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This is my latest artwork:
Mobile work-place ;) Freerunner beeing charged from a modified USB hub using 5 AA batteries.
Full keyboard, mouse and external HDD connected!
Internet access wia UMTS dongle.
A special holder places the FR into a reflection-free angle.
Note the TUX penguin, that I have manually glued on the 'Windows-Keys'!
I have bridged the output power supply of the USB slots in the USB hub back to the 'input' line (where the FR plugs in). With a manual switch I can turn on/off this power feed. This might be some good luck that the good piece didn't blow off - it's a 20EUR DLINK hub.
The USB gender changer (female/female) can be bought for example at the big 'C':
http://www.conrad.de/goto.php?artikel=974822
The power supply are 5 AA NiMH accus, which deliver around 6.5V when fully charged. This is about the same voltage the comes from the external AC/DC power plug.
Note the single blue wire on the bottom right of the right image. This is all it needs. The rest is just fun like an additional switch with a LED to turn power-feed on and off and another Type-A USB slot, so that I don't need the genderchanger and the Type A/B converter any longer as one can see it in the topmost image.
For soldering hints, please look at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:USB.svg or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usb
ATTENTION:
After I have soldered the second USB connector (the black thick cable on the left image), the hub did not work any more on a regular PC, although it still worked on the FR. So my assumption is, that it is not broken, but maybe the USB signal reflects on the open-ended cable. I will invastigate further.
Try this at your own risk! Be prepared to inflame your USB hub, power supply or even your phone!
(You have been warned...)
More images:
From left to right:
Usual way to use the FR as a USB hub (you need 3 different adaptors)
'Short' way with self-soldered USB connector into the hub, which makes it unusable for PC's, though!
Integrated voltage meter in the USB hub, displaying either the HUB's own power supply voltage, or the voltage delivered from the FR to the hub, depending on the small switch that I have built in. LED indicating current direction.
Midori is nice...but not a fully usable browser. And loading pages over cellphone network is pretty slow. Therefore I use a ssh tunnel to a X-server at home and look at it via vnc. (I don't explain how to set-up an ssh account through dyndns here...)
at home type:
vncserver :30 -depth 24 -geometry 1280x1024 DISPLAY=:30 firefox &
on the FR in a first shell:
ssh -L5930:localhost:5930 myaddress.dyndns.org
and in a second shell:
vncviewer localhost:30
In SwapSpace is descriped how you add a swap file on filesystem. This seems somehow complicated to me. I wanted to use my microSD card for swapping (it doesn't matter if it gets broken after 2 million read/write accesses). Also, I don't want the mmc card formatted with VFAT anyway, so I made a new partitioning:
/dev/mmcblk0p1 1 5129 500075 82 Linux swap / Solaris /dev/mmcblk0p2 5130 81820 7477372+ 83 Linux
and added in /etc/fstab:
/dev/mmcblk0p1 swap swap defaults 0 0
doing a
mkswap /dev/mmcblk0p1
once and a reboot and we're done.
See what 'top' says: the internal 128MB memory is almost always completely exhausted, with just one or two applications running. With 512MB swap space I can use Midori, tangoGPS, several terminals, the settings pages and so on all at the same time.
Mem: 120856k total, 116364k used, 4492k free, 172k buffers Swap: 500064k total, 67696k used, 432368k free, 71764k cached
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