More Fun To Be Had With the iPaq
Veidit writes: "The Compaq Cambridge Research Laboratory seems to have a cool project named "Mercury".
They are integrating an IPAQ running Linux with many diffrent types of wireless alternatives like 802.11b, Bluetooth, GSM, CDMA via PCMCIA.
The linux version seems to be the one that Handhelds.org has.
" We also had an e-mail from Dan Sparks who writes: " The free Compaq TestDrive Program has added two new features allowing iPAQ handheld development online. In the Test Drive Program, we have four DEC Sharks (DNARD) SA-110 based network computers running Linux allowing development on Linux based StrongArm systems. In addition, Alpha2Arm cross-compiler tool chain has been added to every single one of our Alpha Linux machines, including our Brickwall Beowulf cluster. This means that you can compile programs for your iPAQ handheld on our blazingly fast Alpha computers. The Toolchain includes support for C and C++, and is available on all the Alpha-based Linux distributions we have, including RedHat Linux, SuSE Linux, TurboLinux, Kondara Linux, and Debian GNU/Linux."
At the moment linux on the iPaq uses cramfs, i.e. anything you want stored when the device is turned off (i.e. stored in flash) must be uploaded as ONE BIG FILE. I.E. if you have a one byte bug fix to the kernel or any binaries etc. you must upload everything again. This will be fixed soon, using jffs to allow the flash to be written directly by the filesystem. It will be much more flexible then. Also wrt to the devices in the mercury project, any compactPCI device will work as long as the OS dirvers are available. Another little problem that Compaq will soon fix is that the key events are serialised, so you can't have any logic that depends on more than one simultaneous keypress, which limits that UI possibliites quite a bit. pixelbeat.
Now I hear they're coming out with a model with 48 MB RAM (plus 16 MB ROM) available, but not out until March. I suppose you can expect that one to be in even shorter supply. But I'm looking forward to seeing one.
And as for the other replier that is whining about how bad compaq support and products are, I don't think it's at all true. Yes, mine did ship with that screen fault, but it wasn't apparent at first, and you see the type of service I'm getting to have the issue resolved. I'm nothing less than happy with my unit.
funny munging