark all items in all feeds as read :) 2013-03-17 09:22 apelete has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 09:29 mth has quit [] 2013-03-17 09:36 mth has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 09:41 C-Keen has left #qi-hardware [#qi-hardware] 2013-03-17 09:49 kyak: perfect! :) 2013-03-17 09:49 I'll check it 2013-03-17 10:04 unclouded has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 11:41 jekhor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 12:05 wolfspraul has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 12:07 viric: i submitted a little something to improve the visibility of feeds that have new items 2013-03-17 12:09 viric: for UI, what do you think about having something like "[12/53]" instead of (Unread: 12; Total: 53)? 2013-03-17 12:12 wolfspraul has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 12:16 wolfspraul has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 2013-03-17 12:23 wolfspraul has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 12:34 rz2k has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 12:48 wolfspraul has quit [Quit: leaving] 2013-03-17 12:49 LunaVorax has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 2013-03-17 13:04 jekhor has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 2013-03-17 13:11 kilae has quit [Ping timeout: 246 seconds] 2013-03-17 13:30 wolfspraul has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 13:33 sb0 has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 13:39 wolfspraul, I don't expect anything from hackable devices anymore... company is a mess, key people left, etc. - actually I should remove the link from milkymist.org, which is now 404 and there isn't M1 on their website anymore... 2013-03-17 13:42 dlan^ has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 13:45 wolfspraul, btw are you getting wolfgang@sharism.cc emails, even when the site is down? 2013-03-17 13:46 sb0 has quit [Quit: Leaving] 2013-03-17 13:49 lekernel has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 13:49 yes, I should get them 2013-03-17 13:49 ok, I see about h:d. well then :-) 2013-03-17 13:50 so I direct him to sharism.cc? 2013-03-17 13:50 yes please 2013-03-17 13:50 ok, thanks! 2013-03-17 13:50 btw I just ordered a papilio pro to try out fpgatools 2013-03-17 13:50 nice 2013-03-17 13:51 I haven't done any commits in 2-3 weeks I think, urgh... but that is encouraging so I shall continue 2013-03-17 13:51 I need to finish some urgent paperwork first though 2013-03-17 13:51 once that is settled there is more time for fpgatools again 2013-03-17 13:52 the next item on the todo list was block-ram 2013-03-17 13:52 pcercuei has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 14:06 kyak: fine 2013-03-17 14:06 kyak: I'm traveling these days; I hope at the evening take a look 2013-03-17 14:19 viric: sure, fine 2013-03-17 14:34 dlan^ has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 2013-03-17 14:52 LunaVorax has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 15:08 gbraad has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 2013-03-17 15:37 rz2k has quit [] 2013-03-17 15:43 viric: heh, some of my feeds easily get >300 items per day. You create a separate file for each item - multiply it by two for a separate file for the "read" status. This can get pretty insane soon 2013-03-17 15:43 sqlite? 2013-03-17 15:44 i get 600 items per day in average, maxing to 900 (according to google reader statistics) 2013-03-17 15:44 LunaVorax has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 2013-03-17 15:45 i don't like the fact that my hard drive would get 1000+ new files every day 2013-03-17 15:50 what's wrong with the files? 