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Envoyé : samedi 28 mai 2011 04:05
À : Henry Vélez Molina
Cc : LASKE, Lionel (C2S); devel@lists.laptop.org
Objet : Re: Get serial number or XO name from command line or python
Hi,
On Fri, May 27 2011, Henry Vélez Molina wrote:
Also you could use this script:
#!/usr/bin
On 28.05.2011, at 08:55, LASKE, Lionel (C2S) wrote:
Hi all,
Thanks for all your answers. The serial was exactly what I expected. Great.
About the XO name, my question was not clear. What I'm looking for is the
name in the Sugar Control Panel (Me).
Any way to get it ?
Depends on the
Hi Bert,
Thanks it's exactly what I'm looking for.
Best regards from France.
Lionel.
--
Date: Sat, 28 May 2011 12:25:43 +0200
From: Bert Freudenberg b...@freudenbergs.de
Subject: Re: Get serial number or XO name from command line or python
To: OLPC Devel
Hi all,
Is there a simple way to get the XO serial number and/or the XO name from the
command line and/or from a python script ?
Lionel.
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Is there a simple way to get the XO serial number and/or the XO name
You have to define serial number, and you have to define name.
Further, the answer depends upon the software version in the XO :
Start with (this is from a bash script)
if [ -e /ofw/serial-number ]; then
echo Serial
Hi.
2011/5/27 LASKE, Lionel (C2S) lla...@c2s.fr
Hi all,
Is there a simple way to get the XO serial number and/or the XO name from
the command line and/or from a python script ?
Also you could use this script:
_ _ _
#!/usr/bin/python -tt
import subprocess
getserial = subprocess.Popen
Hi,
On Fri, May 27 2011, Henry Vélez Molina wrote:
Also you could use this script:
#!/usr/bin/python -tt
import subprocess
getserial = subprocess.Popen(['cat /ofw/serial-number'], shell=True,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
for line in getserial.stdout:
print(line.decode().strip())
There's
The XO serial numbers are structured as follows
AABYWWS
AA - Area, where SH is QSMC (Shanghai), and CS is CSMC (Changshu)
B - Factory
Y - Last digit of year of production
WW - ISO week number of production
S - unique identifier (in hex)
Example:
SHF80801FA0
is a laptop made in Factory
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 5:41 AM, John Watlington w...@laptop.org wrote:
The XO serial numbers are structured as follows
AABYWWS
AA - Area, where SH is QSMC (Shanghai), and CS is CSMC (Changshu)
B - Factory
Y - Last digit of year of production
WW - ISO week number of production
S
I've got a B2-1 which I've just upgraded ready for a demo to a local
Australian senator. Unfortunately I've been bitten by the activation
process.
At powerup it says S/N Unknown, then
could not activate this XO
Serial number: SHF
When I try the activative procedure, I instead get
I wonder how the WP tag got set?
Alexander M. Latham wrote:
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At powerup it says S/N Unknown, then
could not activate this XO
Serial number: SHF
When I try the activative procedure, I instead get:
No serial number in mfg data
No serial number
I wonder how the WP tag got set?
WP == write protect?
You think the flash is write protected?
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Scott,
Um, I don't like those instructions at all. Why not just set the
serial number in SPI flash, and set the 'ak' tag while you're at it?
Mitch suggested that first, and it didn't work. Setting a SN tag plus
a U# tag did work,
According to my recall
On Thu, 2007-06-21 at 13:48 +0800, David Woodhouse wrote:
On Thu, 2007-06-21 at 00:50 -0400, Ivan Krstić wrote:
David Woodhouse wrote:
I remember a lot of noise and pointless paranoia, but no actual _mess_.
A lot of noise and pointless paranoia over something with no practical
Jim Gettys wrote:
Serial number is/should be easily available; after all, it's printed on
the machine.
This is a complete non-sequitur. Remember the bloody mess that was PSN?
http://www.cdt.org/privacy/issues/pentium3/
That a machine's SN# can be identified by opening its battery
On Wed, 2007-06-20 at 16:52 -0400, Ivan Krstić wrote:
This is a complete non-sequitur. Remember the bloody mess that was
PSN?
I remember a lot of noise and pointless paranoia, but no actual _mess_.
But I don't own a tinfoil hat -- so maybe someone's controlling my brain
to make me not see the
David Woodhouse wrote:
I remember a lot of noise and pointless paranoia, but no actual _mess_.
A lot of noise and pointless paranoia over something with no practical
benefits and plenty of abuse potential sure as hell qualifies as a mess
in my book. There was a tremendous amount of consumer and
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