User:Dcorking

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(my openmoko diary)
 
(Monday, August 20, 2007: [http://www.gnome.org/projects/gedit/ gedit])
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I [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Dcorking helped] tidy up the openmoko wiki.
 
I [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Dcorking helped] tidy up the openmoko wiki.
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I ran [http://www.gnome.org/projects/gedit/ gedit] remotely from the Mac (using the Neo as the X server, with instructions on  [[USB Networking#Remote apps on neo]])  It looked remarkably good and was responsive to the stylus and the on-screen keyboard.
  
 
===Sunday, August 19, 2007===
 
===Sunday, August 19, 2007===

Revision as of 16:54, 20 August 2007

I am David Corking.

I have a P1 device.

Website: http://dcorking.com/

Company website: http://www.corking-project.co.uk/

Blog: http://voip4linux.infogami.com/

Contents

Openmoko diary (most recent first)

Monday, August 20, 2007

Device is working beautifully, tethered to my MacBook by USB.

There is a new graphic for battery status - it looks like an empty battery, with a pronged cable plugged into it. I don't know if this means 'charging', or 'fully charged', or something else.

Remote terminal by ssh from the MacBook into the Neo worked first time - it is a bit disconcerting to have an IP login with no password, but great to have a fully functioning Linux console, in a computer that is as powerful as my first Linux desktop system 9 years ago (bar hardware screen acceleration.)

Despite the speed and storage of the system, most of the common unix utilities come from the cut down BusyBox toolkit, rather than the more functional GNU utilities.

Read that AUX wakes up the screen when it has gone to sleep. When in Linux, press and hold for 5 seconds to get a stylus menu including 'power off'. Press and hold for 9 seconds otherwise to halt.

I helped tidy up the openmoko wiki.

I ran gedit remotely from the Mac (using the Neo as the X server, with instructions on USB Networking#Remote apps on neo) It looked remarkably good and was responsive to the stylus and the on-screen keyboard.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

The screen is blank - nothing was happening! So I tested briefly with a BL-5C battery from my Nokia phone. I wanted to put the FIC battery in the Nokia phone to charge, but it is much thicker than the BL-5C, so the Nokia phone cover does not go back on.

Charged my deeply discharged device for most of the day with the dumb APC charger. Then, still connected to the charger, I booted and played with the UI and the stylus. The battery indicator showed a little over half full, but very quickly discharged, showing red and then shutting down.

I plugged into the MacBook (which is configured not to sleep) and left it overnight.

Saturday August 18, 2007

Briefly tested the new P1 device with a charged Nokia BL-5C battery

Put the FIC battery in the phone, and charged for approx. 8 hours with an APC dumb USB charger. Surprised to see that the phone boots as soon as power is applied to the USB socket (this is as designed.)

Installed AJZaurusUSB and OpenMoko Flasher on my Mac OS X Intel MacBook. Discovered that the Neo1973 IR port was in fact the AUX button (no IR - as designed.) Flashed the device with a recent kernel and rootfs.

  • openmoko-devel-image-fic-gta01-20070803091138.rootfs.jffs2
  • uImage-2.6.21.6-moko11-r1_0_0_2388_-fic-gta01.bin

(the image I first wanted did not seem to be visible to OpenMoko Flasher, so I decided not to swim upstream and try another one.)

Booted into an attractive high resolution graphical interface.

Pressed the power button, the screen went blank. I didn't know if it was powered off—it turns out it wasn't, and it deeply discharged the battery overnight.

END

Personal tools

I am David Corking.

I have a P1 device.

Website: http://dcorking.com/

Company website: http://www.corking-project.co.uk/

Blog: http://voip4linux.infogami.com/

Openmoko diary (most recent first)

Monday, August 20, 2007

Device is working beautifully, tethered to my MacBook by USB.

There is a new graphic for battery status - it looks like an empty battery, with a pronged cable plugged into it. I don't know if this means 'charging', or 'fully charged', or something else.

Remote terminal by ssh from the MacBook into the Neo worked first time - it is a bit disconcerting to have an IP login with no password, but great to have a fully functioning Linux console, in a computer that is as powerful as my first Linux desktop system 9 years ago (bar hardware screen acceleration.)

Despite the speed and storage of the system, most of the common unix utilities come from the cut down BusyBox toolkit, rather than the more functional GNU utilities.

Read that AUX wakes up the screen when it has gone to sleep. When in Linux, press and hold for 5 seconds to get a stylus menu including 'power off'. Press and hold for 9 seconds otherwise to halt.

I helped tidy up the openmoko wiki.

I ran gedit remotely from the Mac (using the Neo as the X server, with instructions on USB Networking#Remote apps on neo) It looked remarkably good and was responsive to the stylus and the on-screen keyboard.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

The screen is blank - nothing was happening! So I tested briefly with a BL-5C battery from my Nokia phone. I wanted to put the FIC battery in the Nokia phone to charge, but it is much thicker than the BL-5C, so the Nokia phone cover does not go back on.

Charged my deeply discharged device for most of the day with the dumb APC charger. Then, still connected to the charger, I booted and played with the UI and the stylus. The battery indicator showed a little over half full, but very quickly discharged, showing red and then shutting down.

I plugged into the MacBook (which is configured not to sleep) and left it overnight.

Saturday August 18, 2007

Briefly tested the new P1 device with a charged Nokia BL-5C battery

Put the FIC battery in the phone, and charged for approx. 8 hours with an APC dumb USB charger. Surprised to see that the phone boots as soon as power is applied to the USB socket (this is as designed.)

Installed AJZaurusUSB and OpenMoko Flasher on my Mac OS X Intel MacBook. Discovered that the Neo1973 IR port was in fact the AUX button (no IR - as designed.) Flashed the device with a recent kernel and rootfs.

  • openmoko-devel-image-fic-gta01-20070803091138.rootfs.jffs2
  • uImage-2.6.21.6-moko11-r1_0_0_2388_-fic-gta01.bin

(the image I first wanted did not seem to be visible to OpenMoko Flasher, so I decided not to swim upstream and try another one.)

Booted into an attractive high resolution graphical interface.

Pressed the power button, the screen went blank. I didn't know if it was powered off—it turns out it wasn't, and it deeply discharged the battery overnight.

END