2010/8/23 Gilles Kirouac gkiro...@riq.qc.ca
Is it still an objective of Jsoftware to support ARM-compatible chips?
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-21/microsoft-is-said-to-announce-version-of-windows-for-arm-chips-at-ces-show.html
Microsoft Corp.
The downside being that you must always be connected to the internet
or some network.
The gtk gui and the J engine should, __theoretically__, run on the
n900 with minimal effort since it is just a computer running linux.
If you do decide to do any ports in the future, I second the notion
that a
I see I misread Bobs message.
I thought he was running J on/in an Android.
I have not got access to such a device yet.
I do have a friend who has one and I thought I would ask him to lend it to
me for a few months.
2010/9/17 Thomas Costigliola tcost...@gmail.com
The downside being that you must
Thats right. I have an n900, and most of the interface is built with
gtk, so you get it right out of the box.
On Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 11:38 AM, bill lam bbill@gmail.com wrote:
As far as I know, x window can run on framebuffer.
So theoretically gtk can run on ARM.
Птн, 17 Сен 2010, Thomas
I'm running an Android (Samsung G Vibrant) phone. It's also
a linux box, available here in Canada.
Bob
Gilles Kirouac wrote:
On May 25, 2009, Eric Iverson wrote:
We don't currently build a J Engine for that platform (Linux Arm). The next
release will take some steps that will make it easier
On May 25, 2009, Eric Iverson wrote:
We don't currently build a J Engine for that platform (Linux Arm). The next
release will take some steps that will make it easier for us to support a
broader range of platforms in the future.
On Fri, May 22, 2009 at 8:26 AM, Devon McCormick devonmcc at
My current feeling is that using such devices as browsers to a J server
makes more sense than porting and running J locally. I think the potential
usability is much higher, for far less work, and covers a wider range of
devices. Have you tried one with the current Jsoftware JHS. No doubt there
are
We don't currently build a J Engine for that platform (Linux Arm). The next
release will take some steps that will make it easier for us to support a
broader range of platforms in the future.
On Fri, May 22, 2009 at 8:26 AM, Devon McCormick devon...@gmail.com wrote:
These
These (http://www.plugcomputer.org/index.php/home) are small, low-power
devices that run Linux on an ARM-compatible chip.
--
Devon McCormick, CFA
^me^ at acm.
org is my
preferred e-mail
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