0 Members and 5 Guests are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Lionel Debroux on October 05, 2012, 04:43:45 amQuoteJust a quick reminder that there's a 4MB soft limit for RAM disks. Make sure the final image is less than that until I rework the bootloader to lift it.ACK It's easy to reach 8 MB without even attempting to add an X server + its libraries.Hmmmm. If you get the source for the bootloader you could try changing MAX_RAMDISK_SIZE to something higher. But I can't guarantee it'll work without hitches since it might overwrite the bootloader code.The solution is to relocate the bootloader itself into SRAM or somewhere out of the way before loading. That way, the max ramdisk size is limited by the amount of physical memory. I'll get the done soonEdit: Random thoughts: snes9x SDL on Linux on CX?
QuoteJust a quick reminder that there's a 4MB soft limit for RAM disks. Make sure the final image is less than that until I rework the bootloader to lift it.ACK It's easy to reach 8 MB without even attempting to add an X server + its libraries.
Just a quick reminder that there's a 4MB soft limit for RAM disks. Make sure the final image is less than that until I rework the bootloader to lift it.
Actually I think he wanted to have Touchpad/Clickpad compatibility, but the hardware is apparently different and less documented on Hackspire, making it harder to develop for those older models.
Also mplayer lags o.o
SDL isn't emulated, that's just the graphical frontend. I guess you would have to set some frameskip to snes9x to make it work at 60 FPS.Also mplayer lags o.o
QuoteActually I think he wanted to have Touchpad/Clickpad compatibility, but the hardware is apparently different and less documented on Hackspire, making it harder to develop for those older models.The hardware of the Clickpad & Touchpad has better documentation on Hackspire than the CX hardware (though the delta is blurring, as part of this work) Linux + some userspace does fit in 32 MB of RAM (16 or even 8 would work), but needless to say, it can do less than in 64 MB of RAM (CX).tangrs doesn't have a real Clickpad or Touchpad, though.QuoteAlso mplayer lags o.oWell, the Nspire is no Raspberry Pi (basically > 5x more powerful for 1/6 to 1/4 the price, with some hardware video acceleration) or better
Well, that's why TI advertises is as a calculator
This is awesome, and the usb recognition works so well.I’ve tested my keyboard, mouse, ipod, camera, TI 83, and two flash drives.It tells the correct manufacturer and product for each, though the only one I could get to do anything was the keyboard.
Quote from: Juju on October 31, 2012, 03:27:25 pmSDL isn't emulated, that's just the graphical frontend. I guess you would have to set some frameskip to snes9x to make it work at 60 FPS.Also mplayer lags o.oWell, that's why TI advertises is as a calculator (actually rather a math&science handheld thing - meh, stupid vocabulary ) and not a developer board (also @debrouxl)But yeah, with some overclocking, it's good enough ?
That's very impressive.Out of curiosity, are there any plans to backport this to the first Nspires?
Great work Tangrs! I assume it will be possible to have a Debian rootfs with an X-server?Will try when I get some time.
So were all the USB support changes on the kernel side? Could I just use an existing FS image and boot it correctly on a USB stick?EDIT: Also, what kind of cable do I need to buy?EDIT Again: What sort of other stuff is on the image? GCC? Lua?
Isn't this kernel running on top of TI's OS already? That could explain some of the issues performance-wise.
Depending on what you want to connect, there are many you can buy. If you're only connecting one device, a mini-usb A to USB female adapter should work. Something like this one should work.Though, I highly recommend just buying a powered USB hub that has a mini-usb B upstream port so you can just use the OTG cable that came with your calculator. I happened to have a spare one lying around so that's what I used.
Nope, once booted, it has replaced TI's OS completely in memory.
QuoteDepending on what you want to connect, there are many you can buy. If you're only connecting one device, a mini-usb A to USB female adapter should work. Something like this one should work.Though, I highly recommend just buying a powered USB hub that has a mini-usb B upstream port so you can just use the OTG cable that came with your calculator. I happened to have a spare one lying around so that's what I used.I got one with at best buy for $15 that has four usb ports and one mini usb portSo I can connect my cx and still hav room for four more devicesQuoteNope, once booted, it has replaced TI's OS completely in memory.Wait, so is there no possibility for a keyboard during normal OS? Because a keyboard would make oclua so much cooler.
Edit: Random thoughts: snes9x SDL on Linux on CX?