2013-03-17 15:50 I didn't want to implement a sync protocol 2013-03-17 15:50 at least ext3 is very slow at removing files 2013-03-17 15:50 that's the point in using files: unison 2013-03-17 15:52 I'm not sure how to handle 1000+ rss posts every day 2013-03-17 15:58 for example, by using a database 2013-03-17 15:58 maybe one per feed 2013-03-17 15:58 but two files per one post? that's too fat... 2013-03-17 16:01 Implementing a database now would be too destructive. But at least you could rename the same file to *.read. 2013-03-17 16:02 thus having two times fewer files 2013-03-17 16:02 i'm starting to realize how different our use cases are :) 2013-03-17 16:05 lekernel has quit [Quit: Leaving] 2013-03-17 16:06 lekernel has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 16:09 rz2k has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 16:40 jekhor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 17:00 http://unvrso.ec/0004USK First Ecuadorian satellites, coming to your neighborhood orbit next May :) 2013-03-17 17:07 LunaVorax has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 17:25 jekhor has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 2013-03-17 17:28 pcercuei has quit [Quit: Bye] 2013-03-17 18:17 mwcampbell has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 18:17 Pardon the newbie question, but what input method(s) does the Ben NanoNote have? 2013-03-17 18:24 Also, what are the dimensions and weight? 2013-03-17 18:24 and typical battery life 2013-03-17 18:24 the web page (at least the English one) is a little short on info 2013-03-17 18:26 never mind, found more info 2013-03-17 18:32 Is the Ben NanoNote still being manufactured? 2013-03-17 18:36 it can have whatever input methods you configure it to have. You can read here http://en.qi-hardware.com/wiki/I18n about what's already included in the default software 2013-03-17 18:38 basically, it's russian input in linux console and qt4 applications, and a bunch of "weird" input methods supported by kinyin 2013-03-17 18:39 mwcampbell: well, it's still being sold 2013-03-17 18:40 I'm sorry, I was unclear. I meant to ask what input devices. Looks like it has a small ekyboard. 2013-03-17 18:41 is full-size keyboard via ssh considered an inputs device? :) 2013-03-17 18:43 I'm guessing that the keys on the built-in keyboard are quite small. 2013-03-17 18:43 Here's a crazy hardware hacking idea. I wonder if an 8-dot braille keyboard would be more efficient on a device as small as the NanoNote 2013-03-17 18:43 8-key, I mean 2013-03-17 18:44 of course, the user of such a device would need to know how to enter braille, though not how to read it 2013-03-17 18:44 the keys are bigger than those on my cell phone 2013-03-17 18:44 ah, OK 2013-03-17 18:45 you don't get to type with 10 fingers of course 2013-03-17 18:46 two thumb typing 2013-03-17 18:48 the front picture shows "Ben on hand". Is it enough to get an idea about the keyboard size? 2013-03-17 18:49 yes 2013-03-17 18:50 From the picture, it looks like the Ben has a graphical display, but I haven't yet found any info about the GPU. 2013-03-17 18:51 Is it just a frame buffer? 2013-03-17 18:51 it's just a frame buffer 2013-03-17 18:51 no hw acceleration 2013-03-17 18:52 although the cpu has some simd instructions 2013-03-17 18:55 I read that the hardware design is copyleft. Does this include the CPU itself? 2013-03-17 18:57 no 2013-03-17 18:57 only the pcb and case 2013-03-17 18:58 Then I wonder why Qi Hardware chose a MIPS-compatible processor over a more powerful ARM-based one. 2013-03-17 18:58 The Raspberry Pi has a more powerful processor and more RAM and is cheap. 2013-03-17 18:58 I'm not criticizing; I'm just curious. 2013-03-17 18:59 the nanonote is much older than the rpi 2013-03-17 18:59 mwcampbell: raspberry pi is mainly cheap due to broadcom's deal 2013-03-17 19:00 well, you won't be surprised that broadcom would provide cheap processors to itself. 2013-03-17 19:03 So I'm trying to decide if the NanoNote still occupies a useful niche, and whether I should buy one. If one looks only atht epsecs, it's quite underpowered for its price ($149 on Sharism). 2013-03-17 19:04 But I can see the value in a small device with a battery, a screen, a keyboard, USB, and audio, that's designed to run free software. 2013-03-17 19:05 kyak: :) I'm not sure unison can handle renames 2013-03-17 19:05 but I use to think that filesystems are good databases. 2013-03-17 19:06 viric: but they don't (commonly) have transactions. 2013-03-17 19:06 NTFS has them 2013-03-17 19:06 they have some atomic operations. 2013-03-17 19:06 ACID 2013-03-17 19:06 ? 2013-03-17 19:07 a database is made by Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability 2013-03-17 19:07 jekhor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 19:07 journalling filesystems provide C and D 2013-03-17 19:07 and, sometimes, A 2013-03-17 19:08 sometimes databases are in files in filesystems 2013-03-17 19:09 whitequark: why not I? 2013-03-17 19:09 larsc: example of contrary? 