Familiar Distribution for iPAQ Handhelds
Russ Nelson writes "The Handhelds.org project has released Familiar 0.7.2, a Linux-based firmware replacement for HP iPAQ handhelds. New to this release is support for the h5400 and h5500, which have built-in wlan interfaces. Both GPE (gtk/X) and Opie (Qt) are at or past version 1.0, and we now have a Python-gtk distribution called 'pypaq'. Why waste that commute time playing Tetris when you could be hacking on Python code?"
I'm familiar with Beowuld clusters.
Beep. Boop. Beep. You have questions. I have answers and your home address.
I have the iPaq 5450 and that model comes with a biometric fingerprint scanner. I've noticed that this distro doesn't explicitly say it has support for the scanner. Does anybody know if it does indeed support it?
I use a fingerprint as one of my passwords and I'd like to try this distro out but if it means losing the scanner capability,then I'm hesitant.
TThis link points to telnet://67.37.26.36 which opens to a linux shell at some American ISP, the connection may be logged somewhere and seen as 'questionable activity'.
Welcome to goat.cx TNG. That'll teach me to browse at -1.
I'm eating some Bassetts Jelly Babies.
mmm.....babies
Yes, and the comments are even worse!
Don't piss off The Angry Economist
Leo on this? That would be a killer app.
But do you really need to run Linux for that, or can you just install Python on a stock iPaq?
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
How about a port to the new Zodiac?
Similar hardware, better controls, better video, sound and screen.
Linux Conference 2003
The NX Project
What is NX?
- NX is a remote desktop system based on X-Window
- Adds features to X-Window usually found in proprietary systems like MS RDP and Citrix ICA
- Makes possible to run contemporary Unix applications over the Internet
- Compresses the X protocol by an average factor of 50:1 and more
- Allows users to work comfortably on 28.8Kbps or even 9.6 Kbps modem connections
- Reduces X protocol round-trips nearly to zero
- Implements image streaming algorythms to reduce the perceived latency
- Is able to translate RDP and RFB foreign remote desktop protocols to X
- Runs these foreign remote desktop sessions faster than their native protocols
- It integrates with SMB to provide access to the client's file systems
- It integrates with ARTSD and ESD to allow media playback
- Adds server management tools to handle X, RDP and RFB sessions run by users
- Architecture is designed to distribute the server workload between multiple nodes
- It leverages SSH remote execution capabilities to avoid the need to run a new network server
- It is able to encrypt and protect the network traffic by tunneling the connections through SSH
- Server is intended to run on any Unix OS
- Client runs on Linux, Windows, Solaris, Mac OS/X, Sony Playstation/2, MS Xbox and embedded devices like HP/Compaq iPAQ and Sharp Zaurus
- NX core components and X compression libraries are released under the GPL license
- NX client GUI (nxclient) and the NX server manager (nxserver) are commercial software
- The NX client-server protocol is open
- A library handling the client-server protocol and a compatible command-line NX client have been released under the GPL license
- NoMachine has publicly offered its help to let OSS developers build a free implementation of both the nxclient GUI and the nxserver NX System Architecture X NX "protocol" (internet, modem) Local X display Local NX proxy system Remote NX proxy system Remote X application Windows Terminal Server, XP Prof. (Tight) VNCServer nxagent (based on Xnest) nxdesktop (based on rdesktop) nxviewer (based on vncviewer) RDP X RFB
What features are missing?
- X session persistence and reconnection - Better support of RENDER extension - Better support of X applications in seamless mode
- Better support of SMB file-sharing and printing
- Seamless access to client's peripherals and devices
- A new multimedia architecture with native streaming of media formats
- Better integration with Unix and Windows desktop environments to allow point-and-click remote execution of applications
- Better server management tools, including a Web administration interface
- An open API to let customers and developers to write server extensions What NX would like to become?
- A convenient way to let users of mobile phones and other thin devices to get access to complex, rich applications
- A server infrastructure by which people can easily run applications regardless they reside on the local machine or a remote server
- A peer-to-peer computing environment where users can easily access computing resources, like storage and printers, on any server available on the Internet
- A step in the direction of the "network desktop" envisioned by many
The majority of folks who buy an iPaq (me included) do it in order to have a portable version of their main PIM database (i.e., Outlook) - I do not see the advantage... I truly believe that we should stick with pretty-GUI stuff for the desk/palmtop (i.e., Windows) and use the stable stuff (i.e., *nix) in the back end. Just my views...
I like to bite the heads off, then the legs, then finally comsume the torso. Black ones are my favourites and no GNAA comments please.
He might have been a jerk, but without him 1) there are even fewer editors going through the story que and this means less editing done; 2) fewer different (albeit subjective) views on what is /. worthy material.
