Gagendra's right. Get yourself a good armv7 board. There is good support if anything goes wrong and you'll have some drivers to work with if you intend to get things like hardware acceleration working too.
You can do everything from scratch. You'll learn more that way but things may not work as per plan. Raspberry pi's a good board too but armv6 has some problems and people still are trying to get x hardware accelerated. So make it a point to go for armv7 boards. Look at the gooseberry pi too.. On 11/8/12, gajendra khanna <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Shailendra > If budget is not an issue, I would suggest using a Panda or Beagle board > which will allow you all this plus a good community support is there. There > are arm boards also available which will have support. Have you already > chosen a board? > It is best to avoid doing things from scratch. Things don't work out of the > box for supported boards itself. In my opinion, its better to start with > the above boards and move along. > Regards > Gajendra > > -- > Mailing list guidelines and other related articles: > http://lug-iitd.org/Footer > -- Best regards, Varun Priolkar QA Manager, Kernel lead, developer The SuperX project (http://superxos.com Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html Standup with 37200 people against Microsoft's attempt to own the hardware you buy: http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/secure-boot-vs-restricted-boot/statement You use Apple and Microsoft products? Windows users: http://windows7sins.org/ Apple users: http://www.fsf.org/iphone and http://www.fsf.org/blogs/rms/mac-osx-mistakes-and-malfeatures You deserve something amazing and free from restriction, you deserve free software (free not as in beer but as in freedom) "This movement is going to determine what freedoms the next generation of computer users enjoy. At stake is no less than the next generations autonomy" -Benjamin Hill -- Mailing list guidelines and other related articles: http://lug-iitd.org/Footer