2013-03-17 19:10 viric: you said that filesystems are good databases ;) 2013-03-17 19:10 for my broad understanding of 'databases' :) 2013-03-17 19:10 well, some people think of MongoDB as of a database. so maybe filesystems are just bad databases. 2013-03-17 19:11 whitequark: well it gets problematic I guess if two transactions work on the same set of files 2013-03-17 19:11 larsc: that is the point of isolation. 2013-03-17 19:12 this also gets in the way of building real software. 2013-03-17 19:12 symlink attacks, etc 2013-03-17 19:12 paul_boddie has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 19:14 mwcampbell: See http://lists.en.qi-hardware.com/pipermail/discussion/2011-September/008960.html for some background on the Ben hardware. 2013-03-17 19:14 paul_boddie: thanks 2013-03-17 19:15 paul_boddie: re shedskin. yes. there is no practical value in building a general dynamic-to-static compiler for dynamic languages without homomorphic data storage structures. 2013-03-17 19:15 (dynamically-typed-to-statically-typed) 2013-03-17 19:16 on the contrary, I'm building a compiler for static language which tries to look like a dynamic language with some interesting tricks 2013-03-17 19:16 like transparent generalization/specialization of parametric types and ad-hoc typeclasses (aka duck typing in static languages). 2013-03-17 19:17 mwcampbell: As far as the input devices are concerned, it's really only the keyboard. There's no pointing device. 2013-03-17 19:18 mwcampbell: Longer answer: if you can find a USB Host device to plug into the USB port (or maybe some kind of SDIO device to plug into the microSD port) that can control the Ben, and then get drivers written for those devices, then that might be a solution. 2013-03-17 19:19 whitequark: Well, you mentioned Starkiller, so I had to point out Shedskin because it is pretty much what Starkiller was advertised to be. Of course, Starkiller was never released publicly. 2013-03-17 19:19 I don't need a pointing device; just wanted to know more before I buy. 2013-03-17 19:20 paul_boddie: wasn't it? I have seen a paper. 2013-03-17 19:20 What concerns me more is that I haven't seen any news newer than 2010 on the English Qi Hardware home page. Has Qi Hardware already given up on the NanoNote? 2013-03-17 19:22 As someone who bought a Ben only last year, knowing that the average smartphone is more powerful (faster CPU, more RAM, better screen, more convenient connectivity, built-in sensors...), my motivation was to get an open device that encourages experimentation. Thus, I've been playing around with the 8:10 port and Arduino-level electronics. 2013-03-17 19:23 whitequark: I met the author at a conference in 2005 which was already a year or more after he presented it, and although he seemed like a nice and helpful guy, he seemed a bit jaded with answering questions about it and seemed to have "moved on" from it. 2013-03-17 19:23 paul_boddie: um, yes? it was a research project after all. 2013-03-17 19:23 he got his ph.d or whatever, that was the whole point 2013-03-17 19:24 whitequark: I got the impression that the code was rather "proof of concept" and there were probably lots of areas that needed filling in, and my impression was that he wasn't interested in doing that any more. 2013-03-17 19:24 most of academic work is like that 2013-03-17 19:24 he didn't really need the result of his work. he needed a degree ;) 2013-03-17 19:25 I also don't think it helped that every time someone does a project like that, lots of people in the Python community whine about it not supporting every last stupid feature introduced into Python since 2000. 2013-03-17 19:25 nice guy... I don't think so, actually. his work is heavily based on Ole Agesen's thesis--he didn't really improve it much, although he did several trivial things--and yet there was a lot of very disrespectful statements about said Ole Agesen and his work in his thesis. 2013-03-17 19:25 I think it's the only paper I have ever read written in such a style. 