Spending commute time playing tetris would be a waste for sure. But I prefer reading to "hacking". Programming is what I do when I get to work. I don't need to to it on my way to it and from it.
Does anybody know or has experience with iPAQ and Linux, I'm thinking about buying one, but I don't know one thing.
Does iPAQ with Linux supports GSM phone card (read as accesory drivers), so I could be able to access my servers trough ssh from anywhere?
If yes, then which model and which accesory.
Yes, I know that Windows do support that on iPAQ, but I really hate Windows too much, it's not an option, I'm not in suicidal mode.
Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
a7r [~a7r@a7r-the-fag.biot.com] has joined #linuxos
:-)
hahahaha.
- Kate
"DNA is life. The rest is just translation."
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Five years ago, I decided that I wont'ever pay for a m$ product. No ipaq for me as hp ships them with m$ operating system. I'll stick with sony clie.
Men are born ignorant, not stupid; they are made stupid by education. Bertrand Russel
Why waste that commute time playing Tetris when you could be hacking on Python code?
Because I'm not a nerd.
anyone know when this will be availible for the HP ipaq h1910? Pocket PC 2002 is such a dissapointment that I hoped to put a linux distro on it hours after I got it.... I saw nothing about this on the site... any info would be much appreciated :-)
Did anyone else think this story was going to say something like "the distribution of iPAQ handhelds follows Zipf's law" or something?
I wonder what it would prove if the distribution did follow Zipf's law.
Sunlit World Scheme. Weird and different.
Why waste that commute time playing Tetris when you could be hacking on Python code?"
...so anyway, I'm playing around with this thing, trying to.....shiiiiiiiiit!!!!
Actually I'm doing that as I type...
goddamnit! fucking car tried to cut me off!!
**CRASH!!**
Man, and I thought cell phones were dangerous to use while driving.
Join the TWIT army now!
The linux loader also supports plan9 and Inferno
So why watse your life with Linux when you can use professional software.
oh, and inferno comes with tetris too
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
We are doing a project in Java and the target is the iPAQ with Windoze. We found a commercial JVM that supports javacomm and Swing, though we are experiencing flaky behaviour.
I am not sure if it is the O/S or the JVM, but our code seems to work fine on Win2K.
Has anyone out there had good results getting the full JVM (1.4) working under Linux on this device? Should we switch?
Not covered in the FAQ (that I saw...)
I thought to get OS upgrades to the IPAQ you needed to have it flashed by a dealer (funny flashing comments to follow no doubt) - it's not just a simple "run a program" arrangement. So how do you update to Familiar? Or am I talking rubbish here and it is simply a software update?
Read reviews of shopping cart software
MOD PARENT UP
Python has been available in Familiar, and before that in the Compaq Linux for the iPAQ since I packaged it up nearly 3 years ago.
Mailing List Archive Link
Palin...
This is great news for the linux front, but sad since most Ipaq's go for around $300-$600-the price of a decent Linux box. I don't think many /.'ers can/will offord one. Besides I see this more of a "geek" project. Sure it is a working PDA with linux but it it takes a bit of know how and tweakin along with dedication to get it to work. Bravo guys on increasing the Linux foot print and you have my $$$ to help along the way.
This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
Last time I checked, it basically wasn't possible due to the closed design of them. But love Linux as much as I do, I still pick the most suitable hardware for my needs. An iPAQ answered that, with Windows CE.
:( My camera (which I like!) is MMC.
:)
I tried Familiar (heart beating FAST as it messed around with areas that can easily turn the iPAQ into a brick) and one of the main things that put me off was a lack of support for the MMC slot. Sure, I could bloat the size of it even further with a CF jacket, but... meh
The other thing that bugged me was Bluetooth. If you think it's behind the times in Windows, IMHO it's 5x worse in Linux. I've faffed with it for a week on a desktop machine, don't fancy the same on a handheld TYVM
Not being a troll, just submitting my perspective on things as an honest fan of Linux.
How about a port? In my opinion, the Axim would be a great PPC to port Linux to. It's loaded with features, it's dirt cheap, and I'm sick of WM2003. :)
Seriously though, does anyone know the status of a port to the Axim?
RaGe
We're all just noise on the wires..
As the owner of a Zaurus, I've paid an enormous tax through hardware that is seriously lacking in ergonomics (putting the power button on the outside of the machine. Damn thing turns on in my pocket) and with software that has bad interface design (the datebook requires twice as many taps as the Palm's to put in a date).
Moral of the story: any technology can have a tax. In Zaurus vs. Palm, the question is whether you pay the tax in money (PalmOS) or in Time/Aggrivation/Lost data (Zaurus). For mobile computing, the latter tax is usually several orders of magnitude more expensive.
Ergonomica Auctorita Illico!
http://www.clueless.com/jargon3.0.0/recursion.html
Don't piss off The Angry Economist
Mmm, brains...