Flat Panel Linux Box for $99?
A reader writes "Found an interesting site which describes a hack to modify the $99 Iopener internet appliance to be able to run Linux. Flat panel LCD display, small footprint, 56K (non-win)modem. No ethernet, but a built-in parallel port (for PLIP?). Just add 2.5" HD. The perfect X terminal! "
But will it run text mode quake?
Chaos, Mayhem, and Destruction: Not
According to the page, it's 800x600x16.
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Nicotine free Amish .sig.
Oh C'mon people, give him credit, he did a nice job so stop understating the hack. sure it was easy, but that IS the beauty of it. just because it doesn't take a rocket scientist to do it, doesn't mean the you rocket scientists out there should say it's a piece of crap!
after all, it's the creativity and inventive that counts.
There are two kinds of people in the world: Those with good memory.
So... install *BSD. Or OS/2. Or Windows. If you noted, there's nothing saying this only works for Linux.. you could even install x86 Solaris if you were so inclined. :> And yeah, so it might be just putting a hard drive on the motherboard as someone else mentioned, but it still took this person(s) time to figure out that the plug was mirrored I'm sure. It's still a hack (and one that I might be looking in to soon)
Three dits, four dits, two dits, dah!
Radio, radio, rah rah rah!
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online services? The article mentions that it is a custom dial-up but makes no mention if it's the hardware that's been customized or if it's simply that they don't support other connections in the software. I suppose for the price I can assume it software-braindead but if it's not a winmodem and it IS on COM1..
I would question the need for Linux on a device that is limited to 640x480 (no - it doesn't make sense to put Linux on everything, just most everything) not to mention just how useful it would be in everyday life in as limited a manner as it currently exists. Though- on the positive side I can see application where this would be very useful. At $99 bucks it would be the cheapest "smart-typewriter" ever and the added advantage of being able to do not only typing but spreadsheet work and presentations might make it a very useful tool for some administrative staff...
I purchased one of these for my wife's grandmother. Nice easy to use platform, does e-mail well and surfs. Javascript, no java, no PNG. Does fine on slashdot, CNN, etc...
:-)
Its a slick little box as is. The pointing device is not suitable for arthritic fingers, but they can take an PS/2 pointer as well.
The LCD is VERY sensitive to viewing angle, but if you only have one head on your neck that shouldn't be too bad. Its also very susceptible to ducking. Moving items vanish.
Their original plan was to sell them for $400 with a $5/mo ISP service. That didn't fly so they flipped to $200 and a $20/mo ISP at their xmas time introduction.
Now at $99 for a linux terminal I'm really excited. I feel a bit bad, since they are probably losing money at $99 and won't be making it up on the ISP service. Not bad enough to refrain from buying a couple though.
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Geez man, look at the site you at, Slashdot, News for Nerds! Of all those posts where people complain about non-nerd news this is one piece of news that is nerdy! This is really interesting stuff. If you're getting tired of linux maybe you shouldn't come to slashdot, interesting thought...
Billy Transue
bill-transue@NOcoolmailSPAM.net
Open Source, Open Standards, Open Minds
I know that alot of people here think the EULAs are junk, but in reality some of them are legitimate. Although I think this is very cool, isn't this a blatant misuse of their device. I assume that there is somewhere where they say you can't disassemble them, and in this case, where they are selling them at a loss, they have a legitimate reason to request this.
On a second note, what are the terms of their contract. Assuming you are buying the product, and not just on an indefinate lease, how long are you required to use their internet service before terminating the contract?
I just called their customer service line. The operator was a bit confused when I asked her if I could order the appliance without the ISP service, but assured me that I could cancel it at any time. So, you don't need to subscribe to their service. Woohoo!
"We apologize for the inconvenience."
There is an ethernet card that is supported by Linux that attaches to a parallel port.   It's pretty steep in price (around US$100+) though.   One of my buddies was considering buying it since his old XIRCOM parallel port wasn't supported.
Can't think of the name of it off hand but will look it up in a hurry unless someone already knows it and posts...
-- Win2k: "It's not so much that it's only 65,000 bugs, it's just that they stopped at 65,535 to prevent an overflow."
Prolific manufactures a range of USB chips, including the PL2301 and PL2302 devices that allow two USB host controllers to be linked, providing a simple point to point link at up to 5Mbps. This driver supports both PL2301 andPL2302 chips.
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I love PC's, and something like this would really be the perfect complement. Why settle for an information appliance hard coded to do one particular thing, when you can a bunch of sleek little x-terminals that can do anything a stand-alone appliance does?
I can think of plenty of uses for something like this around the house, in a business setting, the uses multiply.
So if anyone with the means is listening, build them! The market for appliances of this type will fail until they're cheap enough ($200 would be my price point, can I reiterate that enough?), and as long as they're tied to proprietary systems. Who else would buy a generic, sleek, flat paneled x-term for $200?
Ship it to me, then drive down and get it, presuming you live in Ottawa, Montreal, or anywhere in-between.
-russ
Don't piss off The Angry Economist
...they're IPO'ing next week?
I was on the point of buying one of these, but while I was thinking about it and taking a shower I came up with a progression in mind...
Now unless you're violating a license agreement by not using their internet service you aren't doing anything illegal by turning this machine into a Linux box. Sure, it seems very stupid to me that the company would sell these machines at what can only be a loss assuming they would make up their loss with the internet service -- but that's not the point here.
Whether or not the people buying this machine are doing anything wrong, think of the bad publicity this thing could cause, not to mention the potential moral guilt of destroying a dumb company. It would be different if this company were selling millions of units and only a small handfull of people hacked it and installed Linux, but Slashdot is a big site now, and our "Slashdot Effect" can do more than just take down a small web server.
Something to think about anyhow...
I'm wondering if the internal modem is a serial device working through a UART on the board, or if it is on an ISA(possibly PCI) bus, like a normal internal modem.
If the later is the case, it should only be a matter of a little solder work to get a normal ethernet NIC in there.
All this talk of a $99 Linux box puzzles me. I have yet to figure out how such a thing costs $99. If you purchase the unit for $99 and it require mods... will it not be more? Maybe all of you out there have a few extra 2.5" HDs in the scrap parts box... I don't... I am afraid that will be a few extra dollars... you can probably pick a small one up for $75 - $100... by the time you start adding things up (include your time)... you could have purchased a 400 mhz eMachine.
Small footprint... yes... flat panel...yes... $99... no.
I think this thing is awesome... I am going to track one down this weekend... I want to perform the mods... but I'm not fooling myself... this thing is not $99 when all is said and done... I figure to do it right, $350 - $400 to get it up on a network.
Side note: If someone can find a way to retro-fit this thing into a notebook case for under $400... let me know... make this thing portable and keep the modem and I am a happy Linux camper.
Just my $.02
"Perhaps most amazingly, votaries of 'diversity' insist on absolute conformity." -- Tony Snow
Yamaha YMF715 Stereo Speakers Doesn't say anything about the sound chip, though? Is it any good [or upgradable?]. I don't think that PLIP could get the bandwidth, but with USB ethernet, I could also plug this into my home network to play MP3's stored on my server!!
...and stop complaining. Putting linux on everything (including Palm Pilots) is just a geek game. Welcome to Slashdot.
If it wasn't for people with this hackish spirit, we may never have had PC's in the first place. Do you have any idea how useless early systems like the Altair were? All you had was switches and lights, but hackers went nuts over them. Over time, they improved them, and now we have our modern PC's.
I think its an interesting post. The hack wasn't very technical, but it is kind of cute.
--Lenny
FreeBSD 4.0 has support for a USB-10BT adapter.
An IDE CD-ROM is a lot cheaper and easier to work with than a 2.5" hard disk. If the BIOS supports the El-Torito Bootable CDRom stuff, that's another way to get your favorite linux distro on it -- especially if you can get the 16M flash to work as well. Nifty!!!
I assume the QNX/Software comes on the 16MB flash chips, there is no disk to nuke. This page doesn't say anything about needing to re-flash, so when you decide you're done with it, you can just yank the HD and give it to a family member to use as it was originally intended.
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"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
The page says that you have to install a 2.5" hard drive unless you can find a way to use the 16mb flash. The thing is, it seems like you could use the flash. Anyone have any pointers here?
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I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
This thing uses a Yamaha YMF715 audio chip. As far as I know, it is not supported under Linux.
I am running Debian 2.2 and have seen no way to get the audio working.
EC
EverCode
the screen is the new sharp dualscan 800x600 16bpp you can fdisk and format the internal flash disk it will boot off the flash disk if there is no hard drive plugged in.. and you can replace the kb it just uses a ps2 plug thats how you get into setup ctl+alt+esc ! i use a dlink de620 par either net adapter and it works well.. the cpu does about 80 bogomips i swaped the winchip whith a itel 200 pre mmx 3.4v core and bogomips when about 3x i will update the page and fix the forum tonight thanks for the ./ codeman
My plan is to hack one into a wireless LCD screen Linux system for less than $200. I believe this can be done, but I will need some help. Here is the known specs:
Will anyone who has seen the actual board, or who knows anything about it, please comment on my idea? If anyone can identify the connection of the modem daughterboard to the motherboard, it's even better. Some people suggested that it was PCMCIA, in this case, does anyone know which PCMCIA controller is used?
If this can be done, and we have access to the ISA bus or a PCMCIA connector on the i-opener, possibilities are endless. The i-opener has barely enough space inside to house a small ISA card with the metal bracket removed. With an ISA Ethernet board with a boot ROM, you can build a diskless X terminal; or you can try adding a wireless LAN card like me.
If I can pull this off, I will post it as an article on my Bluetooth Central to share.
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BluetoothCentral.com
A site for everything Bluetooth. Coming soon.
Zigbee Central: A Zigbee weblog
Just get an USB-Ethernet adapter. They will probably cost more than the machine though ...
I don't think X would easily fit in 16Meg. Now, you could just NFS mount /usr and get rolling ... that's cool indeed!
I just checked out their website. All three locations nearest me and their shipping location are out of stock. Not sure what to make of this, but I doubt they'd respond this quickly for NetAppliance.
in the bay area, at least ;-(
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"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Of course, you could just use QNX, the os the iopener is _actually_ using. -William Bull bbull@qnx.com
For 99 bucks
Those who dare open the box
Run Unix for cheap.
I've been looking for some kinda cheap LCD xterm like this. I'm thinking about picking one of these up and moding it. Hmm, extra RAM for the Powerbook or an i-opener...such decsions. Some people have asked in Netpliance is going to go out of business because they'll sell a bunch of boxes without selling the internet service that comes with them. I highly doubt it, scores more people will buy the i-opener to use in its standard configuration with a small small handful (one out of 400) buying them to modify them. Oh well, it would be their own fault, not ours. I wonder if I could replace the processor in it...
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
We just picked 2 of them up. They require no contract at purchase time, so we own the units without being required to purchase service.
To be nice I thought I'd be provide some links to 2.5" HDs and Accessories:
eCost - A listing of some notebook (2.5 mostly) hard drives
PriceTrack - A listing on 1.0 to 3.9 gig Hard Drives (some may not be 2.5)
More 2.5 Drive Comparisions - Just more of the same
IDE Connectors - May or may not be what your looking for
Hope it helped,
Instead of using a HD, why not just have the 16 Meg Flash boot and mount root over NFS?
-- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
Oh, yeah, I forgot about the need for a NIC.
This is not relevent today, but there are USB NICs out there, and hopefully they will be suppored soon.
-Peter
They aren't just making money off of the ISP. If you look at the keyboard, where the function keys are, there is instead hotlinks to various services - shopping, email, even a pizza button. They probably get money from every sale made via those hot buttons, similar to amazon's web partnering.
LetterRip
W inchip Specs
Another site, the Indiana University Knowledge Base had some decent, general information, but nothing on bus speeds and voltages.
The short answer is that this is a 60MHz bus box, probably 3.3v. If the chip was running at 200MHz, the bus would be 66MHz. The 3.3v will be fine for my Pentium 166-MMX, and the 60MHz bus should run okay with my chip (according to Intel's documentation. Whee! I'll have to check the documentation on my AMD K6 233MHz later.
Chris
I sure wish that CompUSA or Best Buy carried these things. I may just have to drive about 250 to the nearest Circuit City to get one. I've even got a 340M 2.5" hard drive sitting around idle (ripped out of a laptop to replace it with a bigger drive), so all I'd need would be the cable and to make a mounting bracket...
I know this is a bad thing to say on slashdot, but I got win 98 SE running on my i-opnener. I already had an i-opener (won at a trade show) I took a 1.2 gig IBM 2.5 HD that had all the cab files on it, booted off it, and was able to get windows 98SE installed. The Modem is yet to work, but from having An iMac 333, i have a USB Superdisk drive that runs on the USB port, and an USB to Ethernet adapter. I already have office 2000 running on it. One other thing, You can use any iMac Rev a-d memory in it. I popped in a 64 meg chip for the 32. I do think that the bios only allows 64 megs of ra, to be adrressed though.
If you have any question email me, I will try to get linux on a spare HD to Install.
Welcome to the Entropy Bar, may I take your order?
so I ordered one via the phone. even with the $39 'shipping' charge, its still a bargain.
...as long as they don't get sneaky and change the internals so we can no longer use this as a linux box ;-(
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"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Could it be AMR? (=Audio/Modem Riser)
It is a standard endorsed by Intel and based on an AC-97 serial interface to the codec.
If this is the case it means that something else on the board is doing the actual DSP work and presenting the result to the CPU as a standard modem.
ZZ
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Stop worrying about the risks of nuclear power and start worrying about the risks of not using nuclear power.
Just went down to Circuit City and bought two I-Openers for $99 a pop (one for me and one for my boss). There wasn't any kind of contract or anything -- just $99 for the thing. Mine has a 180 MHz WinChip, 32MB ram, and a 10" 800x600 display.
/etc
/app/start-photon
/app/start-photon ! I did this, and now my system does nothing. I will have to get a harddrive to boot from now.
Fun things to do with an I-Opener:
1. - Plug in a normal PS/2 keyboard (one with an ESC key). Or, you can take a laptop PS/2 "Y" cable and plug in both the mouse and keyboard (the mouse and keyboard are reversed, ie., plug the mouse into the keyboard connector and the keyboard into the mouse connector).
2. - Wait for the system to boot up and go into the tutorial. Let it get far enough into the tutorial that it waits for your input so that it doesn't keep getting in your way.
3. - Press ESC-4 a few times. This will bring up a shell with root access. You are now in the QNX operating System.
4. - The first thing you will want to do is allow root to login.
: cd
: chmod +www passwd
: vi passwd
(delete the first "x" in the root entry)
: chmod -www passwd
now you can login as root without a password. Note that this change is not permanent. To make the change permanent you have to make the change to the passwd~ file. Note, the system won't let you make the change to the passwd~ file, so you have to mv passwd~ to passwd_old and then copy passwd_old to passwd~ and then make the change.
5. - do a "ps". Probably the very last thing you will see is something like "/app/start-photon".
6. - kill the
You will now be at a text-only screen where you can login as root.
Notes:
- Don't delete
- Hitting the power button to power off only powers off the display (it might also put the processor into sleep mode, I dunno). Powering off doesn't "power off". You have to disconnect power to do a hard boot.
- These things have a telnet daemon and a www daemon running in the background by default.
I'm sure if you knew QNX well enough, you could just use the underlying system there to dialup to the internet, download a linux kernel and install it onto the flash directly. But seeing as I've pretty much hosed up my system by deleting a startup file, I'm going to have to hook up a hard drive anyway.
--
Mark Fassler
fassler at verinet dot com
-=-=-=-=-
-=-=-=-=-
My mom's going to kick you in the face!
does it have enough juice to decode mp3s?
16 megs of flash to speedly boot from, an IDE CDROM for the mp3s.. At that price, I should get one for the living room and one for the car..
The 2.5" disk do have the same cable pinout as the 3.5" drives. Most of the 3.5->2.5 adapters won't work in this box for two reasons. First, they have the wrong genders for the connections. Second, the biggest difference between 3.5" drives and 2.5" drives is that the 3.5" drives need +12V and +5V, while the 2.5" drives take only +5V. Since this is the standard (almost) 44 pin 2.5" conenctor, you don't have a +12V signal to give to your 3.5" drive.
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"Insert witty quote here."
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"Insert witty quote here."
In fact, here is a link about using the Cyberblade i7 drivers on an NEC PC notebook for those who are skeptical about running win 982 000_press_releases/nec_cyberblade_i7.htm
http://www.tridentmicro.com/html/press_release/
Welcome to the Entropy Bar, may I take your order?
Well I live in PA (East Coast). What do you mean by 'no service'? Do you mean they're not requiring you to purchase this ISP plan deal? Or that circuit city (et. al) won't provide service at that price? I was curious about that myself. If, when you purchase one from circuit city, they also make you sign a contract to purchase the ISP service stuff, or something to that effect...
> [ lots of very valid stuff about how this will likely not put Netpliance out of business,
> but how their business model is, at least presently, flawed, and how it's too late for them to do
> much about it now anyways ]
He also writes one thing with which I disagree:
> I would like to hereby congratulate the Netpliance engineer who invented [ the flipped-pins
>on the IDE port for "security" ] . It would be too bad if he went back to
> flipping burgers just weeks before the IPO.
Hell, I'd like to thank said engineer. For making it possible for all of us to enjoy a really cool toy for $99.
I'd also like to point out to his bosses that Netpliance's sales may well skyrocket before the IPO. Even if Netpliance doesn't see the kind of revenue it originally projected, by using a relatively open architecture with no real effort made at preventing re-use of the hardware, it's made a name for itself among geeks.
The poster to whom I'm replying also made a suggestion: that Netpliance consider selling general-purpose versions of these machines in the $200-250 range.
I'd like to echo that suggestion. It's a damn sexy box. Hell, it exudes sex. I, along with many other Slashdot readers, am probably gonna buy one of these things at $99+$30 shipping in order to hack it to run Linux and skip the built-in ISP part of the equation. That's because I'm not afraid of voiding a warranty with a soldering iron.
But given that the hack will likely take a few hours, and given that an even larger contingent on Slashdot may question their ability to re-pin a ribbon cable, I'd think there'd be strong and widespread interest in buying the unit unencumbered for $200-250. Truth be known, even though I enjoy mucking about with a soldering iron, I'd probably have preferred to pay a little extra and buy the unit that way myself.
If you're a Netpliance exec and you're reading this, and if there's a reasonable price point at which you can sell the unit and still make money - please consider it as an option. What looks like today's disaster may simply be tomorrow's opportunity in disguise. There's a reason your call volume and web site traffic just soared tonight.
So don't fire him. Give the guy who thought up the pin-swapped IDE connector a helluva bonus. If you'd built the box on a wholly-proprietary architecture, it would have cost far more to build, and would have had no geek appeal whatsoever.
But as it stands - it runs UNIX (whether QNX or Linux) and it's a flatscreen and it's expandable - it's bloody sexy, and I'm gonna buy one. I'll buy it for $99+30 and hack it -- but only because I didn't have the option for buying it at $200-250 without the ISP tie-in.
If there's one IDE connector, and there is a memory device on it (as the master, presumably), would there be anything preventing one from rigging up a cable and attaching a hard disk as a slave device?
Nice to know I'm not the only person who'd like to get one to the UK to have a play with ;)
;) OK, _several_ £60 computers...
I suspect a more enterprising slashdotter could buy up a bundle, make the necessary adaptions and stick them on eBay. Anyone feeling tempted, or do I have to fly across the Atlantic to get a £60 computer?
Greg
Greg
(Inside a nuclear plant)
Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!
My friend Rob and I went to Circuit City up in Nashua, NH this afternoon to buy a couple. They were sold out. In fact, every Circuit City within an hour's drive of Nashua was sold out of them - most had been sold in the last day, as far as the sales rep knew! We went onto a backorder list, with 8 more people ahead of us.
/. effect applies to meatspace, too. This is probably the first time that a consumer electronics chain has been slashdotted...
So now we have proof that the
Imagine the faces back at headquarters when they see the weekend sales figures. They'll be so excited, waiting for all the new ISP subscriptions that they'll expect to be getting - I feel kind of sorry for them.
- -Josh Turiel
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
I emailed the company that someone suggested earlier in this board. Here is the email. I hope this helps though honestly I can't decide if that is
the cable I want or not. Anyone know anything about the specific cable she is referring to?
With regards to your message at 02:28 AM
3/12/00 -0600, John. Where you stated:
>I need a 44pin IDE cable (laptop ide
>connection size) for a 2.5" hard drive.
>First, do you have these, and what is the
>price? Second, if possible I need
>one that has pins 1 and 2 swapped, 3 and 4
>swapped, 5 and 6 swapped, etc.
>Are these type cables available? Thank you >very much for your time.
>John
We stock the internal IDE cable for the Multia/UDB Computer as part number
FC530.
Cost per FC530 is $10 US / $15 CAD.
Cost of shipping / handling by mail is $5 US for USA destinations and $5
CAD for Canadian.
We accept payment by cashiers cheque, money order, VISA or Mastercard.
If you prefer not to send credit information by email we suggest you may
consider faxing us your particulars.
We process the orders within 1 business day and normally ship in North
America by airmail. This takes from 4 to 10 days depending on location. If
needed we can also send by courier, but this is much more expensive.
To process your order we would need:
Name
Address, including ZIP or postal code
If paying by credit card we also need:
Type of card (VISA or Mastercard)
Name of credit card holder as shown on the face of the card
Card number
Expiry date of card
If processing your order on credit card and if you are in the US the exact
charges may be slightly different as we post the charges in Canadian
dollars and your bank/credit card company performs the actual currency
exchange. As rates fluctuate it may be out by a per cent or 2.
We thank you for your enquiry!
Best regards,
Maurice W. Hilarius Telephone: 01-780-456-9771
Hard Data Ltd. FAX: 01-780-456-9772
11060 - 166 Avenue mailto:maurice@harddata.com
Edmonton, AB, Canada http://www.harddata.com/
T5X 1Y3
03-12-2000 18:51:57
RE:Souce For Mini IDE cables? (modified 0 times)
VivianC
I looked up the specs for the Multia and it is a 44 pin IDE connector for a hard-drive. The manual doesn't provide any pinouts for it, so I'll guess
that it would still need the pins reversed.
Any idea on the length? It looks about 3 inches in the picture. Not a lot of room to work with....
This is the best page I've found on it so far:
http://www.brouhaha.com/~eric/computers/udb.html
Viv
http://snoopy.net/mailman/listinfo/iopener
:O
Check it out... full-featured listserv.
I am the list mom.
"What have I done?"
SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a
#i-opener-linux experimentation reveals the
:(
interface to be a standard serial port plus
four extra lines, two for incoming phone line
and two for outgoing phone line.
so, you've got a COM1 port to play with. no bus.
sorry
it has a USB port though. lots of stuff can
fit in a usb port. like a $4o USB to ethernet
adaptor. also available in wireless.
I am doing and have done several similar "conversion" projects with embedded computers and Linux.
/. before, but in a nutshell:
.1" used by pretty much all other header connectors - damn metric system!)
My first conversion of this type (other than laptops, which I was running Linux on way before it was cool, and when video drivers were a really ugly problem) was an Epson IM-403 cash register computer. (Available from Timeline, the surplus guys, for $99.) It's got a lot less stones than the iOpener, and no screen, but it does have a nifty if tiny little UPS that lets it ride out most power glitches. I've posted about this project here on
- 486SX33 CPU, pretty nice little BIOS
- nice little Chips and Tech video controller will do 800x600 max to std VGA connector
- four serial ports (great for control projects!)
- a parallel port
- socket/tray for a 2.5" IDE notebook hard disk (will accept even the tall 17 or 19mm drives, so you can put IBM's latest monster in it)
- a single ISA half-card slot for the obligatory network card.
- Socket for up to 32MB of RAM (plenty for a decent Linux system - I've run several versions of Caldera on the box, but recommend sticking to slim WMs for obvious reasons.)
- Flat ribbon connector for Epson floppy (know where to order one, if you need it.)
- Tiny little NiCad UPS built in. This is one of the coolest features, and the reason one of these is my primary file server at home. It will only keep the box alive for a few minutes, but that's always been enough so far.
These run Linux fine, or if you just need vNC, you can run the DOS vNC client with the packet drivers or a stripped Linux with the SVGALIB vNC, either of which should fit on a floppy. [As an aside, I have one extra IM-403 with a 3GB HDD that I'll sell for $120+S&H in the US, if anyone's interested.]
(BTW, anybody know where I can get a multiport network card (2 or more Ethers, 1 half-size ISA slot) that works under Linux? If so, I've got my new firewall...)
Also, I'm just starting to hack on a little ARM-based *touchscreen* webphone. These were built at enormous cost by AT&T and Philips before they decided they cost more than the market would bear. (They would have had to sell them for about $600.) They run AT&T's Inferno operating system, and are pretty darn nice speakerphones in addition to finally having the holy grail I've been searching for: a *touchscreen*. I think I can lay my hands on a couple hundred more of these at ~$200 each +S&H, if there's interest. They aren't speedy, but they have a built-in web browser and use one of those little WebTV-style wireless keyboards. Although I don't know of anyone that's replaced the OS (althogh ARM Linux is out there...), but there are hacking instructions available that show how to get root in Inferno. They don't have E-net connections, but do have two PCMCIA slots, so decent networking should be possible.
I've done a lot of hacking with laptop hard disks, and it's extraordianrily difficult to get the 44-pin cables for these things, especially if you want a cable to support two of the little drives. (Which I'd like to do for several machines I've got, including my FIC Sahara Databook, which uses a notebook CDROM on the secondary IDE channel that could give me a place to hang a backup drive. I can't even find anyplace to get a cable like that *made* anywhere here in Austin! You can get the connectors from Jameco, but I haven't found out where to get the dinkier ribon cable these need. (The 44-pin IDE 2.5" drive header uses 2mm pin spacing rather than the standard
Also, a local computer shop once had sockets and little plastic cases to allow a 2.5" HDD to be plugged into a 3.5" drive bay socket. They don't have them anymore. Anybody stumble across these in your searches?
"The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last
If you are talking Linux you may be able to override the BIOS limitation by using something like "mem=131072k" as an append parameter in LILO.
I don't know for sure if this will work with the Iopener, but it does for one of my old PC's which also has a 64M BIOS limit.