2013-03-17 19:26 So, any motivation to make a usable solution just wasn't there, and so he called it a day and moved on, I guess. It's also possible that MIT messed him around with the copyright, but I wouldn't know. 2013-03-17 19:26 paul_boddie: it isn't really possible to make a 'usable' solution, or what the Python community would deem as one, for the problem of compiling generic Python code to C++ 2013-03-17 19:26 Well, I meant that he was fairly reasonable in person, but I do remember that his presentations were a bit provocative. Maybe he backed away from the whole thing after realising he couldn't deliver what he had promised. 2013-03-17 19:28 * whitequark has also observed that the thesis was likely written with a thesaurus in the other hand. It wouldn't otherwise explain pervasive--several per page--and unnecessary use of words I don't know. 2013-03-17 19:30 Shedskin, on the other hand, does a decent job of what it claims to do, and I think that the thesis connected to it is probably more informative. If I remember correctly, it builds on (or references) work by a guy called John Plevyak. 2013-03-17 19:31 John Plevyak, Andrew A. Chien: Precise Concrete Type Inference for Object-Oriented Languages. OOPSLA 1994: 324-340 ? 2013-03-17 19:33 oh, yeah, I have read it 2013-03-17 19:33 Not sure. I didn't actually read any of the papers. ;-) But I did discuss some of this with the author of Shedskin because I was also looking at static analysis. 2013-03-17 19:33 I have independently rediscovered most of the results in it, and using them heavily in my work 2013-03-17 19:33 though his Function Splitting technique, as I understand it, is less efficient than CPA 2013-03-17 19:34 Ole Agesen's thesis was written later than Plevyak's article. 2013-03-17 19:34 mwcampbell: We've been discussing the situation with the NanoNote on and off on the qi-hardware discussion mailing list, but I'm not sure that there's any momentum as far as the hardware roadmap is concerned. 2013-03-17 19:34 what I don't believe in his work at all is Container Splitting 2013-03-17 19:35 it only works as expected for trivial inputs. 2013-03-17 19:35 whitequark: I think Plevyak had a project on SourceForge to apply his more recent work to Python, perhaps, but I don't think it went anywhere. 2013-03-17 19:36 * whitequark shrugs 2013-03-17 19:36 I'll explain 2013-03-17 19:36 there are two problems with trying to infer the type of the container 2013-03-17 19:37 first, it introduces "action at the distance". a type inferencer can pass a type through a very long chain of functions, for example 2013-03-17 19:37 but so far (when you only infer types of functions), it is not much of a practical problem as you can pinpoint the problematic part and trace (manually) where the type came from 2013-03-17 19:38 however, if you infer types of the container, you cannot. it was inferred at some point in the past and you don't really know which. 2013-03-17 19:38 second, it has a lot of edge cases like tuple keys where different types parts of the tuple type get inferred from different parts in the problem 2013-03-17 19:39 whitequark: Couldn't the inferencer be instrumented to tell you how it inferred the type? 2013-03-17 19:39 mwcampbell: it could, however, these traces are mostly unreadable 2013-03-17 19:39 i.e. Haskell's error messages are often hard to parse. 2013-03-17 19:40 the third and most important problem is that Python promises you heteromorphic containers 2013-03-17 19:40 and you won't get any when you're using such a compiler 2013-03-17 19:40 unless you use union types, that is, which come with their own set of problems 2013-03-17 19:41 most important of which is the danger of inferring a correct, but useless, union type of any existing type in the problem, for every expression in your program. 2013-03-17 19:41 That last part makes sense to me. 2013-03-17 19:41 mwcampbell: that is why there can not be a compiler of generic python code. 2013-03-17 19:41 It seems to me that the most sensible way to get monomorphic containers in a language like Python would be to add type annotations of some kind. 2013-03-17 19:42 Either in the language, like in Python 3, or in docstrings 2013-03-17 19:42 mwcampbell: you might like http://whitequark.org/blog/2012/12/06/a-language-for-embedded-developers/ 2013-03-17 19:42 A few years back, when I was first talking to the Shedskin author about this, I was experiencing some difficulties with a solution I was developing, and he then introduced me to the notion of data polymorphism which conveniently put a name on a problem I was having trying to specify every last aspect of any given program. 2013-03-17 19:42 paul_boddie: an observation which might help you: 2013-03-17 19:43 in object-oriented dynamically typed systems data polymorphism can almost completely be divided into two categories: 2013-03-17 19:43 I think the whole experience demonstrated why in languages like OCaml, you end up having to declare your structures' types even though the language supports type inference. 2013-03-17 19:43 1) subtyping polymorphism, which we fortunately know how to compile (C++ vtables) 2013-03-17 19:43 whitequark: I've been thinking lately about subsetting or otherwise adapting dynamic languages for ahead-of-time compilation. I never thought my thoughts on that would dovetail with a discussion on this channel. :) 2013-03-17 19:44 2) interface polymorphism, which we also know how to compile, more or less 2013-03-17 19:45 it gets more compilcated when interface polymorphism appears in the form of duck typing and/or there is a need to be able to present a stable ABI 2013-03-17 19:45 but I think I've solved that 2013-03-17 19:45 mwcampbell: there is a channel ##foundry and also a mailing list. 2013-03-17 19:45 (the name of my compiler.) 2013-03-17 19:46 it can infer types for, and compile fib: https://gist.github.com/whitequark/2d1d44ed5d97ddc9c933 2013-03-17 19:46 My interests have probably moved fairly generally in the direction of interfaces, or at least have given me an appreciation for them and why they exist. 2013-03-17 19:50 Anyway, I'm sure we'll hear more about this later. Have to go. 2013-03-17 19:50 paul_boddie has left #qi-hardware ["Kopete 0.10 : http://kopete.kde.org"] 2013-03-17 19:51 unclouded has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 20:07 If there were a NanoNote-like device based on the completely unencumbered LM32 architecture, I'd buy it now 2013-03-17 20:10 In the meantime I guess I can show Qi Hardware my interest in the concept of a completely free pocket computer by buying the Ben and finding something useful to do with it 2013-03-17 20:18 The Ben has no moving parts (e.g. fans), correct? 2013-03-17 20:26 yea 2013-03-17 20:26 Well, that eliminates one possible cause of buyer's remorse. :) 2013-03-17 20:27 (I don't like noisy fans) 2013-03-17 20:32 kuribas has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 20:40 Have any other operating system kernels been ported to the Ben? Or any toolchains for writing applications that run on the bare metal? 2013-03-17 20:40 It seems to me that a general-purpose OS with preemptive multitasking, like GNU/Linux, is overkill for a relatively underpowered device like the Ben 2013-03-17 20:42 I used to hack in assembler on an old Apple IIGS, even learning how to directly manipulate the graphica framebuffer and some other hardware. Maybe a completely open device like the Ben will inspire me to do that kind of hacking again 2013-03-17 20:43 doesn't seem that way to me. doesn't Linux still run on a 10 MHz 386 with 2 MB of RAM? 2013-03-17 20:43 Does it? I don't actually know. 2013-03-17 20:45 I just powered up my Ben. it's using 13MB after I stopped mpd, although it's seems that I've got ntp running on there too 2013-03-17 20:45 as for the CPU power, it plays transcoded video faultlessly, which is pretty impressive 2013-03-17 20:45 You're using it as a portable music player? 2013-03-17 20:46 yes, music and video player for my little one 2013-03-17 20:46 ah, nice 2013-03-17 20:46 ah, it's running dropbear ( SSH) too, hence the high RAM usage 2013-03-17 20:46 Do you know how long the battery lasts whe ndoing continuous audio playback with the screen turned off? 2013-03-17 20:47 no idea. the only time I've ever run the battery out is when I forget to turn it off. I think 10h might be right 2013-03-17 20:47 kuribas has quit [Quit: ERC Version 5.3 (IRC client for Emacs)] 2013-03-17 20:47 It doesn't have a built-in speaker does it? 2013-03-17 20:48 (I just ordered my Ben) 2013-03-17 20:48 and if you want to play with graphics next to the metal, /dev/fb0 is waiting for you 2013-03-17 20:48 yes, mono 2013-03-17 20:48 oh, nice 2013-03-17 20:48 although SDL will probably give you an easier ride for using the framebuffer 2013-03-17 20:48 I might use it for listening to audio books then 2013-03-17 20:49 I mean, it would be an expensive audio player if that was all I planned to do with it 2013-03-17 20:49 it's a cute little device. I only started appreciating how good the keyboard is after using a few physical phone keyboards 2013-03-17 20:50 Good to know it's well built. 2013-03-17 20:50 be advised of the strange arrangement of pixels in the LCD though. you'll never notice when playing video but small fonts can look a bit fuzzy 2013-03-17 20:51 Because I'm impatient, can you please find out if it runs espeak (a speech synthesizer) fast enough for real-time text-to-speech? 2013-03-17 20:51 I'd never built OpenWrt from scratch before the Ben. I'd recommend it. It's easier than you might think and empowering 2013-03-17 20:53 I wouldn't have a clue, although if an Amiga 500 can do it then then Ben ought to be able to 2013-03-17 20:53 I'll wait until I get mine then 2013-03-17 20:55 it can also run a C64 emulator if you're so inclined, although it doesn't cope well with games that require lots of per-pixel scrolling 2013-03-17 20:55 An Apple II emulator would be more to my liking. 2013-03-17 20:56 and of course you should only run games that you already have a license to ( and let's face it - why would you want to run any others since it's for nostalgia anyway) 2013-03-17 20:56 perhaps you could port an Apple II emulator if one is not already packaged? 2013-03-17 20:57 I don't think I want one that bad. 2013-03-17 20:58 I do have a couple of possible projects in mind 2013-03-17 20:58 it might not even be much work if the emulator uses SDL 2013-03-17 20:59 I'm pretty sure I've seen one that does 2013-03-17 21:00 Assuming espeak works, my first project will be a talking audio player and text file reader. 2013-03-17 21:03 unclouded: (linux) tried that a few years ago with 8MB 386 2013-03-17 21:03 didn't run but could also be dead hardware 2013-03-17 21:03 tried also 486 with 24MB 2013-03-17 21:03 kyak: ok all applied :) 2013-03-17 21:03 kyak: thank you for the patience 2013-03-17 21:03 it won't detect the IDE drive 2013-03-17 21:06 shame. I wonder why. I would have thought that bog-standard access to the AT task file would have been left in Linux 2013-03-17 21:08 AT task file?.. 2013-03-17 21:08 I've no idea what you're talking about 2013-03-17 21:08 though I don't really want to know 2013-03-17 21:10 Can anyone here tell me what I need to buy to add WiFi to the Ben? It looks like it can be done via an SDIO card 2013-03-17 21:10 mwcampbell: to my knowledge, there is no way to. 2013-03-17 21:13 I'm glad I just bought my Ben. I can't speak for other software developers, but I think I've been spoiled by the sheer power of PC hardware. It will be interesting to see what useful applications I can develop for the Ben. 2013-03-17 21:51 paul_boddie has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 21:52 mwcampbell: http://en.qi-hardware.com/wiki/Ben_NanoNote_Wi-Fi 2013-03-17 21:54 I also saw that the legendary Xiangfu had a mobile wireless router running a custom OpenWrt build and providing "Ethernet over USB" to the Ben. 2013-03-17 22:04 well.. you can use such a small wifi router providing ip via usb. sure. 2013-03-17 22:05 something along the lines of http://wiki.openwrt.org/toh/tp-link/tl-mr3020 2013-03-17 22:06 basic openwrt router, atheros soc, usb-host port. then run cdc-ethernet via that usb link to the ben 2013-03-17 22:07 Yes, that's what I meant. 2013-03-17 22:12 paul_boddie has left #qi-hardware ["Kopete 0.10 : http://kopete.kde.org"] 2013-03-17 22:27 jekhor has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 22:29 papilio pro, good! finally a new toy in the familly =) 2013-03-17 22:40 jekhor has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 22:44 hmm werner still offline.. 2013-03-17 22:52 lekernel has quit [Quit: Leaving] 2013-03-17 23:03 wolfspraul has quit [Ping timeout: 248 seconds] 2013-03-17 23:13 apelete has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 2013-03-17 23:17 pcercuei has joined #qi-hardware 2013-03-17 23:34 pcercuei has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds]