Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-06 Thread janszymanski12345
IMHO, many people will pay a few dollars more for BBB hardware to cover for 
a software professional salary.
Do not let the BBB die.

On Sunday, January 5, 2014 11:35:34 AM UTC+11, William Hermans wrote:

 Personally, I'd rather that TI kept their sticky paws off of the 
 development as much as possible. Watching the SGX/DRM driver progression 
 should be warning enough.


 On Sat, Jan 4, 2014 at 5:24 PM, John Syne jsyn...@us-power.comjavascript:
  wrote:


 From: Anguel anguel@gmail.com javascript:
 Reply-To: beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Date: Saturday, January 4, 2014 at 3:09 PM
 To: beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Cc: jason@hangerhead.com javascript:
 Subject: Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant



 On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:

 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an 
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a 
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with 
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.


 It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this is 
 the way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should 
 support him in every way they can.
 It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So 
 efforts should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working 
 properly, I mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel + 
 stability + Qt, because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop 
 replacement.
 For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste of 
 precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers 
 that the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and 
 will never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.

 Actually, Cloud9 together with DojoToolKit is amazing for developing Web 
 based GUI. Using websockets makes the GUI very responsive.  



 The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so. 
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so. 


 The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen 
 stuff from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke. 
 Then this somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they 
 stayed there. I already discussed this in another thread.

 Use Capacitive based touchscreen. These interface via USB.



 Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-06 Thread William Hermans
So why not just flat out donate right now.  I am sure that you can donate
to someone on this list  that could be trusted to get the money where it
belongs.

After all there is no point in making everyone pay. And yeah this is
starting to sound a bit like closed source stuff, but there is no reason
why everyone has to pay for someones drivers when they do not need them.



On Sun, Jan 5, 2014 at 3:29 PM, janszymanski12...@gmail.com wrote:

 IMHO, many people will pay a few dollars more for BBB hardware to cover
 for a software professional salary.
 Do not let the BBB die.


 On Sunday, January 5, 2014 11:35:34 AM UTC+11, William Hermans wrote:

 Personally, I'd rather that TI kept their sticky paws off of the
 development as much as possible. Watching the SGX/DRM driver progression
 should be warning enough.


 On Sat, Jan 4, 2014 at 5:24 PM, John Syne jsyn...@us-power.com wrote:


 From: Anguel anguel@gmail.com
 Reply-To: beagl...@googlegroups.com

 Date: Saturday, January 4, 2014 at 3:09 PM
 To: beagl...@googlegroups.com
 Cc: jason@hangerhead.com

 Subject: Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant



 On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:

 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.


 It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this is
 the way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should
 support him in every way they can.
 It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So
 efforts should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working
 properly, I mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel +
 stability + Qt, because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop
 replacement.
 For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste
 of precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers
 that the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and
 will never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.

 Actually, Cloud9 together with DojoToolKit is amazing for developing Web
 based GUI. Using websockets makes the GUI very responsive.



 The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so.
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so.


 The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen
 stuff from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke.
 Then this somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they
 stayed there. I already discussed this in another thread.

 Use Capacitive based touchscreen. These interface via USB.



 Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-06 Thread David Anders


On Saturday, January 4, 2014 5:09:53 PM UTC-6, Anguel wrote:



 On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:

 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an 
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a 
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with 
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.


 It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this is 
 the way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should 
 support him in every way they can.
 It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So 
 efforts should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working 
 properly, I mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel + 
 stability + Qt, because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop 
 replacement.
 For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste of 
 precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers 
 that the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and 
 will never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.


just a reminder, TI has nothing to do with BeagleBoard.org other than 
selling Circuitco the chips to manufacture the beagleboard products 
it's circuitco and beagleboard.org that are working with Robert.

Dave

 

 The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so. 
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so. 


 The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen stuff 
 from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke. Then 
 this somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they stayed 
 there. I already discussed this in another thread.

 Anguel


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-06 Thread Micka
But Who ?

I'm willing to pay someone to fix the Jitter problem of the LCD, but who
can fix that ?

I'm also planning to fix that by myself if no one want to do it, I'm not
afraid to put some printk everywhere to find out where is this *** bug ? Do
we know where this problem is situated ? Which driver ?


On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 10:31 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:

 So why not just flat out donate right now.  I am sure that you can donate
 to someone on this list  that could be trusted to get the money where it
 belongs.

 After all there is no point in making everyone pay. And yeah this is
 starting to sound a bit like closed source stuff, but there is no reason
 why everyone has to pay for someones drivers when they do not need them.



 On Sun, Jan 5, 2014 at 3:29 PM, janszymanski12...@gmail.com wrote:

 IMHO, many people will pay a few dollars more for BBB hardware to cover
 for a software professional salary.
 Do not let the BBB die.


 On Sunday, January 5, 2014 11:35:34 AM UTC+11, William Hermans wrote:

 Personally, I'd rather that TI kept their sticky paws off of the
 development as much as possible. Watching the SGX/DRM driver progression
 should be warning enough.


  On Sat, Jan 4, 2014 at 5:24 PM, John Syne jsyn...@us-power.com wrote:


 From: Anguel anguel@gmail.com
 Reply-To: beagl...@googlegroups.com

 Date: Saturday, January 4, 2014 at 3:09 PM
 To: beagl...@googlegroups.com
 Cc: jason@hangerhead.com

 Subject: Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant



 On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:

 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.


 It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this
 is the way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should
 support him in every way they can.
 It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So
 efforts should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working
 properly, I mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel +
 stability + Qt, because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop
 replacement.
 For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste
 of precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers
 that the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and
 will never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.

 Actually, Cloud9 together with DojoToolKit is amazing for developing
 Web based GUI. Using websockets makes the GUI very responsive.



 The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so.
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so.


 The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen
 stuff from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke.
 Then this somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they
 stayed there. I already discussed this in another thread.

 Use Capacitive based touchscreen. These interface via USB.



 Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-04 Thread Jason Kridner
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 4:21 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com wrote:

 A little birdy told me that Angstrom has been abandoned for the BBB ??

I wouldn't say abandoned. If there are things you need fixed, it is
still possible for us to make bug fixes in the image. Also, I haven't
heard anything from Koen that says Angstrom won't continue or won't
continue to support all the Beagles. It is true he's not being paid by
CircuitCo to work on Angstrom for Beagle anymore.


 If this is the case, and seems to be the case as there hasnt been an update
 for the Angstrom image for the BBB for quite some time, and there are still
 a number of issues with LCD CAPES which have not yet been resolved...

Not an official release, but I just checked the site and saw new image
builds as recent as Jan 3.


 What is the 'new' standard distribution for the BBB going to be now?

We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an
out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a
few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with
node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing. You
can already grab Debian test images today. The script to build the
image is at https://github.com/beagleboard/image-builder.


 Us LCD CAPE users are having a hard time getting touch working reliably for
 a wide range of LCD Capes on the market. I know most of us don't know enough
 to fix problems ourselves or know what the problem is actually caused by,
 and we don't know if anyone is working on these issues or if they are being
 ignored or pass over, or if 'the people' who do know what is going on just
 don't have time to look at them etc?

The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into
https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and
https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so.
Github pull requests are the best way to do so.


 Starting to really dislike this whole 'open' community based thing
 especially when there are issues and no one wants to own them. These issues
 have been reported for many months, and we are no further ahead.

Can you be specific?


 Does anyone know of anyone who is working on the LCD CAPE touch issue which
 is a problem on Angstrom (and maybe others which use the same
 driver/source?)

 Terry

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-04 Thread Anguel


On Friday, January 3, 2014 9:57:12 PM UTC+1, John Syne wrote:



 Have you tried Xenomai? I looked at using F28M35C Concerto devices and I 
 always seemed to run out of memory when adding all the pieces I needed such 
 as network stack, security, etc. 


Not yet. I am not that experienced with Linux and find it already 
complicated to get Linux without Xenomai to work on the BBB. So I prefer to 
keep things simple  separated and communicate with my Cortex M3 or M4 via 
USB, SPI, or whatever.

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-04 Thread Anguel


On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:

 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an 
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a 
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with 
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.


It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this is 
the way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should 
support him in every way they can.
It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So efforts 
should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working properly, I 
mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel + stability + Qt, 
because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop replacement.
For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste of 
precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers 
that the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and 
will never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.

The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and 
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so. 
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so. 


The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen stuff 
from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke. Then 
this somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they stayed 
there. I already discussed this in another thread.

Anguel

-- 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-04 Thread John Syne

From:  Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Saturday, January 4, 2014 at 3:09 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Cc:  jason.krid...@hangerhead.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 
 On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:20:07 PM UTC+1, Jason Kridner wrote:
 We are working with Robert Nelson's Debian images to try to produce an
 out-of-box experience on par with the Angstrom images. Once we have a
 few more features in, namely an updated Cloud9 IDE that works with
 node 0.10, then we'll push out a beta image broadly for testing.
 
 It is good news that you are working with Robert on Debian. IMHO this is the
 way to go. Robert is doing so much for the BBB community. TI should support
 him in every way they can.
 It is a fact that BBB developer resources are extremely limited. So efforts
 should really concentrate on getting the serious stuff working properly, I
 mean the basic things a serious developer needs: kernel + stability + Qt,
 because Linux is used for touch GUIs, not as a desktop replacement.
 For me Linux Desktops, Cloud9, USB networking etc. is just a big waste of
 precious development time, unless the intention is to fool new customers that
 the BBB is something easy to use. This is definitely not the case and will
 never be! Just have a look at all the posts in this thread.
Actually, Cloud9 together with DojoToolKit is amazing for developing Web
based GUI. Using websockets makes the GUI very responsive.
 
 
 The LCD Cape vendors should push support for their hardware into
 https://github.com/beagleboard/kernel and
 https://github.com/beagleboard/cape-firmware. CircuitCo does so.
 Github pull requests are the best way to do so.
 
 The problem with touch was that someone ported the ADC / touchscreen stuff
 from an upcoming TI kernel to the 3.8 kernel and some things broke. Then this
 somebody just did not have the time to fix the bugs and they stayed there. I
 already discussed this in another thread.
Use Capacitive based touchscreen. These interface via USB.
 
 
 Anguel
 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-03 Thread John Syne


From:  Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Friday, January 3, 2014 at 2:05 AM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 
 On Friday, January 3, 2014 1:20:58 AM UTC+1, John Syne wrote:
 
 
 Have you looked a qtwayland? I haven¹t got it to work, but it does look
 interesting.
 
 Yes, it seems to be a new lightweight X-Window replacement using QPA in Qt 5.
 Similar to the good old Qt 4 internal lightweight QWS.
 I see Debian has some Wayland packages by default but these probably don't
 work with the setup you have done?
 Sorry for my ignorance, but are you actually installing the TI Graphics SDK on
 top of Robert's Debian? I mean this:
 RootFS: omap-image-builder
 debian-7.2-machinekit-armhf
Hi Anguel,

Yes, I originally built the TI Graphics SDK and installed it on top of
Robert¹s Debian release, but now Robert has kindly added a SGX script which
I can confirm does the same thing.

Regards,
John
 
 
 Anguel
 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-03 Thread Anguel


On Friday, January 3, 2014 8:03:32 PM UTC+1, John Syne wrote:

 Hi Anguel,

 Yes, I originally built the TI Graphics SDK and installed it on top of 
 Robert’s Debian release, but now Robert has kindly added a SGX script which 
 I can confirm does the same thing. 



Sounds good. Today I wrote Robert's Debian 7.3 image to an SD card and 
successfully booted the BBB. Then I installed Debian's qt-sdk (which is Qt 
4.8.2). Qt complained that it cannot find an X Server, so I first tried to 
install xserver-xfbdev (which is advertised as very lightweight) but this 
did not work for some reason. Then I installed LXDE and that worked out 
fine. Haven't tested thoroughly but I suspect that the 3.8.13 kernel in the 
Debian 7.3 image does not have 3D accelleration.

Of course the native compilation, even at application level, takes a long 
time on the BBB. And I am still not sure which is the recommended way to 
cross-compile Qt apps on the BBB.

If I have some time I will also have a look at Qt 5 with TI's Graphics SDK. 
I think Qt is very important for the BBB and is required by many people. 
For non-GUI tasks where fast response times are needed I still prefer a 
Cortex M3 or M4 at bare-metal level :)

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-03 Thread William Hermans
Robert, so . . . still no cape support, and I at least need I2C, SPI UART,
and possibly a few other things ( definitely standard GPIO ). Would
enabling these features be a major undertaking, or would someone such as
myself who is new to embedded Linux be able to work out the wrinkles ?

I'd be willing to give it a shot either way, but I would need some guidance
as how to proceed.


On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 1:57 PM, John Syne jsyne...@us-power.com wrote:

 From: Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
 Reply-To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Date: Friday, January 3, 2014 at 12:41 PM

 To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant



 On Friday, January 3, 2014 8:03:32 PM UTC+1, John Syne wrote:

 Hi Anguel,

 Yes, I originally built the TI Graphics SDK and installed it on top of
 Robert’s Debian release, but now Robert has kindly added a SGX script which
 I can confirm does the same thing.



 Sounds good. Today I wrote Robert's Debian 7.3 image to an SD card and
 successfully booted the BBB. Then I installed Debian's qt-sdk (which is Qt
 4.8.2). Qt complained that it cannot find an X Server, so I first tried to
 install xserver-xfbdev (which is advertised as very lightweight) but this
 did not work for some reason. Then I installed LXDE and that worked out
 fine. Haven't tested thoroughly but I suspect that the 3.8.13 kernel in the
 Debian 7.3 image does not have 3D accelleration.

 When you install SGX, you have 3D acceleration. The 3D examples are under
 /opt. To run the QT app, I use the –platform eglfs.



 Of course the native compilation, even at application level, takes a long
 time on the BBB. And I am still not sure which is the recommended way to
 cross-compile Qt apps on the BBB.

 If I have some time I will also have a look at Qt 5 with TI's Graphics
 SDK. I think Qt is very important for the BBB and is required by many
 people. For non-GUI tasks where fast response times are needed I still
 prefer a Cortex M3 or M4 at bare-metal level :)

 Have you tried Xenomai? I looked at using F28M35C Concerto devices and I
 always seemed to run out of memory when adding all the pieces I needed such
 as network stack, security, etc.



 Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-03 Thread Robert Nelson
On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 4:33 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:
 Robert, I would not mind helping out, if I can, I just do not know where to
 start. Actual testing, I would think you'd want some one familiar with a
 scope / LA, and that person is not me. YET.

 Pretty much what I need in the end is all UARTs, all I2C, and all SPI
 enabled. My buddy and I have a project that uses every single last pin, and
 then some . . . but anyhow I would like to help If i can. My own motivation
 would be to get what I want, and the benefit to the community would be every
 one gets to use whatever I put together.

if you guys can write up spreadsheet with what pins you need that will
be great..

So far what i've done with rscm was the result of beer  new years. ;)

My current goal, default dts setup for:
http://elinux.org/Basic_Proto_Cape

Out of the box.

Then we can dynamically patch what we can into it.. So far this is
just i2c/uart.. (have a wip spi enable, but it locks up..)

Then a minimal dts (aka no hdmi), then we can patch a lot more into..

Finally a discrete dts for capes that can't be patched for above..

So that's the plan, and in 13mins i'll be away from keyboard till
sunday..  so maybe next week .;)

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-03 Thread William Hermans
Yeah no big hurry. I have a PIN out file i think and if not I have a PDF of
the schematic, which will take me a while to put that into a file. So yeah
will be a few days at least before I can get to that anyhow.


On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 3:47 PM, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 4:33 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:
  Robert, I would not mind helping out, if I can, I just do not know where
 to
  start. Actual testing, I would think you'd want some one familiar with a
  scope / LA, and that person is not me. YET.
 
  Pretty much what I need in the end is all UARTs, all I2C, and all SPI
  enabled. My buddy and I have a project that uses every single last pin,
 and
  then some . . . but anyhow I would like to help If i can. My own
 motivation
  would be to get what I want, and the benefit to the community would be
 every
  one gets to use whatever I put together.

 if you guys can write up spreadsheet with what pins you need that will
 be great..

 So far what i've done with rscm was the result of beer  new years. ;)

 My current goal, default dts setup for:
 http://elinux.org/Basic_Proto_Cape

 Out of the box.

 Then we can dynamically patch what we can into it.. So far this is
 just i2c/uart.. (have a wip spi enable, but it locks up..)

 Then a minimal dts (aka no hdmi), then we can patch a lot more into..

 Finally a discrete dts for capes that can't be patched for above..

 So that's the plan, and in 13mins i'll be away from keyboard till
 sunday..  so maybe next week .;)

 Regards,

 --
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 http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread cwrseckford

When I first got a BBB around the middle of 2013 it took me a week to sort 
out a working device tree compiler; that's now a straight download from 
Robert Nelson's site; and there are a lot of other improvements.  However, 
the BBB software isn't really stable enough for the long-term, albeit 
hobbyist, data logging I planned to use it for.  Perhaps it will be in 
future, but not now.

It would have been better if CircuitCo had increased the BBB price by ten 
dollars or so, still an astounding bargain, and hired someone to develop 
the software.

Will

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel

On Thursday, January 2, 2014 1:08:25 AM UTC+1, David wrote:

  Well said William! Initially, I adopted Angstrom as it seemed to be the 
 official way that the Beagle community was heading. About a month, 
 however, ago I felt that Angstrom was not meeting my needs as far as 
 stability and support, so I changed to Debian. No big deal. It only took 
 a day or two, with some kind help from Robert Nelson. I have not regretted 
 the change.


David, do you know if USB gadget support (g_multi) is working on Debian as 
it does on Angstrom? Also, I experience some strange USB problems with 
latest libusb(x) when doing asynchronous USB transfers in parallel. These 
problems are not present on my desktop's Ubuntu nor on my Windows PC, only 
on the BBB. Will try a newer kernel these days.

Regards,
Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 1:31 PM, Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 1:08:25 AM UTC+1, David wrote:

 Well said William! Initially, I adopted Angstrom as it seemed to be the
 official way that the Beagle community was heading. About a month,
 however, ago I felt that Angstrom was not meeting my needs as far as
 stability and support, so I changed to Debian. No big deal. It only took a
 day or two, with some kind help from Robert Nelson. I have not regretted the
 change.


 David, do you know if USB gadget support (g_multi) is working on Debian as
 it does on Angstrom? Also, I experience some strange USB problems with
 latest libusb(x) when doing asynchronous USB transfers in parallel. These
 problems are not present on my desktop's Ubuntu nor on my Windows PC, only
 on the BBB. Will try a newer kernel these days.

Yes, I set it up that way on debian/ubuntu to mirror Angstrom..

As long as you aren't using any capes.. (i do give you uart/i2c/spidev
options at the moment..) you can also try the v3.13-rc6 based kernel..

Regards,

-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel


On Thursday, January 2, 2014 8:35:49 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:

  David, do you know if USB gadget support (g_multi) is working on Debian 
 as 
  it does on Angstrom? Also, I experience some strange USB problems with 
  latest libusb(x) when doing asynchronous USB transfers in parallel. 
 These 
  problems are not present on my desktop's Ubuntu nor on my Windows PC, 
 only 
  on the BBB. Will try a newer kernel these days. 

 Yes, I set it up that way on debian/ubuntu to mirror Angstrom.. 

 As long as you aren't using any capes.. (i do give you uart/i2c/spidev 
 options at the moment..) you can also try the v3.13-rc6 based kernel.. 



Sounds great! Thanks!

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread William Hermans
Robert, so 3.12.x is done then ?


On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 12:48 PM, Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com wrote:



 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 8:35:49 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:

  David, do you know if USB gadget support (g_multi) is working on Debian
 as
  it does on Angstrom? Also, I experience some strange USB problems with
  latest libusb(x) when doing asynchronous USB transfers in parallel.
 These
  problems are not present on my desktop's Ubuntu nor on my Windows PC,
 only
  on the BBB. Will try a newer kernel these days.

 Yes, I set it up that way on debian/ubuntu to mirror Angstrom..

 As long as you aren't using any capes.. (i do give you uart/i2c/spidev
 options at the moment..) you can also try the v3.13-rc6 based kernel..



 Sounds great! Thanks!

 Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 3:03 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:
 Robert, so 3.12.x is done then ?

I'm personally done with it. ;)  If someone wants to keep it going for
rt/xenomai... Or they want to port the 2000+ patches from the ti
3.12 kernel bsp...

idk... ignoring the capes, more things work on mainline now and i have
a few patches i'm getting ready to push to 3.14..

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 3:13 PM, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 3:03 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:
 Robert, so 3.12.x is done then ?

 I'm personally done with it. ;)  If someone wants to keep it going for
 rt/xenomai... Or they want to port the 2000+ patches from the ti
 3.12 kernel bsp...

ps: i'm tracking the bsp with this script:

https://github.com/RobertCNelson/ti-linux-kernel

ti-linux-3.12.y branch

suspend works.. ;)

http://paste.debian.net/73848/

http://paste.debian.net/73849/

current from 0.29A - 0.04A

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel
Just one question: Is there any particular reason to choose Debian over 
Ubuntu or the other way around?
Also, should I use Debian on my host when planing to use it on the BBB?

Thanks in advance.

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 4:17 PM, Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com wrote:
 Just one question: Is there any particular reason to choose Debian over
 Ubuntu or the other way around?
 Also, should I use Debian on my host when planing to use it on the BBB?

In general, Debian developers are just easier to work with... ;)

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel


On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:26:15 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:


 In general, Debian developers are just easier to work with... ;) 


That's an argument :) Convinced :)
BTW, are there any known issues cross-compiling Qt4-Embedded on Debian?

Anguel


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 4:35 PM, Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com wrote:


 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:26:15 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:


 In general, Debian developers are just easier to work with... ;)


 That's an argument :) Convinced :)
 BTW, are there any known issues cross-compiling Qt4-Embedded on Debian?

I usually stay away from gui's...

John has a good thread on qt 5.1.1

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!category-topic/beagleboard/vw_ZQoq1QNM

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread John Syne
From:  Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Thursday, January 2, 2014 at 2:35 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 
 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:26:15 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:
 
 In general, Debian developers are just easier to work with... ;)
 
 That's an argument :) Convinced :)
 BTW, are there any known issues cross-compiling Qt4-Embedded on Debian?
Hi Anguel,

Do you have any references referring to this problem? I¹m using QT5.1.1 and
it seems to work just fine.

Regards,
John
 
 
 Anguel
 
 
 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel


On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:37:58 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:
 

 I usually stay away from gui's... 


Yes, but sometiomes they are needed :( By using the embedded version of Qt 
4.8 I can do without a window manager. On Angstrom I could easily build an 
embedded cross-toolchain with Qt.
 


 John has a good thread on qt 5.1.1 

 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!category-topic/beagleboard/vw_ZQoq1QNM 


Thanks, will have a look at it, although it looks like he does native 
compilation on the BBB :( Is quemubuilder an option? I have no idea as I 
just used a cross-compiler so far.

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Anguel


On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:48:24 PM UTC+1, John Syne wrote:

 From: Anguel anguel@gmail.com javascript:
 Reply-To: beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Date: Thursday, January 2, 2014 at 2:35 PM
 To: beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 Subject: Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 That's an argument :) Convinced :)
 BTW, are there any known issues cross-compiling Qt4-Embedded on Debian?

 Hi Anguel,

 Do you have any references referring to this problem? I’m using QT5.1.1 
 and it seems to work just fine. 


No, just asking because I read that there is no qt4-embedded package on 
Debian.

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread Robert Nelson
 No, just asking because I read that there is no qt4-embedded package on
 Debian.

The full qt4 is available thou. :)

Regards,

-- 
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http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread David Lambert

On 01/02/2014 05:00 PM, Robert Nelson wrote:

No, just asking because I read that there is no qt4-embedded package on
Debian.

The full qt4 is available thou. :)
As a recent convert to Debian on the BBB. I am pleased to find the 
full versions of applications. With specifically embedded 
distributions I found it irksome to have cut-down busybox versions of 
programs such as less. The BBB has plenty of memory and CPU cycles to 
handle the full versions. Progress is great, but sometimes confusing ;-) .



Regards,

Dave.


Regards,



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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread John Syne

From:  Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Thursday, January 2, 2014 at 2:53 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 
 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:37:58 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:
  
 I usually stay away from gui's...
 
 Yes, but sometiomes they are needed :( By using the embedded version of Qt 4.8
 I can do without a window manager. On Angstrom I could easily build an
 embedded cross-toolchain with Qt.
  
 
 John has a good thread on qt 5.1.1
 
 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!category-topic/beagleboard/vw_ZQoq1QNM
 
 Thanks, will have a look at it, although it looks like he does native
 compilation on the BBB :( Is quemubuilder an option? I have no idea as I just
 used a cross-compiler so far.
Hi Anguel,

I¹m confused. Are you talking about cross compiling the QT framework for
Debian or are you talking about cross compiling QT apps? I tried to cross
compile QT for the BBB, but I kept getting some strange error which seems to
relate to the incompatible compiler used on the BBB and the version used on
my host. BBB used Linaro GCC compiler V4.6 and my host was using v4.7. This
shouldn¹t have been an issue, but I just found it easier to build it
natively on the BBB.

Cross compiling QT apps for Debian is no problem.

Regards,
John
 
 
 Anguel
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-02 Thread John Syne

From:  Anguel anguel.stan...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Thursday, January 2, 2014 at 2:53 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 
 On Thursday, January 2, 2014 11:37:58 PM UTC+1, RobertCNelson wrote:
  
 I usually stay away from gui's...
 
 Yes, but sometiomes they are needed :( By using the embedded version of Qt 4.8
 I can do without a window manager. On Angstrom I could easily build an
 embedded cross-toolchain with Qt.
Have you looked a qtwayland? I haven¹t got it to work, but it does look
interesting.
 
  
 
 John has a good thread on qt 5.1.1
 
 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!category-topic/beagleboard/vw_ZQoq1QNM
 
 Thanks, will have a look at it, although it looks like he does native
 compilation on the BBB :( Is quemubuilder an option? I have no idea as I just
 used a cross-compiler so far.
 
 Anguel
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread Anguel


On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 1:37:02 PM UTC+1, Elena Grandi wrote:

 This theory has a problem: Beagleboard.org was born in 2008 or so, 
 much earlier than the Raspberry (which started to be known to the 
 public in 2011, and was available in 2012). 


Ok, I admit I am not much aware of the way Beagleboard.org worked before 
the lower-cost Beaglebones were introduced, but it has always been driven 
by marketing, initially aimed at colleges, according to Wikipedia.
I just want to make clear that big companies don't do anything without 
profit.

 


 Of course the success of the Raspberry did influence BB.org's 
 products: back in 2008 the standard price for this kind of 
 boards was around 150$ (e.g. the original BeagleBoard) and it had been 
 slowly coming down to just below 100$ (e.g. the BeagleBone White): 
 it was Raspberry and its extreme corner cutting that brought 
 prices down below 50$, and other producers had to adapt their offerings. 


I totally agree. Nobody would buy a BBB for $150 when you can get a 
Raspberry Pi. But prices of other HW components have probably also dropped 
significantly since the old days.

Anguel

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread APRichelieu


Den onsdagen den 1:e januari 2014 kl. 13:13:55 UTC+1 skrev Anguel:

 Happy New Year everybody!

 Well, reading all those comments here about non-profit and break-even 
 calculations my theory is the following:

 On the other hand it is very interesting for me to know how much this 
 non-profit scheme spends for advertising and marketing, I bet it is a 
 very different number in contrast to the money spent for actual Beaglebone 
 HW + SW development. Talking about all this non-profit stuff people 
 overlook the fact that the Beaglebone is actually a very effective large 
 marketing machine working for TI and its Linux processors. Just look at all 
 the articles about the Beaglebones, all the Google Adwords and other 
 advertising in magazines you see around, people wrinting in forums, 
 spending time to make YouTube videos just push TI popularity + sales for 
 free and they do it better than any internal marketing department. Also, I 
 still don't get it why TI should make less money when 100.000 BBBs are sold 
 than they do when selling large quantities of a Linux MCU to a big 
 company...


TI probably have a significant number of projects which has 100ku volume or 
more, which does not require special support.
If on average each customer buys 10 boards and files 1 request to TI 
support, then definitely it is more expensive
than a single customer which buys 100,000 chips.
If the chip is $5 and the profit margin is 50%, then they earn $25 per 
customer.
If an engineer costing $100/hour is spending 15 minutes on answering that 
question, then 100% of the profit is used up.
Simple math.


 Unfortunately, as we know, the marketing concept did not work as well as 
 expected: The only SW developer at Beagleboard.org decided to choose the 
 niche Angstrom Linux for some reason. For Angstrom there was no community, 
 no existing docs or books, no forums you could find any questions answered. 



Angstrom is the OpenEmbedded/Yocto project repackaged.
 There are two mailing lists for Angstrom, but the main activity is the 
OpenEmbedded mailing lists.
The core OpenEmbedded project is not concerned with the BSP for specific 
parts,
but the semiconductor companies involved with embedded linux.  
(I.E: Intel, TI, Freescale and Atmel) all are making Yocto the recommended
way to build a BSP.
The toolchain used by Angstrom/OpenEmbedded is the Linaro toochain which is 
funded
by most major mobile phone developers.

I think you should check facts before rarting.
 

 So developers not only had to know Linux at bare-metal level but they also 
 had to learn complex OpenEmbedded and spend too much time to get simple 
 things done in the Angstrom way, if they did not give up immediately. So 
 nobody really contributed anything to Angstrom Beaglebone development. 


The way it works is that peiople contribute to the OpenEmbedded/Yocto 
project and then the people behine Angstrom 
(which incidently are the core people behind OpenEmbedded) make a snapshot 
which is available in a branch in the
Angstrom Distribution. The default branch is Yocto 1.3 compliant, but there 
are Yocto 1,4 and 1.5 versions available as well.
 

 Another problem was the fact, that TI did not even succeed to deliver a 
 proper kernel with working drivers to the community at that time. They also 
 sticked to their parallel Arago (EZSDK) project instead of working together 
 with the community and Angstrom (Angstrom is a real celebrity in contrast 
 to Arago). Additionally, at this time Linus Torvalds decided to force 
 developers to move to device tree. This was another very huge problem that 
 still has not been solved completely.

 Which is totally unrelated to the choice Angstrom and/or Debian.
 

 Reagardless of the problems above, people continued to buy the BBB because 
 it is cheap and advertisements suggested it was easy to use. Development 
 boards are a nice business for any manufacturer because everything is 
 expected to be done by the developer (who is always the one who causes the 
 problem) and there are no warranties at all.



 

 So it looks now that TI / Beagleboard / CircuitCo try to correct the 
 Angstrom concept by moving to Debian, probably again without investing in 
 development. If the community will suddenly become as engaded as with the 
 Raspberry Pi is a different question. But at least they would not have to 
 rely on one single Angstrom developer to solve all their problems.


Moving to Debian will not solve any kernel problems.
It certainly will not solve problems with capes or any other beaglebone 
specific stuff, 
without extra development.

No sane company expecting to deliver significant volyme would choose a 
development board 
based on a part which cannot be purchased, so I expect that they will 
continue to sell a lot.

Ulf
 

 Anguel



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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread David Anders


On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 6:55:38 AM UTC-6, Anguel wrote:



 On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 1:37:02 PM UTC+1, Elena Grandi wrote:

 This theory has a problem: Beagleboard.org was born in 2008 or so, 
 much earlier than the Raspberry (which started to be known to the 
 public in 2011, and was available in 2012). 


 Ok, I admit I am not much aware of the way Beagleboard.org worked before 
 the lower-cost Beaglebones were introduced, but it has always been driven 
 by marketing, initially aimed at colleges, according to Wikipedia.
 I just want to make clear that big companies don't do anything without 
 profit.


here is the thing: TI has nothing to do with beagleboard.org other than 
they sell the processors to circuitco to make the boards - that's it.

have a quick read - http://beagleboard.org/about
 

  


 Of course the success of the Raspberry did influence BB.org's 
 products: back in 2008 the standard price for this kind of 
 boards was around 150$ (e.g. the original BeagleBoard) and it had been 
 slowly coming down to just below 100$ (e.g. the BeagleBone White): 
 it was Raspberry and its extreme corner cutting that brought 
 prices down below 50$, and other producers had to adapt their offerings. 


 I totally agree. Nobody would buy a BBB for $150 when you can get a 
 Raspberry Pi. But prices of other HW components have probably also dropped 
 significantly since the old days.


here is the thing: in 2007 when beagleboard was started, the only other 
open hardware platform that was available was the arduino. the idea of an 
open hardware platform was very new. in addition in 2007 you could not 
purchase an arm development platform for less than $1000USD! beagleboard 
was the FIRST arm development platform that cost less than $200 and it was 
the FIRST arm open hardware platform 

so beagleboard has been and always will be the driving force for low 
cost open hardware platforms...


Dave
 

 Anguel


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread Hugh Johnson
 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?
 
 Gerald

Yes. 

Thanks,
Hugh Johnson

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread William Hermans
You know what I find funny ?

That here is one hell of a piece of hardware ( complete system ), that
costs $45( very good price ), that works very well if you're willing to
spend some time working on it ( software ). And all a bunch of people on
this list can do is complain, find conspiracy theories, or otherwise just
try to find something wrong with it or the situation.

There is *NOTHING* better out there right now as a learning platform.
PERIOD. In fact, not only is it a very good learning platform, there are
people I know for a fact who use MANY of these in commercial type
applications. I have talked to 1-2 people who claimed to have purchased 100
or more of these, and have talked with several people who have over 10.
Here, we own 2, and eventually we will probably own many more.

Is the BBB perfect ? Well that is debatable, and really depends on your
needs, but I would say no. Nothing ever is. But for the price, there really
is nothing to complain about. Now if you're incapable of working with the
hardware to make it do what you want. You know what, that is your own
fault. Compulsive buyer is probably how I would initially label these
types. These people can try and twist words from this source and that, but
the truth of the matter is that this system is a learning platform, with
very good potential. *IF YOU'RE WILLING TO WORK AT IT. *Or does every one
else here think we're able to have a complete Dell like support situation
for $45 ? Right . . . keep dreaming.

Now if these people would come on the list asking for help stating that
x-y-z does not work with x-y-z platform, using x-y-z software etc. Many
people would offer to try and help, even myself. But the same situation
with the exception of complaining about it, pointing fingers, trying to
find conspiracy . . . yeah I have absolutely zero sympathy. You know what
else, I have no idea who works for TI (still ? ), who does not, and what
the motivation is for this project for ANY of the companies involved. Go
out, take the schematics / gerber files etc. Send them off to some PCB fab
company, and TRY to have even just the PCB's made for the same price as
what circuitco sells the PCBA for . . . Gratitude for ya . . .

Now to the guy talking about the Cortex M3 MCU's, and how they seemingly
went out of production overnight. If you had paid attention to the errata
for these processors in the first place you never would have thought about
using it. Not for anything serious anyway. TI replaced these with Cortex
M4's very quickly, not to mention there are other Cortex equivalents (
geared towards safety, automotive etc. ).

Anyway, I need to stop as I am starting to scare myself by sounding too
much like a TI Evangelist ( which I am not) But some of you seriously need
to wake up to a  fresh cup of reality.


On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 1:11 PM, David Anders danders@gmail.com wrote:



 On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 6:55:38 AM UTC-6, Anguel wrote:



 On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 1:37:02 PM UTC+1, Elena Grandi wrote:

 This theory has a problem: Beagleboard.org was born in 2008 or so,
 much earlier than the Raspberry (which started to be known to the
 public in 2011, and was available in 2012).


 Ok, I admit I am not much aware of the way Beagleboard.org worked before
 the lower-cost Beaglebones were introduced, but it has always been driven
 by marketing, initially aimed at colleges, according to Wikipedia.
 I just want to make clear that big companies don't do anything without
 profit.


 here is the thing: TI has nothing to do with beagleboard.org other than
 they sell the processors to circuitco to make the boards - that's it.

 have a quick read - http://beagleboard.org/about





 Of course the success of the Raspberry did influence BB.org's
 products: back in 2008 the standard price for this kind of
 boards was around 150$ (e.g. the original BeagleBoard) and it had been
 slowly coming down to just below 100$ (e.g. the BeagleBone White):
 it was Raspberry and its extreme corner cutting that brought
 prices down below 50$, and other producers had to adapt their offerings.


 I totally agree. Nobody would buy a BBB for $150 when you can get a
 Raspberry Pi. But prices of other HW components have probably also dropped
 significantly since the old days.


 here is the thing: in 2007 when beagleboard was started, the only other
 open hardware platform that was available was the arduino. the idea of an
 open hardware platform was very new. in addition in 2007 you could not
 purchase an arm development platform for less than $1000USD! beagleboard
 was the FIRST arm development platform that cost less than $200 and it was
 the FIRST arm open hardware platform

 so beagleboard has been and always will be the driving force for low
 cost open hardware platforms...


 Dave


 Anguel

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 ---
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 BeagleBoard group.
 To 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread David Lambert
Well said William! Initially, I adopted Angstrom as it seemed to be the 
official way that the Beagle community was heading. About a month, 
however, ago I felt that Angstrom was not meeting my needs as far as 
stability and support, so I changed to Debian. No big deal. It only 
took a day or two, with some kind help from Robert Nelson. I have not 
regretted the change. Over the past few years, I have used Snapgear, 
uCLinux, Buildroot, as appropriate. IMHO developing embedded systems 
requires me to have some flexibility to go with the flow, and not to get 
too upset if the flavor of the month changes from my favorite. My 
experience with the Beagleboards has been generally very positive, and I 
have learned to live with the few wrinkles I have found.


Nuff said. Happy New Year to all.


Dave.

On 01/01/2014 03:42 PM, William Hermans wrote:

You know what I find funny ?

That here is one hell of a piece of hardware ( complete system ), that 
costs $45( very good price ), that works very well if you're willing 
to spend some time working on it ( software ). And all a bunch of 
people on this list can do is complain, find conspiracy theories, or 
otherwise just try to find something wrong with it or the situation.


There is *NOTHING* better out there right now as a learning platform. 
PERIOD. In fact, not only is it a very good learning platform, there 
are people I know for a fact who use MANY of these in commercial type 
applications. I have talked to 1-2 people who claimed to have 
purchased 100 or more of these, and have talked with several people 
who have over 10. Here, we own 2, and eventually we will probably own 
many more.


Is the BBB perfect ? Well that is debatable, and really depends on 
your needs, but I would say no. Nothing ever is. But for the price, 
there really is nothing to complain about. Now if you're incapable of 
working with the hardware to make it do what you want. You know what, 
that is your own fault. Compulsive buyer is probably how I would 
initially label these types. These people can try and twist words from 
this source and that, but the truth of the matter is that this system 
is a learning platform, with very good potential. *IF YOU'RE WILLING 
TO WORK AT IT. *Or does every one else here think we're able to have a 
complete Dell like support situation for $45 ? Right . . . keep dreaming.


Now if these people would come on the list asking for help stating 
that x-y-z does not work with x-y-z platform, using x-y-z software 
etc. Many people would offer to try and help, even myself. But the 
same situation with the exception of complaining about it, pointing 
fingers, trying to find conspiracy . . . yeah I have absolutely zero 
sympathy. You know what else, I have no idea who works for TI (still ? 
), who does not, and what the motivation is for this project for ANY 
of the companies involved. Go out, take the schematics / gerber files 
etc. Send them off to some PCB fab company, and TRY to have even just 
the PCB's made for the same price as what circuitco sells the PCBA for 
. . . Gratitude for ya . . .


Now to the guy talking about the Cortex M3 MCU's, and how they 
seemingly went out of production overnight. If you had paid attention 
to the errata for these processors in the first place you never would 
have thought about using it. Not for anything serious anyway. TI 
replaced these with Cortex M4's very quickly, not to mention there are 
other Cortex equivalents ( geared towards safety, automotive etc. ).


Anyway, I need to stop as I am starting to scare myself by sounding 
too much like a TI Evangelist ( which I am not) But some of you 
seriously need to wake up to a  fresh cup of reality.



On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 1:11 PM, David Anders danders@gmail.com 
mailto:danders@gmail.com wrote:




On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 6:55:38 AM UTC-6, Anguel wrote:



On Wednesday, January 1, 2014 1:37:02 PM UTC+1, Elena Grandi
wrote:

This theory has a problem: Beagleboard.org was born in
2008 or so,
much earlier than the Raspberry (which started to be known
to the
public in 2011, and was available in 2012).


Ok, I admit I am not much aware of the way Beagleboard.org
worked before the lower-cost Beaglebones were introduced, but
it has always been driven by marketing, initially aimed at
colleges, according to Wikipedia.
I just want to make clear that big companies don't do anything
without profit.


here is the thing: TI has nothing to do with beagleboard.org
http://beagleboard.org other than they sell the processors to
circuitco to make the boards - that's it.

have a quick read - http://beagleboard.org/about


Of course the success of the Raspberry did influence BB.org's
products: back in 2008 the standard price for this kind of
boards was around 150$ (e.g. the original BeagleBoard) 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread Terry Storm
What is funny is that it still seems to be expected that everyone who buys 
a BBB should be required to have the capability to make it work correctly. 
Your argument is valid but still only for a small proportion of buyers. 
Think of all the people out there who have brought a BBB to maybe be a step 
up from their Arduino. They have never used linux etc, its a hell of a 
learning curve.

It find it hard to believe that it should be expected that everyone who 
buys a BBB should have had at least (say) 5 years of linux experience 
before they even consider buying one. This is targeted at a wide range of 
users, which includes hobbyists who have never touch embedded development 
boards before. The price of the BBB is irrelevant. What is relevant is 
there are a ton of people stuck, and a bunch of experienced linux people 
who are capable of fixing issues and making the BBB work as they require, 
slagging of everyone else who is not capable and saying they shouldn't have 
purchased in the first place. Or that all these inexperienced users should 
harden up and take a concrete pill and figure it out themselves.

Ridiculous.

Swap places and see how far you get.

Making GPIO do things, writing basic application code etc, basically 
turning a BBB into a glorified Arduino, no problem for most people and that 
is something that can easily be learnt. Rewriting kernels and drivers so 
supplied hardware even works, this is a problem for most people. Bringing 
up a discussion to talk about this, how this constitutes as whining or 
complaining, I don't know.

This topic has gone way off topic anyway.

End of the day we have great hardware, no one is complaining about that. 
End of the day we have crap supporting software and now it seems no 
official (paid) developers, and issues relating to kernels which most users 
are not capable of fixing or understanding themselves. This is what we are 
talking about.

Terry.

On Thursday, 2 January 2014 10:42:29 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 You know what I find funny ?

 That here is one hell of a piece of hardware ( complete system ), that 
 costs $45( very good price ), that works very well if you're willing to 
 spend some time working on it ( software ). And all a bunch of people on 
 this list can do is complain, find conspiracy theories, or otherwise just 
 try to find something wrong with it or the situation. 

 There is *NOTHING* better out there right now as a learning platform. 
 PERIOD. In fact, not only is it a very good learning platform, there are 
 people I know for a fact who use MANY of these in commercial type 
 applications. I have talked to 1-2 people who claimed to have purchased 100 
 or more of these, and have talked with several people who have over 10. 
 Here, we own 2, and eventually we will probably own many more.

 Is the BBB perfect ? Well that is debatable, and really depends on your 
 needs, but I would say no. Nothing ever is. But for the price, there really 
 is nothing to complain about. Now if you're incapable of working with the 
 hardware to make it do what you want. You know what, that is your own 
 fault. Compulsive buyer is probably how I would initially label these 
 types. These people can try and twist words from this source and that, but 
 the truth of the matter is that this system is a learning platform, with 
 very good potential. *IF YOU'RE WILLING TO WORK AT IT. *Or does every one 
 else here think we're able to have a complete Dell like support situation 
 for $45 ? Right . . . keep dreaming.

 Now if these people would come on the list asking for help stating that 
 x-y-z does not work with x-y-z platform, using x-y-z software etc. Many 
 people would offer to try and help, even myself. But the same situation 
 with the exception of complaining about it, pointing fingers, trying to 
 find conspiracy . . . yeah I have absolutely zero sympathy. You know what 
 else, I have no idea who works for TI (still ? ), who does not, and what 
 the motivation is for this project for ANY of the companies involved. Go 
 out, take the schematics / gerber files etc. Send them off to some PCB fab 
 company, and TRY to have even just the PCB's made for the same price as 
 what circuitco sells the PCBA for . . . Gratitude for ya . . .

 Now to the guy talking about the Cortex M3 MCU's, and how they seemingly 
 went out of production overnight. If you had paid attention to the errata 
 for these processors in the first place you never would have thought about 
 using it. Not for anything serious anyway. TI replaced these with Cortex 
 M4's very quickly, not to mention there are other Cortex equivalents ( 
 geared towards safety, automotive etc. ).

 Anyway, I need to stop as I am starting to scare myself by sounding too 
 much like a TI Evangelist ( which I am not) But some of you seriously need 
 to wake up to a  fresh cup of reality.


 On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 1:11 PM, David Anders dande...@gmail.comjavascript:
  wrote:



 On Wednesday, January 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2014-01-01 Thread John Syne

From:  Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Wednesday, January 1, 2014 at 7:05 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 What is funny is that it still seems to be expected that everyone who buys a
 BBB should be required to have the capability to make it work correctly. Your
 argument is valid but still only for a small proportion of buyers. Think of
 all the people out there who have brought a BBB to maybe be a step up from
 their Arduino. They have never used linux etc, its a hell of a learning curve.
 
 It find it hard to believe that it should be expected that everyone who buys a
 BBB should have had at least (say) 5 years of linux experience before they
 even consider buying one. This is targeted at a wide range of users, which
 includes hobbyists who have never touch embedded development boards before.
 The price of the BBB is irrelevant. What is relevant is there are a ton of
 people stuck, and a bunch of experienced linux people who are capable of
 fixing issues and making the BBB work as they require, slagging of everyone
 else who is not capable and saying they shouldn't have purchased in the first
 place. Or that all these inexperienced users should harden up and take a
 concrete pill and figure it out themselves.
 
 Ridiculous.
 
 Swap places and see how far you get.
 
 Making GPIO do things, writing basic application code etc, basically turning a
 BBB into a glorified Arduino, no problem for most people and that is something
 that can easily be learnt. Rewriting kernels and drivers so supplied hardware
 even works, this is a problem for most people. Bringing up a discussion to
 talk about this, how this constitutes as whining or complaining, I don't know.
 
 This topic has gone way off topic anyway.
 
 End of the day we have great hardware, no one is complaining about that. End
 of the day we have crap supporting software and now it seems no official
 (paid) developers, and issues relating to kernels which most users are not
 capable of fixing or understanding themselves. This is what we are talking
 about.
Terry,

I don¹t know why you keep on going here. As I said before, use Linux Kernel
V3.2 and everything will work as you expect. New users shouldn't use Linux
Kernel V3.8 or V3.12 because this is bleeding edge and they don¹t have the
experience to work around some of the missing features. There is no ³crap
supporting software², so please stop saying this. You are completely wrong
and you don¹t know what you are talking about. You need to read and
understand what open source software is all about. Understand what the Linux
Kernel version numbers mean and stick to stable releases with long term
support. Don¹t use the latest Linux kernel which is still work in progress
and isn¹t meant to be free of errors or full featured.

Regards,
John 
 
 Terry.
 
 On Thursday, 2 January 2014 10:42:29 UTC+13, William Hermans  wrote:
 You know what I find funny ?
 
 That here is one hell of a piece of hardware ( complete system ), that costs
 $45( very good price ), that works very well if you're willing to spend some
 time working on it ( software ). And all a bunch of people on this list can
 do is complain, find conspiracy theories, or otherwise just try to find
 something wrong with it or the situation.
 
 There is *NOTHING* better out there right now as a learning platform. PERIOD.
 In fact, not only is it a very good learning platform, there are people I
 know for a fact who use MANY of these in commercial type applications. I have
 talked to 1-2 people who claimed to have purchased 100 or more of these, and
 have talked with several people who have over 10. Here, we own 2, and
 eventually we will probably own many more.
 
 Is the BBB perfect ? Well that is debatable, and really depends on your
 needs, but I would say no. Nothing ever is. But for the price, there really
 is nothing to complain about. Now if you're incapable of working with the
 hardware to make it do what you want. You know what, that is your own fault.
 Compulsive buyer is probably how I would initially label these types. These
 people can try and twist words from this source and that, but the truth of
 the matter is that this system is a learning platform, with very good
 potential. IF YOU'RE WILLING TO WORK AT IT. Or does every one else here think
 we're able to have a complete Dell like support situation for $45 ? Right . .
 . keep dreaming.
 
 Now if these people would come on the list asking for help stating that x-y-z
 does not work with x-y-z platform, using x-y-z software etc. Many people
 would offer to try and help, even myself. But the same situation with the
 exception of complaining about it, pointing fingers, trying to find
 conspiracy . . . yeah I have absolutely zero sympathy. You know what else, I
 have no idea who works for TI (still ? ), who does not, and what the
 motivation is for this project

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Mike Bremford
Uh, well for me it's the virtual capes - the actual list I'm loading is:

BB-SPIDEV1

BB-I2C1

BB-UART1

BB-UART2

BB-UART4

BB-UART5

BB-ADC

Plus several of the virtual capes from
https://github.com/nomel/beaglebone/tree/master/gpio-header so I can turn
on/off individual GPIO pull-ups. But it's not the cape manager so much,
it's the ability to change the mode of the pins as described here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/beagleboard/YqONs50YKWU/VuVsbBhQNl0J.


On 30 December 2013 22:37, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 3:37 PM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
  Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape
 support
  added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with stable
 USB.
  Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board (reasonable,
 as
  the result would be a better product), but I realise that's more
  contentious.

 Hey Mike,

 I've been playing around with a stupid cape manager idea for
 v3.12/v3.13, which cape do you need?

 Regards,

 --
 Robert Nelson
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Robert Nelson
Well, i got 3 of these working on 3.13 last night..

On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 6:23 AM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
 Uh, well for me it's the virtual capes - the actual list I'm loading is:

 BB-SPIDEV1
 BB-I2C1

Should be able to get these working today, just need someone to test..

 BB-UART1
 BB-UART2
 BB-UART4

These work on bbw  bbb..

 BB-UART5
only bbw (need a good way to disable hdmi on bbb)

 BB-ADC

I think i can get this one to work..

 Plus several of the virtual capes from
 https://github.com/nomel/beaglebone/tree/master/gpio-header so I can turn
 on/off individual GPIO pull-ups. But it's not the cape manager so much, it's
 the ability to change the mode of the pins as described here:
 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/beagleboard/YqONs50YKWU/VuVsbBhQNl0J.

Oh the gpio is going to be fun..

Anywho, upgrade to 3.13-rc6-bone2 (use the install-me.sh from rcn-ee.net/deb/ )

Then on your board:

git clone git://github.com/RobertCNelson/rscm.git
cd ./rscm/

patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO1.diff
patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO2.diff
patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO4.diff

sudo ./build.sh
sudo reboot

At this point it's a total hack i dreamt about, so no error checking/etc..

Regards,

-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Mike Bremford
I see what you're doing, patching am335x which is presumably loaded
directly by the kernel on boot - much simpler than loading after the boot I
guess.

So they load no problem, and I have UART1, 2 and 4! Nice work!. I have to
dig out a complicated wiring harness to actually test them, but the devices
are present - will check for correct later. I'm BBB so UART5 will have to
keep.

Testing ADC, I2C and SPI is easy, the devices are soldered to the board so
just let me know what you need me to do. FWIW. saw you had an
enable-i2c-1.diff in that folder too, tried it but although the
/dev/i2c-1 was created, a bus scan incorrectly finds no devices.

Thanks Robert!

On 31 December 2013 15:25, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.com wrote:

 Well, i got 3 of these working on 3.13 last night..

 On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 6:23 AM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
  Uh, well for me it's the virtual capes - the actual list I'm loading is:
 
  BB-SPIDEV1
  BB-I2C1

 Should be able to get these working today, just need someone to test..

  BB-UART1
  BB-UART2
  BB-UART4

 These work on bbw  bbb..

  BB-UART5
 only bbw (need a good way to disable hdmi on bbb)

  BB-ADC

 I think i can get this one to work..

  Plus several of the virtual capes from
  https://github.com/nomel/beaglebone/tree/master/gpio-header so I can
 turn
  on/off individual GPIO pull-ups. But it's not the cape manager so much,
 it's
  the ability to change the mode of the pins as described here:
 
 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/beagleboard/YqONs50YKWU/VuVsbBhQNl0J
 .

 Oh the gpio is going to be fun..

 Anywho, upgrade to 3.13-rc6-bone2 (use the install-me.sh from
 rcn-ee.net/deb/ )

 Then on your board:

 git clone git://github.com/RobertCNelson/rscm.git
 cd ./rscm/

 patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO1.diff
 patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO2.diff
 patch -p1  ./3.13.0-rc6-bone2/simple/enable-ttyO4.diff

 sudo ./build.sh
 sudo reboot

 At this point it's a total hack i dreamt about, so no error checking/etc..

 Regards,

 --
 Robert Nelson
 http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Robert Nelson
On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 10:34 AM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
 I see what you're doing, patching am335x which is presumably loaded directly
 by the kernel on boot - much simpler than loading after the boot I guess.

 So they load no problem, and I have UART1, 2 and 4! Nice work!. I have to
 dig out a complicated wiring harness to actually test them, but the devices
 are present - will check for correct later. I'm BBB so UART5 will have to
 keep.

 Testing ADC, I2C and SPI is easy, the devices are soldered to the board so
 just let me know what you need me to do. FWIW. saw you had an
 enable-i2c-1.diff in that folder too, tried it but although the /dev/i2c-1
 was created, a bus scan incorrectly finds no devices.

Crap, but thanks for testing! Which pins are you using for i2c1?..

P9.18, P9.17: enable-i2c-1.diff
P9.26, P9.24: enable-i2c-1-alt-pins.diff

Regards,

-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Mike Bremford
It's P9.18, P9.17 - there's nothing in the logs either I'm afraid.

On 31 December 2013 16:55, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 10:34 AM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
  I see what you're doing, patching am335x which is presumably loaded
 directly
  by the kernel on boot - much simpler than loading after the boot I guess.
 
  So they load no problem, and I have UART1, 2 and 4! Nice work!. I have to
  dig out a complicated wiring harness to actually test them, but the
 devices
  are present - will check for correct later. I'm BBB so UART5 will have to
  keep.
 
  Testing ADC, I2C and SPI is easy, the devices are soldered to the board
 so
  just let me know what you need me to do. FWIW. saw you had an
  enable-i2c-1.diff in that folder too, tried it but although the
 /dev/i2c-1
  was created, a bus scan incorrectly finds no devices.

 Crap, but thanks for testing! Which pins are you using for i2c1?..

 P9.18, P9.17: enable-i2c-1.diff
 P9.26, P9.24: enable-i2c-1-alt-pins.diff

 Regards,

 --
 Robert Nelson
 http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-31 Thread Robert Nelson
On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 11:19 AM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
 It's P9.18, P9.17 - there's nothing in the logs either I'm afraid.

Thanks! i just also enabled i2c2 (eeprom bus) now to find an i2c
device to stick on P9.18/19 from my scrap pile..

Regards,


-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Paulo Ferreira

On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:

 
 Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two paragraphs are 
 unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in embedded Linux for some 
 time.
 


It seems you are barking at the wrong tree. 

Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should come after 
some knowledge and practice.

Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding machine, a 
forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful tools, but 
they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice time, and after 
having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and  how to use them 
correctly. 


The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about the 
friends... 

 You can approach Unix at several levels: 

1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and understanding of 
shell scripts
2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX programming 
tools (config, make, gcc, etc...) 
4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel 


If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that many 
people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology, 
and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to understand 
how they work. 


The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant gratification) 
without being involved.  Open Source does not work that way, and most 
important, life does not work that way. 

In order to do things, in order to get what you want, you need to involve 
yourself. 


Happy New Year to All

Paulo Ferreira

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Micka
Just an idea, but maybe we should create a software, hardware, kernel
mailing list ?


On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 11:23 AM, Bogdan Teodorescu 
bogdan.teodore...@quartzmatrix.ro wrote:

 50 % true

 The best hardware is useless without an operating systems. Most of this
 forum users are end-apllications developers, not kernel or embedded Linux
 developers. they expect quick results based on their current skills

 A wise producer will allways provide a solid operating system in order to
 sel his wonder hardware. Because this hardware is mainly aquired by end
 applications developers (90%) and not by kernel/Linux developers.





 *From:* beagleboard@googlegroups.com [mailto:beagleboard@googlegroups.com]
 *On Behalf Of *William Hermans
 *Sent:* Monday, December 30, 2013 12:14 PM
 *To:* beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 *Subject:* Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant



 Well said Paulo, and I have to agree 100% on the instant gratification /
 getting something for nothing aspect.



 Also the amount of posts on the group that has nothing to do with with the
 hardware is staggering. Learning how to use Linux has nothing to do with
 electronics or the hardware provided by circuitco. I guess the acronym
 R.T.F.M. is lost on the current generation of users ?



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 2:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira p...@keeh.net wrote:


 On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:

 
  Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two
 paragraphs are unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in
 embedded Linux for some time.
 

 It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

 Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should come
 after some knowledge and practice.

 Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding machine,
 a forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful tools,
 but they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice time,
 and after having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and  how to
 use them correctly.


 The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about
 the friends...

  You can approach Unix at several levels:

 1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and understanding
 of shell scripts
 2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
 3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX
 programming tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
 4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel


 If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that
 many people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology,
 and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to
 understand how they work.


 The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant
 gratification) without being involved.  Open Source does not work that
 way, and most important, life does not work that way.

 In order to do things, in order to get what you want, you need to involve
 yourself.


 Happy New Year to All

 Paulo Ferreira


 --
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread APRichelieu


Den måndagen den 30:e december 2013 kl. 11:23:23 UTC+1 skrev Bogdan 
Teodorescu:

 50 % true

 The best hardware is useless without an operating systems. Most of this 
 forum users are end-apllications developers, not kernel or embedded Linux 
 developers. they expect quick results based on their current skills

 A wise producer will allways provide a solid operating system in order to 
 sel his wonder hardware. Because this hardware is mainly aquired by end 
 applications developers (90%) and not by kernel/Linux developers.

  

It is actually not always so. If you make H/W attractive enough, then other 
people will make the S/W for you.
Smart customers will require that you have as much as possible ready, so it 
is a chicken race
between the H/W vendor and the customer.
If the H/W does not bring unique capabilities then you open up to 
competition by not
supporting your stuff.



 

  

 *From:* beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *William Hermans
 *Sent:* Monday, December 30, 2013 12:14 PM
 *To:* beagl...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

  

 Well said Paulo, and I have to agree 100% on the instant gratification / 
 getting something for nothing aspect. 

  

 Also the amount of posts on the group that has nothing to do with with the 
 hardware is staggering. Learning how to use Linux has nothing to do with 
 electronics or the hardware provided by circuitco. I guess the acronym 
 R.T.F.M. is lost on the current generation of users ? 

  

 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 2:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira p...@keeh.netjavascript: 
 wrote:


 On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford mi...@bfo.com javascript: 
 wrote:

 
  Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two 
 paragraphs are unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in 
 embedded Linux for some time.
 

 It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

 Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should come 
 after some knowledge and practice.

 Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding machine, 
 a forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful tools, 
 but they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice time, 
 and after having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and  how to 
 use them correctly.


 The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about 
 the friends...

  You can approach Unix at several levels:

 1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and understanding 
 of shell scripts
 2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
 3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX 
 programming tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
 4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel


 If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that 
 many people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology,
 and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to 
 understand how they work.


 The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant 
 gratification) without being involved.  Open Source does not work that 
 way, and most important, life does not work that way.

 In order to do things, in order to get what you want, you need to involve 
 yourself.


 Happy New Year to All

 Paulo Ferreira


 --
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread David Lambert

Excellent summary Paulo. I would add one level:
 0)   Novice user level - Expects a shrink wrapped system to just work 
like Windows, but without the crashes ;)


A very Happy New Year to all,

Dave.


On 12/30/2013 03:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira wrote:

On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:


Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two paragraphs are 
unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in embedded Linux for some 
time.



It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should come after 
some knowledge and practice.

Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding machine, a 
forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful tools, but 
they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice time, and after 
having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and  how to use them 
correctly.


The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about the 
friends...

  You can approach Unix at several levels:

1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and understanding of 
shell scripts
2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX programming 
tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel


If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that many 
people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology,
and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to understand 
how they work.


The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant gratification) without 
being involved.  Open Source does not work that way, and most important, life does not 
work that way.

In order to do things, in order to get what you want, you need to involve 
yourself.


Happy New Year to All

Paulo Ferreira



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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Terry Storm
Great discussion.

My main issue with this whole system is that its designed for Hobbyists and
Developers. Yes developers who know what they are doing can work through
issues and develop what they require. Hobbyists however, not so much,
obviously depending on the skill of the hobbyist though.
I am a hobbyist, never touched linux on embedded devices before, only
played with linux on a PC for as many hours as I have fingers. I brought a
LCD4 and a BBB to start with thinking they would both work together and the
'advertised' OS would work 'correctly'. I had touch related issues along
with many more, basically rendering the combo useless to do anything
without an external mouse, which defeated the whole purpose of what I was
trying to achieve. Various issues were fixed over the next few months
however the touch issues remained. I then brought a LCD7, and then the
4DCAPE-43T and 4DCAPE-70T, but all had the same touch issues, no doubt
stemming from a common cause. None of these boards will do what I want,
which is simply to have a working OS with touch screen capability. I
wouldn't have thought that was too much to ask for.

I know of many people/companies who have brought BBB's and LCD Capes and
wanted to develop systems for them, but due to the OS being so buggy and
touch not working correctly, along with other issues, the companies have
had to move to another platforms. These companies have linux developers,
however not developers who could modify the kernel or write improved
drivers, they could write applications to suit their company that run on
Linux. Like what was mentioned above by Mike, you have to have a stable OS
in order for companies/individuals to write applications on. Since we dont
have that, and 90% of people dont have the skills or know-how to fix OS
related problems, or write drivers or modify the kernel etc to fix issues
before they can even get started.

Personally I think that is a bit rough and harsh to expect people to have
to do that.

Yes its open source, however you still need a base to work from that
actually works.

I would actually say I purchased the BBB and capes with incorrect
information, or to an extent 'false advertising', as these really are not
suited to hobbyists. If you have a BBB and want to blink an LED or do some
simple Arduino type things with IO, then sure, that is all hobbyist level.

Rant over.

Just think the whole situation sucks to an extent. Circuitco/Ti/who ever is
making money, should be putting money back into software development so all
the thousands of people who purchased these things and expected some sort
of stable system out of the box, or their capes to work as advertised, have
working systems they can then build on.

No doubt I will get 'flamed' for what I have written also.

Terry




On 31 December 2013 03:35, David Lambert d...@lambsys.com wrote:

 Excellent summary Paulo. I would add one level:
  0)   Novice user level - Expects a shrink wrapped system to just work
 like Windows, but without the crashes ;)

 A very Happy New Year to all,

 Dave.



 On 12/30/2013 03:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira wrote:

 On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:

  Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two
 paragraphs are unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in
 embedded Linux for some time.


 It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

 Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should come
 after some knowledge and practice.

 Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding machine,
 a forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful tools,
 but they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice time,
 and after having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and  how to
 use them correctly.


 The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about
 the friends...

   You can approach Unix at several levels:

 1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and
 understanding of shell scripts
 2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
 3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX
 programming tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
 4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel


 If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that
 many people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology,
 and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to
 understand how they work.


 The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant
 gratification) without being involved.  Open Source does not work that
 way, and most important, life does not work that way.

 In order to do things, in order to get what you want, you need to involve
 yourself.


 Happy New Year to All

 Paulo Ferreira


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Gerald Coley
Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
BeagleBoard.org.

Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

Gerald



On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 2:48 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com wrote:

 Great discussion.

 My main issue with this whole system is that its designed for Hobbyists
 and Developers. Yes developers who know what they are doing can work
 through issues and develop what they require. Hobbyists however, not so
 much, obviously depending on the skill of the hobbyist though.
 I am a hobbyist, never touched linux on embedded devices before, only
 played with linux on a PC for as many hours as I have fingers. I brought a
 LCD4 and a BBB to start with thinking they would both work together and the
 'advertised' OS would work 'correctly'. I had touch related issues along
 with many more, basically rendering the combo useless to do anything
 without an external mouse, which defeated the whole purpose of what I was
 trying to achieve. Various issues were fixed over the next few months
 however the touch issues remained. I then brought a LCD7, and then the
 4DCAPE-43T and 4DCAPE-70T, but all had the same touch issues, no doubt
 stemming from a common cause. None of these boards will do what I want,
 which is simply to have a working OS with touch screen capability. I
 wouldn't have thought that was too much to ask for.

 I know of many people/companies who have brought BBB's and LCD Capes and
 wanted to develop systems for them, but due to the OS being so buggy and
 touch not working correctly, along with other issues, the companies have
 had to move to another platforms. These companies have linux developers,
 however not developers who could modify the kernel or write improved
 drivers, they could write applications to suit their company that run on
 Linux. Like what was mentioned above by Mike, you have to have a stable OS
 in order for companies/individuals to write applications on. Since we dont
 have that, and 90% of people dont have the skills or know-how to fix OS
 related problems, or write drivers or modify the kernel etc to fix issues
 before they can even get started.

 Personally I think that is a bit rough and harsh to expect people to have
 to do that.

 Yes its open source, however you still need a base to work from that
 actually works.

 I would actually say I purchased the BBB and capes with incorrect
 information, or to an extent 'false advertising', as these really are not
 suited to hobbyists. If you have a BBB and want to blink an LED or do some
 simple Arduino type things with IO, then sure, that is all hobbyist level.

 Rant over.

 Just think the whole situation sucks to an extent. Circuitco/Ti/who ever
 is making money, should be putting money back into software development so
 all the thousands of people who purchased these things and expected some
 sort of stable system out of the box, or their capes to work as advertised,
 have working systems they can then build on.

 No doubt I will get 'flamed' for what I have written also.

 Terry




 On 31 December 2013 03:35, David Lambert d...@lambsys.com wrote:

 Excellent summary Paulo. I would add one level:
  0)   Novice user level - Expects a shrink wrapped system to just work
 like Windows, but without the crashes ;)

 A very Happy New Year to all,

 Dave.



 On 12/30/2013 03:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira wrote:

 On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:

  Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two
 paragraphs are unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in
 embedded Linux for some time.


 It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

 Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should
 come after some knowledge and practice.

 Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding
 machine, a forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful
 tools, but they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice
 time, and after having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and
  how to use them correctly.


 The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about
 the friends...

   You can approach Unix at several levels:

 1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and
 understanding of shell scripts
 2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
 3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX
 programming tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
 4)  Kernel developer - all of the previous ones + how to compile a kernel


 If you want to work with BeagleBone, you must at least understand that
 many people are doing all those levels  on the cutting edge of technology,
 and that knowledge takes time, because you need to make things, to
 understand how they work.


 The saddest thing, is that people want things done (or instant
 gratification) 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Mike Bremford
Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape support
added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with stable
USB. Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board
(reasonable, as the result would be a better product), but I realise that's
more contentious.


On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 2:48 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.comwrote:

 Great discussion.

 My main issue with this whole system is that its designed for Hobbyists
 and Developers. Yes developers who know what they are doing can work
 through issues and develop what they require. Hobbyists however, not so
 much, obviously depending on the skill of the hobbyist though.
 I am a hobbyist, never touched linux on embedded devices before, only
 played with linux on a PC for as many hours as I have fingers. I brought a
 LCD4 and a BBB to start with thinking they would both work together and the
 'advertised' OS would work 'correctly'. I had touch related issues along
 with many more, basically rendering the combo useless to do anything
 without an external mouse, which defeated the whole purpose of what I was
 trying to achieve. Various issues were fixed over the next few months
 however the touch issues remained. I then brought a LCD7, and then the
 4DCAPE-43T and 4DCAPE-70T, but all had the same touch issues, no doubt
 stemming from a common cause. None of these boards will do what I want,
 which is simply to have a working OS with touch screen capability. I
 wouldn't have thought that was too much to ask for.

 I know of many people/companies who have brought BBB's and LCD Capes and
 wanted to develop systems for them, but due to the OS being so buggy and
 touch not working correctly, along with other issues, the companies have
 had to move to another platforms. These companies have linux developers,
 however not developers who could modify the kernel or write improved
 drivers, they could write applications to suit their company that run on
 Linux. Like what was mentioned above by Mike, you have to have a stable OS
 in order for companies/individuals to write applications on. Since we dont
 have that, and 90% of people dont have the skills or know-how to fix OS
 related problems, or write drivers or modify the kernel etc to fix issues
 before they can even get started.

 Personally I think that is a bit rough and harsh to expect people to have
 to do that.

 Yes its open source, however you still need a base to work from that
 actually works.

 I would actually say I purchased the BBB and capes with incorrect
 information, or to an extent 'false advertising', as these really are not
 suited to hobbyists. If you have a BBB and want to blink an LED or do some
 simple Arduino type things with IO, then sure, that is all hobbyist level.

 Rant over.

 Just think the whole situation sucks to an extent. Circuitco/Ti/who ever
 is making money, should be putting money back into software development so
 all the thousands of people who purchased these things and expected some
 sort of stable system out of the box, or their capes to work as advertised,
 have working systems they can then build on.

 No doubt I will get 'flamed' for what I have written also.

 Terry




 On 31 December 2013 03:35, David Lambert d...@lambsys.com wrote:

 Excellent summary Paulo. I would add one level:
  0)   Novice user level - Expects a shrink wrapped system to just work
 like Windows, but without the crashes ;)

 A very Happy New Year to all,

 Dave.



 On 12/30/2013 03:13 AM, Paulo Ferreira wrote:

 On 30/12/2013, at 02:03, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:

  Where is this documented? And why should I care? The above two
 paragraphs are unintelligible to anyone that hasn't been involved in
 embedded Linux for some time.


 It seems you are barking at the wrong tree.

 Unix is a tool. A powerful tool. As all powerful tools, power should
 come after some knowledge and practice.

 Think of a razor sharp kitchen knife, a chainsaw, an arc welding
 machine, a forklift, a pickup truck.  All those are examples of very useful
 tools, but they only can be used in a productive way, after some practice
 time, and after having acquired some knowledge about how they work, and
  how to use them correctly.


 The standard phrase is that Unix is very user friendly, but picky about
 the friends...

   You can approach Unix at several levels:

 1)  User level - command line use of the Unix utilities, and
 understanding of shell scripts
 2)  Admin level - know how to manage users, programs, networking
 3)  Programmer - know the POSIX programming model and all the UNIX
 programming tools (config, make, gcc, etc...)
 4)  Kernel developer 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Carl-Fredrik Sundström

I don't know if there is any truth to this new article but it states that 
there will be a move towards debian in the next few months.

http://linuxgizmos.com/beaglebone-black-sbc-surpasses-10-units/




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread dave
Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere 
that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had 
included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could 
have been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't 
provide support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die. 
It is in the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one 
underlying OS gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point 
I don't really care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)

On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I 
place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC 
based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and 
there will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments 
of the nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see 
support from both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of 
their product. I just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the 
proverbial drain even before I get it running.

On Monday, December 30, 2013 4:37:10 PM UTC-5, Mike Bremford wrote:

 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape support 
 added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with stable 
 USB. Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board 
 (reasonable, as the result would be a better product), but I realise that's 
 more contentious.


 On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.orgjavascript:
  wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for 
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Gerald Coley
In order to support the $45 price tag, it was a bear bones
offering. Circuitco was paying for the Angstrom support but
the maintainer left Circuitco and went to another company.

TI supports mainline Linux,  currently 3.12 and higher. We are moving in
that direction as fast as we can from the 3.3 Kernel.

Angstrom and Linux are distributions of the Linux OS.

Gerald


On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 4:08 PM, dave d...@pfaltz.com wrote:

 Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere
 that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had
 included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could
 have been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't
 provide support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die.
 It is in the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one
 underlying OS gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point
 I don't really care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)

 On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I
 place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC
 based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and
 there will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments
 of the nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see
 support from both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of
 their product. I just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the
 proverbial drain even before I get it running.


 On Monday, December 30, 2013 4:37:10 PM UTC-5, Mike Bremford wrote:

 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape
 support added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with
 stable USB. Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board
 (reasonable, as the result would be a better product), but I realise that's
 more contentious.


 On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Robert Nelson
On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 3:37 PM, Mike Bremford m...@bfo.com wrote:
 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape support
 added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with stable USB.
 Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board (reasonable, as
 the result would be a better product), but I realise that's more
 contentious.

Hey Mike,

I've been playing around with a stupid cape manager idea for
v3.12/v3.13, which cape do you need?

Regards,

-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Anguel


On Monday, December 30, 2013 11:08:42 PM UTC+1, dave wrote:

 Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere 
 that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had 
 included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could 
 have been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't 
 provide support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die. 
 It is in the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one 
 underlying OS gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point 
 I don't really care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)

 On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I 
 place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC 
 based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and 
 there will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments 
 of the nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see 
 support from both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of 
 their product. I just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the 
 proverbial drain even before I get it running.


Expect anything from TI! My experience with TI started with their ARM 
Cortex M3. They suddenly dropped all Cortex M3 chips without having any 
replacement - customers went crazy in the forums! Marketing is the only 
thing TI can do successfully. Don't expect software support, unfortunately 
most other manufacturers also don't do better. Now I see that CircuitCo has 
plans to move to Debian? Just because they lost Koen, their only Linux 
developer? So I expect them to suddenly drop the BBB completely, as soon as 
the new Arduino Linux board starts selling successfully. Don't trust 
anybody in this business anymore.

If people here tell me that there is just nobody who is willing to do work 
for free I ask what are all these people who bought the thousands of BBB 
doing with their boards? Are they plugging them in, see that something 
works as long as you don't try to modify anything and then throwing them 
away? There must be many companies with enough Linux experience prototyping 
with the BBB. Why aren't they contributing to the kernel? Or are they just 
stupid, just working for themselves and ignoring the GPL? And if people 
here tell me that the BBB is just for fun / hobby then I ask myself, how 
people use TI chips in real Linux products? What is the difference between 
a BBB and a custom board? Isn't the BBB a reference platform that should 
work the best? Do you really believe that TI and CircuitCo are non-profit 
and build the BBB just because they like the Linux community? That's 
ridiculous!

Angstrom is full of bugs, I am a Linux guru but even looking at the 
simplest startup scripts I see that they are full of bashisms etc. Some 
things in Angstrom work just because of some packages being pulled in by 
accident. The production images are a big mess. Yes, I dived into 
OpenEmbedded to see that everything is a big mess. It somehow works but 
don't touch it. Koen was great, it is amazing how he managed to do 
everything himself. But this is no excuse for TI and CircuitCo. Now I hear 
they want to sponsor them? I can't believe it...

BTW, anything newer than Angstrom 2012.12 does not work at all. E.g. the Qt 
cross-toolchain in later Angstrom does not work at all and nobody knows why.

Anguel



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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread William Hermans
I'll assume you mean Angstrom and Debian. Which just a factiod for those
who do not know already. Angstrom is pretty much already based on Debian.
Technically Debian - Open Zaurus - Angstrom is the fork path.

Moving to Debian personally makes total sense to me. Granted I've been
using Debian since the 90's and am very familiar with it. However, on the
same hand when I speak of Debian on this hardware do realize that I am also
a newb when it comes to embedded Linux. Before I got our BBB's here ( 2 ) I
had zero hands on with Linux in this capacity, and had never done any Linux
development period.

I see this USB babble error mentioned on the groups and have no idea where
it comes from and have never experienced it. I have experienced zero
problems with USB except that with 3.8.x USB hot plugging will cause a
fatal crash. Knowing this, I just do not hot plug USB and there are not
problems . . . and it is not as though I do not have as much experience
with this board as the next person, because I was working on netbooting,
USB booting, this board back in June this year ( when the board was first
released to the general public ).

Knowing what I do now, I would not call myself an expert, but I have
learned quite a bit in the last 6-7 months. For me  personally, I would
never dream of using Angstrom on this fine hardware. As the second week
after playing with the board I've had Debian running on it in just about
every conceivable way SD card, TFTP/NFS netboot, USB, etc.

Has everything worked perfectly from the start ? Hell no, I had to work at
it. I took 2 weeks studying the uEnv.txt file alone. Got every bit of
information I could find on the web on my own to help me understand uboot,
and how it all worked. Then by the time I understood things well enough to
ask a sensible question ( at least i hope it was sensible ), I asked my
question, and got pointed to the C header file for uboot
configuration/initialization I guess it was.

Anyway, the point being is if *you* want something to work on this
platform, you had better work on it yourself. Otherwise, if it does not
work already you're going to be stuck getting no where. That and people
like me will not care if something does not work for *you* especially
considering you're  not even willing to take the time to learn Linux, or
even attempt to do sometime about it yourselves.

I suppose a perfect example on this list would be all the conversation
about QT not compiling on the BBB . . . I find the topic hilarious on
multiple levels. Suffice it to say if you do not already understand why, do
not bother asking . . .


On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.orgwrote:

 In order to support the $45 price tag, it was a bear bones
 offering. Circuitco was paying for the Angstrom support but
 the maintainer left Circuitco and went to another company.

 TI supports mainline Linux,  currently 3.12 and higher. We are moving in
 that direction as fast as we can from the 3.3 Kernel.

 Angstrom and Linux are distributions of the Linux OS.

 Gerald


 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 4:08 PM, dave d...@pfaltz.com wrote:

 Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere
 that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had
 included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could
 have been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't
 provide support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die.
 It is in the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one
 underlying OS gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point
 I don't really care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)

 On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I
 place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC
 based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and
 there will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments
 of the nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see
 support from both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of
 their product. I just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the
 proverbial drain even before I get it running.


 On Monday, December 30, 2013 4:37:10 PM UTC-5, Mike Bremford wrote:

 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape
 support added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with
 stable USB. Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board
 (reasonable, as the result would be a better product), but I realise that's
 more contentious.


 On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald


  --
 For 

Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Terry Storm
Gerald, I find this very interesting.
So given the barebones target price of $45, it seems Marketting and Sales 
have failed on the BBB totally, as if 100K BBB's have been sold now and 
Circuitco is breakeven and Beagleboard.org doesnt make anything, then to me 
it sounds like the project was/is a flop. Hardware is great, but its crap 
if nothing runs on it out of the box. 

I have 2 BBB's which gather dust at this moment, along with 4 Capes, of 
which I personally can do nothing about. I would have to spend years 
learning from nothing in order to do anything productive to get anywhere 
even close to trying to fix the problems I personally care about. Its not 
about me personally not putting in the effort to learn Linux, its about 
capability, and I am not capable. If Koen was the only developer on this 
thing, I imagine he has a fairly impressive CV regarding linux etc, so 
myself in comparison is N/A, and I imagine that is the case for 90% of 
users out there. Mutter Mutter. So peoples comments about everyone else not 
putting in the effort to learn and fix themselves, I find irrelevant, as 
not everyone is capable of doing this work. Its like trying to get a truck 
driver to design a bridge across some massive canyon.

I agree with what was said above, I would have happily paid $50 for a BBB 
if it meant it actually works software wise.

What has happened is essentially like 'Acme Computers' brought processors 
off 'Beta Processors Ltd' and used 'Gigasoft OS' as their OS, sold 100K 
computers to the public and said it does xyz, but it turns out it doesn't 
work as people expected, and actually requires customer to learn how to 
modify said Gigasoft OS themselves in order to get the hardware working 
correctly before they even start the development of their software which 
they are to then sell to make a profit themselves. Crazy.

Would hate to think of the number of customers who are pissed off at the 
situation. Would be interesting to see the number of customers who use 
their share of the 100K of BBB's too. I would imagine a large number 
purchased, couldn't do much, so have put them in the cupboard and are 
either waiting for a stable OS or have moved on, or given up etc.

Still cant believe the breakeven after 100K. 

Terry.


On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 09:52:52 UTC+13, Gerald wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for 
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Andrew Frazer


On Tuesday, December 31, 2013 9:52:52 AM UTC+13, Gerald wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for 
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald


gee.. and people used to buy BBW's for $89 and did'nt really complain.


 




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread William Hermans
Terry,

I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me just
say that I think you missed a few key points.

1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not expect
the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong with
the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the only
thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has been
resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people seem
to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this is
very likely mostly user error.

2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is usually
and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What Gerald and his
partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the Beaglebone
black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when electronics
retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they sell so fast.

3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this yourself.
Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a reasonable question
to ask.

Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you. Just
now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. Heck
there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these
very boards . . .


On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 5:48 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com wrote:

 Gerald, I find this very interesting.
 So given the barebones target price of $45, it seems Marketting and Sales
 have failed on the BBB totally, as if 100K BBB's have been sold now and
 Circuitco is breakeven and Beagleboard.org doesnt make anything, then to me
 it sounds like the project was/is a flop. Hardware is great, but its crap
 if nothing runs on it out of the box.

 I have 2 BBB's which gather dust at this moment, along with 4 Capes, of
 which I personally can do nothing about. I would have to spend years
 learning from nothing in order to do anything productive to get anywhere
 even close to trying to fix the problems I personally care about. Its not
 about me personally not putting in the effort to learn Linux, its about
 capability, and I am not capable. If Koen was the only developer on this
 thing, I imagine he has a fairly impressive CV regarding linux etc, so
 myself in comparison is N/A, and I imagine that is the case for 90% of
 users out there. Mutter Mutter. So peoples comments about everyone else not
 putting in the effort to learn and fix themselves, I find irrelevant, as
 not everyone is capable of doing this work. Its like trying to get a truck
 driver to design a bridge across some massive canyon.

 I agree with what was said above, I would have happily paid $50 for a BBB
 if it meant it actually works software wise.

 What has happened is essentially like 'Acme Computers' brought processors
 off 'Beta Processors Ltd' and used 'Gigasoft OS' as their OS, sold 100K
 computers to the public and said it does xyz, but it turns out it doesn't
 work as people expected, and actually requires customer to learn how to
 modify said Gigasoft OS themselves in order to get the hardware working
 correctly before they even start the development of their software which
 they are to then sell to make a profit themselves. Crazy.

 Would hate to think of the number of customers who are pissed off at the
 situation. Would be interesting to see the number of customers who use
 their share of the 100K of BBB's too. I would imagine a large number
 purchased, couldn't do much, so have put them in the cupboard and are
 either waiting for a stable OS or have moved on, or given up etc.

 Still cant believe the breakeven after 100K.

 Terry.


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 09:52:52 UTC+13, Gerald wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread APRichelieu


Den måndagen den 30:e december 2013 kl. 23:08:42 UTC+1 skrev dave:

 Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere 
 that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had 
 included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could 
 have been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't 
 provide support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die. 
 It is in the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one 
 underlying OS gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point 
 I don't really care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)


I think that a Semiconductor company should be responsible for the boot 
loader and the kernel, and provide a Yocto compliant layer
which shows how to build the BSP.
The smart Semiconductor company will ensure that all stuff is merged with 
the mainstream kernel,
and should not like T.I. maintain its own SDK.

When I worked at Atmel, there was a lot of discussions, but they eventually 
adopted this approach.
The kernel + BSP is maintained on github, and frequently merged with 
mainlina.

Freescale has been particularity bad on this, and they typically released a 
kernel, and then only patched
this kernel, so eventually  you end up with a 2-3 year old kernel with 
hundreds of patches.
They claim that they have adopted a sane approach with the iMX6, but this 
is priced
way above the AM335x, making it unattractive for cost reasons.

It is not their expertise to provide something similar to Debian,
so I think they should avoid this.

Asking the semiconductor company to support each and every variant of a 
graphic LCD screen, probably also won't happen
Touchscreen same thing. An internal touch screen controller, yes. 
Capacitive touch with an external chip: only if it
is available on a development kit.

Most serious customer has a single configuration, and do not need the 
flexibility of capes.
It is specific to the Beaglebone, and thus it is not the responsibility of 
TI to support it.
Cape functionality can be handled through writing a new device tree file.
Some help in writing such files, would be nice, but it is not there at  the 
moment.

It is unlikely that large customers use Beagleboard at all, except for 
prototyping.
For any decent volume, people are building their own board.
For a company the size of TI, the Beaglebone project is interesting, but 
not critical.

If you add lets say 2$ for each Beaglebone, this is $200,000, which will 
pay for 1-2 man years max,
This is not enough to support a full blown operating system, so a board 
vendor can provide some
support, but not something which is off the shelf fully tested.

If you want to get a tested linux, with warranty, then you have to sign a 
contract with 
a large company like Wind River or Mentor, and then we are talking about 
orders of magnitude
higher cost than the Beaglebone.
 
Moving to Debian will help somewhat, but it will not fix problems with the 
kernel,
nor will it handle beagleboard specific things like capes.

 


 On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I 
 place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC 
 based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and 
 there will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments 
 of the nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see 
 support from both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of 
 their product. I just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the 
 proverbial drain even before I get it running.

 On Monday, December 30, 2013 4:37:10 PM UTC-5, Mike Bremford wrote:

 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape 
 support added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with 
 stable USB. Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board 
 (reasonable, as the result would be a better product), but I realise that's 
 more contentious.


 On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org wrote:

 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.

 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for 
 BeagleBoard.org.

 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?

 Gerald




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Terry Storm
Hi William

As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the 
average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there is 
a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then Joe 
Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as 
advertised, and this isnt the case.

I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of doing, 
however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a LCD 
Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as 
default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse 
pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is recommended 
and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for something as 
fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user error?

I personally think not.

I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not make a 
profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what was the 
point.
And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have to 
start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting and 
thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea how 
to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they 
wanted to.

Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just sucks 
that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they dont 
work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works 
fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many 
so it doesnt help much.

Terry

On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me just 
 say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not expect 
 the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong with 
 the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the only 
 thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has been 
 resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people seem 
 to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this is 
 very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is usually 
 and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What Gerald and his 
 partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the Beaglebone 
 black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when electronics 
 retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this yourself. 
 Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a reasonable question 
 to ask. 

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you. Just 
 now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. Heck 
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these 
 very boards . . .




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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread John Syne

From:  Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Monday, December 30, 2013 at 2:21 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 In order to support the $45 price tag, it was a bear bones offering. Circuitco
 was paying for the Angstrom support but the maintainer left Circuitco and went
 to another company.
 
 TI supports mainline Linux,  currently 3.12 and higher. We are moving in that
 direction as fast as we can from the 3.3 Kernel.
I explained this previously, but this seems to have been missed in the
wining and griping present in this thread. Linus required that the ARM
community clean up the sprawling board support code in the Linux kernel.
Each ARM vendor duplicated each others work and this became a mess when
trying to merge each vendors kernel patches. For this reason, the Linux
kernel has undergone significant change (devicetree, display subsystem,
clock management, power management, etc) since v3.2 and it is expected to
settle down sometime after v3.14. This has little to do with BBB and more to
do with all ARM vendors.

It is just unfortunate that this occurred just as the sales volume of BBB
exploded towards the end of 2013. What is needed is a little patients as I
see most of these issues are being actively addressed by very capable
developers in this community.

Happy new year
Regards,
John

 
 Angstrom and Linux are distributions of the Linux OS.
 
 Gerald
 
 
 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 4:08 PM, dave d...@pfaltz.com wrote:
 Allow me to add my support (AKA 2 cents) to this thread. Noting elsewhere
 that CircuitCo has shipped over 100,000 units to date, if the cost had
 included a couple of dollars for software development, that money could have
 been put to good use. Also adding to the comment on TI, if they don't provide
 support leading to the demand for the chip, the product will die. It is in
 the interest of both TI and CircuitCo to see that at least one underlying OS
 gets supported and will be around for a while. (At this point I don't really
 care if it's Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, or even Slackware!)
 
 On my part, I just want an embedded system with Linux that Just Runs! I
 place myself at a level slightly higher than novice since I have used (PC
 based) Linux in previous projects. Admittedly, this platform is new and there
 will be some pain in getting there, but I don't like seeing comments of the
 nature that XXX OS is/will no longer be supported. I want to see support from
 both TI and CircuitCo to ensure the continuing support of their product. I
 just want to know that my efforts are not headed for the proverbial drain
 even before I get it running.
 
 
 On Monday, December 30, 2013 4:37:10 PM UTC-5, Mike Bremford wrote:
 Aha, well that certainly explains it. Yes, I'd chip in to get cape support
 added to one of Robert's more recent (3.12 or 3.13) kernels with stable USB.
 Myself, I'd also be willing to pay slightly more per board (reasonable, as
 the result would be a better product), but I realise that's more
 contentious.
 
 
 On 30 December 2013 20:52, Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org wrote:
 Circuitco, breaks even, barely. Beagleboard.org makes no money at all.
 
 TI, well they make a little of the chips, but provides no funding for
 BeagleBoard.org.
 
 Anyone willing to donate some funds so we can fund some SW developers?
 
 Gerald
 
 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Gerald Coley
I designed the BBB. Other people design the capes. No capes come from
BeagleBoard.org. So feel free to rant, but facts do have a place in rants.


Gerald



On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:56 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi William

 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the
 average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there is
 a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then Joe
 Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as
 advertised, and this isnt the case.

 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of doing,
 however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a LCD
 Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as
 default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse
 pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is recommended
 and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for something as
 fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user error?

 I personally think not.

 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not make
 a profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what was
 the point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have to
 start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting and
 thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea how
 to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they
 wanted to.

 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just
 sucks that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they
 dont work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works
 fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many
 so it doesnt help much.

 Terry


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me just
 say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not expect
 the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong with
 the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the only
 thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has been
 resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people seem
 to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this is
 very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is usually
 and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What Gerald and his
 partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the Beaglebone
 black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when electronics
 retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this yourself.
 Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a reasonable question
 to ask.

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you.
 Just now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. Heck
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these
 very boards . . .


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread liyaoshi
A part of this group interest me is about the rants

Nest Time ,if I have chance to be abroad , I will use the skill learned
from here

:)


2013/12/31 Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org

 I designed the BBB. Other people design the capes. No capes come from
 BeagleBoard.org. So feel free to rant, but facts do have a place in rants.


 Gerald



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:56 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.comwrote:

 Hi William

 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the
 average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there
 is a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then
 Joe Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as
 advertised, and this isnt the case.

 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of doing,
 however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a LCD
 Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as
 default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse
 pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is recommended
 and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for something as
 fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user error?

 I personally think not.

 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not make
 a profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what was
 the point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have to
 start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting and
 thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea how
 to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they
 wanted to.

 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just
 sucks that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they
 dont work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works
 fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many
 so it doesnt help much.

 Terry


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me
 just say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not
 expect the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong
 with the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the
 only thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has
 been resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people
 seem to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this
 is very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is usually
 and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What Gerald and his
 partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the Beaglebone
 black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when electronics
 retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this
 yourself. Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a reasonable
 question to ask.

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you.
 Just now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. Heck
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these
 very boards . . .


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread David Anders
just in case some of the folks here would like to educate themselves on 
what beagleboard.org is:

http://www.beagleboard.org/about




On Monday, December 30, 2013 8:11:57 PM UTC-6, liyaoshi wrote:

 A part of this group interest me is about the rants 

 Nest Time ,if I have chance to be abroad , I will use the skill learned 
 from here 

 :)


 2013/12/31 Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org javascript:

 I designed the BBB. Other people design the capes. No capes come from 
 BeagleBoard.org. So feel free to rant, but facts do have a place in rants.


 Gerald



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:56 PM, Terry Storm 
 terrys...@gmail.comjavascript:
  wrote:

 Hi William

 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the 
 average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there 
 is a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then 
 Joe Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as 
 advertised, and this isnt the case.

 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of 
 doing, however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a 
 LCD Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as 
 default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse 
 pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is recommended 
 and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for something as 
 fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user error?

 I personally think not.

 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not 
 make a profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what 
 was the point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have 
 to start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting 
 and thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea 
 how to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they 
 wanted to.

 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just 
 sucks that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they 
 dont work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works 
 fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many 
 so it doesnt help much.

 Terry


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me 
 just say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not 
 expect the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong 
 with the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the 
 only thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has 
 been resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people 
 seem to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this 
 is very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is 
 usually and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What 
 Gerald 
 and his partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the 
 Beaglebone black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when 
 electronics retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they 
 sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this 
 yourself. Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a 
 reasonable 
 question to ask. 

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you. 
 Just now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. 
 Heck 
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these 
 very boards . . .


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread liyaoshi
Come on , its just a joke


2013/12/31 David Anders danders@gmail.com

 just in case some of the folks here would like to educate themselves on
 what beagleboard.org is:

 http://www.beagleboard.org/about





 On Monday, December 30, 2013 8:11:57 PM UTC-6, liyaoshi wrote:

 A part of this group interest me is about the rants

 Nest Time ,if I have chance to be abroad , I will use the skill learned
 from here

 :)


 2013/12/31 Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org

 I designed the BBB. Other people design the capes. No capes come from
 BeagleBoard.org. So feel free to rant, but facts do have a place in rants.


 Gerald



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:56 PM, Terry Storm terrys...@gmail.comwrote:

 Hi William

 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the
 average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there
 is a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then
 Joe Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as
 advertised, and this isnt the case.

 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of
 doing, however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a
 LCD Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as
 default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse
 pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is
 recommended and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for
 something as fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user 
 error?

 I personally think not.

 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not
 make a profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what
 was the point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have
 to start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting
 and thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea
 how to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they
 wanted to.

 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just
 sucks that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they
 dont work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works
 fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many
 so it doesnt help much.

 Terry


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me
 just say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not
 expect the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong
 with the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the
 only thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has
 been resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people
 seem to have experienced different problems here and there, but think this
 is very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is
 usually and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What 
 Gerald
 and his partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the
 Beaglebone black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when
 electronics retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they
 sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this
 yourself. Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a 
 reasonable
 question to ask.

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you.
 Just now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. 
 Heck
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these
 very boards . . .


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread William Hermans
Well I for one am very glad of this hardware, including the software that
*does* work with it. Which is to say Debian runs flawlessly, GPIO works
fine, and all the other hardware through software works just fine. I would
not say that it is exactly the same experience you may get on PC Linux(
Debian ), but you know what it is close enough for me(actually very dahmed
close ).. For the rest that *I* personally need working. I am willing to
spend time to make it work as I expect. Perhaps even asking for
help/guidance once in a while.



On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:33 PM, liyaoshi liyao...@gmail.com wrote:

 Come on , its just a joke


 2013/12/31 David Anders danders@gmail.com

 just in case some of the folks here would like to educate themselves on
 what beagleboard.org is:

 http://www.beagleboard.org/about





 On Monday, December 30, 2013 8:11:57 PM UTC-6, liyaoshi wrote:

 A part of this group interest me is about the rants

 Nest Time ,if I have chance to be abroad , I will use the skill learned
 from here

 :)


 2013/12/31 Gerald Coley ger...@beagleboard.org

  I designed the BBB. Other people design the capes. No capes come from
 BeagleBoard.org. So feel free to rant, but facts do have a place in rants.


 Gerald



 On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 7:56 PM, Terry Storm terrys...@gmail.comwrote:

 Hi William

 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the
 average Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and
 there is a recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility,
 then Joe Bloggs would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as
 advertised, and this isnt the case.

 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of
 doing, however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a
 LCD Cape made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as
 default, and finding that the touch does not work and things like the 
 mouse
 pointer jumps all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?

 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is
 recommended and claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for
 something as fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user 
 error?

 I personally think not.

 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not
 make a profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what
 was the point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have
 to start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting
 and thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no 
 idea
 how to fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they
 wanted to.

 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just
 sucks that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they
 dont work right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android 
 works
 fine, so the hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many
 so it doesnt help much.

 Terry


 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans wrote:

 Terry,

 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me
 just say that I think you missed a few key points.

 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not
 expect the same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing 
 wrong
 with the hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the
 only thing that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has
 been resolved, but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people
 seem to have experienced different problems here and there, but think 
 this
 is very likely mostly user error.

 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is
 usually and possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What 
 Gerald
 and his partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the
 Beaglebone black is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when
 electronics retailers can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they
 sell so fast.

 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this
 yourself. Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a 
 reasonable
 question to ask.

 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you.
 Just now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. 
 Heck
 there are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these
 very boards . . .


  --
 For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
 ---
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
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 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread John Syne

From:  Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Monday, December 30, 2013 at 5:56 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 Hi William
 
 As I said, I have no problem with the BBB hardware.
 I am 100% referring to the software. If the software sucks then to the average
 Joe Bloggs the hardware then also, well, sucks.
 If Joe Bloggs buys a BBB and a cape made by the same company, and there is a
 recommended software to go with it which claims compatibility, then Joe Bloggs
 would rightly expect that the BBB + CAPE + OS will run as advertised, and this
 isnt the case.
Actually, you could always use the v3.2 kernel where everything works just
fine. All the capes work, all the touch screens work. Take a look at Android
for example, they mostly use the v2.6 kernel before v4 and KitKat is still
using v3.4. BTW, everything works on v3.4 kernel. The problem is you want to
use the bleeding edge version of the Kernel and then complain when it
doesn¹t work. Go back to the v3.2 or v3.4 kernel and everything will work
fine.

Regards,
John
 
 I personally am using but a fraction of what the BBB is capable of doing,
 however I wouldn't have thought using a BBB made by CircuitCo and a LCD Cape
 made by CircuitCo, running the recommended OS with everything as default, and
 finding that the touch does not work and things like the mouse pointer jumps
 all over the screen, kinda not fit for purpose?
 
 If someone like me buys a BBB + Cape and uses an OS which is recommended and
 claims compatibility, and finds that it doesn't work for something as
 fundamental as the touch screen, is that classed as user error?
 
 I personally think not.
 
 I stand by my comment of it being a flop, as if the company does not make a
 profit after selling 100K of a popular product, then really... what was the
 point.
 And in terms of sales and people not being able to get stock, you have to
 start to wonder how many of those are from users reading the marketting and
 thinking that will be great, to find when they get it they have no idea how to
 fix problems they encounter (like me) and so cannot use it as they wanted to.
 
 Many of the happy people probably dont use Capes as you said. It just sucks
 that the people who designed the cape also design the BBB, and they dont work
 right purely due to the Software. BBB + LCD Cape on Android works fine, so the
 hardware is perfectly fine, but Android is of no use to many so it doesnt help
 much.
 
 Terry
 
 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 14:07:17 UTC+13, William Hermans  wrote:
 Terry,
 
 I do realize you're mostly aiming your comments at Gerald but let me just say
 that I think you missed a few key points.
 
 1) This is not a Dell or common general purpose PC. So you can not expect the
 same from such hardware. With that said, there is nothing wrong with the
 hardware. It all works fine, and actually up until recently the only thing
 that did not work was the SGX/DRM video drivers. Now, that has been resolved,
 but still in alpha / beta stage (  ish ). Different people seem to have
 experienced different problems here and there, but think this is very likely
 mostly user error.
 
 2) Do you understand the idea of open source hardware ? *.org is usually and
 possibly always non profit domain name affiliation. What Gerald and his
 partners have planned I have no idea, but in my own mind the Beaglebone black
 is far from a flop. Quite the opposite actually when electronics retailers
 can hardly seem to keep them in stock, because they sell so fast.
 
 3) If you can pick up a book, or read web pages you can do this yourself.
 Many in this group will help, even me, when you have a reasonable question to
 ask. 
 
 Anyways it really suck that this does not seem to be working for you. Just
 now that many of of are perfectly happy with these little boards. Heck there
 are a few people who own ten's and possibly even hundred's of these very
 boards . . .
 
 
 
 -- 
 For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
 --- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
 BeagleBoard group.
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread Terry Storm
Hi John

If I knew how to do that, I would be very happy indeed.
I have tried Debian, Ubuntu, Angstrom, Android 4.2.2, potentially other 
distros too that had images available for the BBB, and all that I tried had 
the same touch issue except Android which works for both the TI 3.2 Kernel 
version, and I believe is ok for Andrew Hendersons 3.8 Kernel version too...

Can you point me to how I can use Debian or Ubuntu, or even Angstrom if 
that is easier... using an old Kernel, that has working LCD Cape software 
for both display and touhscreen. 
This would make a huge number of people happy.

This is one of those things that a person from the 'outside' has no idea 
about... That an old kernel can be used with an existing version of an OS 
etc.
I was not actually aware that old versions of the kernel didnt have the 
problem, as I have only used versions of Angstrom which were released on 
the normal BBB 'Update' page, that stated compatibility with the LCD4 and 
LCD7.

If I could be pointed to either images that worked for the LCD4 and LCD7, 
or some kind of instructions on how something is to be built, that would 
most certainly help and put my ranting to ease, so I can at least start 
with some working platform and learn from there.

I appreciate it.

Regards
Terry

On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 17:44:35 UTC+13, John Syne wrote:


 Actually, you could always use the v3.2 kernel where everything works just 
 fine. All the capes work, all the touch screens work. Take a look at 
 Android for example, they mostly use the v2.6 kernel before v4 and KitKat 
 is still using v3.4. BTW, everything works on v3.4 kernel. The problem is 
 you want to use the bleeding edge version of the Kernel and then complain 
 when it doesn’t work. Go back to the v3.2 or v3.4 kernel and everything 
 will work fine.

 Regards,
 John


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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-30 Thread John Syne

From:  Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Monday, December 30, 2013 at 10:26 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 Hi John
 
 If I knew how to do that, I would be very happy indeed.
 I have tried Debian, Ubuntu, Angstrom, Android 4.2.2, potentially other
 distros too that had images available for the BBB, and all that I tried had
 the same touch issue except Android which works for both the TI 3.2 Kernel
 version, and I believe is ok for Andrew Hendersons 3.8 Kernel version too...
 
 Can you point me to how I can use Debian or Ubuntu, or even Angstrom if that
 is easier... using an old Kernel, that has working LCD Cape software for both
 display and touhscreen.
 This would make a huge number of people happy.
 
 This is one of those things that a person from the 'outside' has no idea
 about... That an old kernel can be used with an existing version of an OS etc.
 I was not actually aware that old versions of the kernel didnt have the
 problem, as I have only used versions of Angstrom which were released on the
 normal BBB 'Update' page, that stated compatibility with the LCD4 and LCD7.
 
 If I could be pointed to either images that worked for the LCD4 and LCD7, or
 some kind of instructions on how something is to be built, that would most
 certainly help and put my ranting to ease, so I can at least start with some
 working platform and learn from there.
Hi Terry,

I would start by contacting the vendors who build the capes you are using
and ask them which kernel version do they currently support. BTW, I wouldn¹t
call v3.2 kernel old; I would call it stable, which is what you want.

Linux consists of the kernel (zImage), kernel modules and firmware. Usually,
zImage is installed on the FAT partition together with MLO (x-loader),
u-boot and uEnv.txt. On the second partition, you find the filesystem (OS)
and in the /lib folder you will find the modules and firmware folders. If
you look in the modules folder, you will find the kernel modules for each
Linux kernel installed. If you look at one of these folders, you will find a
folder called kernel. This is where you will find the kernel modules
(drivers) for that specific Linux kernel version. When you change the zImage
on the FAT partition, it will load the drivers from the correct modules
folder. If you want to know which modules folder is current, use Œuname ­r¹.

Best place to find the Linux kernels is Robert Nelsons site which you should
find from the wiki (hopefully Robert reads this e-mail and suggests the most
stable kernel). From there, follow the wiki to install the zImage, kernel
modules and firmware.

I hope this helps.
Regards,
John
 
 I appreciate it.
 
 Regards
 Terry
 
 On Tuesday, 31 December 2013 17:44:35 UTC+13, John Syne  wrote:
 
 Actually, you could always use the v3.2 kernel where everything works just
 fine. All the capes work, all the touch screens work. Take a look at Android
 for example, they mostly use the v2.6 kernel before v4 and KitKat is still
 using v3.4. BTW, everything works on v3.4 kernel. The problem is you want to
 use the bleeding edge version of the Kernel and then complain when it doesn¹t
 work. Go back to the v3.2 or v3.4 kernel and everything will work fine.
 
 Regards,
 John
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-26 Thread Travis Estep
I think most people make the mistake of thinking the BB and BBB are commercial 
products with commercial-quality software. They also believe that the capes are 
just plug-and-play. This board is not for novices. If you are interested in 
learning electronics, both hardware and software, this is not the board to 
learn on.

Novices need a firm grasp of how electronics work, especially processors, 
before moving to this platform. An arduino is a good start, or some variation 
of an STM32.

Linux is another beast altogether, and experience is key. Download the kernel 
and dig through it. Experiment with it. Get books about driver development. 
This is not a subject you will pick up in a few days. The Linux kernel is very 
complex, and aside from the code, there are concepts you must understand. For 
me, I didn't understand Linux and how it ran on ARM until I dug into bare metal 
programming. Once I could make things work without an OS, I moved to Linux and 
had a far better understanding of what it was doing with my hardware. If you 
haven't played with starterware yet, check it out.  TI gives us all the tools 
we need to develop code without an OS for this platform.

Good luck!

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-24 Thread William Hermans
Sounds like the perfect excuse to start learning.


On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 6:47 PM, Robert Nelson robertcnel...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 7:24 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
 wrote:
  Hi
  Thanks for the reply.
  Yes I have tried contacting the manufacturers however one is a hardware
 only
  provider (4D) for the Capes (they fully support their other stuff), and
 the
  other one (CircuitCo) which 4D Cares are based on according to their
  datasheet, doesn't seem to support software and points us here, or simply
  doesn't reply to emails. I'm not the first person to mention this about
  CircuitCo by the way. At least 4D do reply and tried to help, but they
 cant
  support the software.
 
  Sorry if I sounded demanding, just frustrated more than anything.
 
  Fully understand the community is made up of people who do this for no
 money
  etc, however who is actually responsible for open source software, I dont
  know. No one person I assume, and therefore no place for me to find
 answers?
  This is the only place I know to raise it.
 
  In terms of fixing stuff myself. I wouldnt know where to start. I
 purchased
  the hardware thinking/hoping that the standard software provided would
 work
  correctly. In most cases it is fine, but when dealing with a touch screen
  that doesnt touch due to software, its kinda frustrating. That said it
 works
  fine on Android so it proves the hardware is OK, so CircuitCo and 4D get
 off
  the hook in that respect as the hardware is fine, its just the software
  seems to need some improvements.
 
  I guess all I wanted to hear was what you said, that things are being
 looked
  at by someone, and their should be fixes coming out soon. Question
 though,
  where does the average Joe Bloggs who came in to the BBB from nothing,
 has
  no idea about linux and how everything works, find out what is being
 worked
  on so a silly Joe Bloggs like me doesnt make a rant post to try and
 figure
  out where they stand...?
 
  So is Angstrom Dead, or is that rumor false?
  This new 3.12 you mention, I assume that is the kernel. Is a new Angstrom
  being built based on that?
  I believe Debian, Ubuntu and Angstrom, no doubt more, have the same touch
  issues, which is I gather based on the kernel having a problem (3.8?).
 
  I'm a linux noob if you haven't guessed.

 Every developer starts out as noob.  Sometimes, all it takes is some
 software itch you personally want done...

 Regards,

 --
 Robert Nelson
 http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread John Syne


From:  Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
Reply-To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Date:  Monday, December 23, 2013 at 1:21 PM
To:  beagleboard@googlegroups.com
Subject:  [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

 
 A little birdy told me that Angstrom has been abandoned for the BBB ??
 
 If this is the case, and seems to be the case as there hasnt been an update
 for the Angstrom image for the BBB for quite some time, and there are still a
 number of issues with LCD CAPES which have not yet been resolved...
 
 What is the 'new' standard distribution for the BBB going to be now?
 
 Us LCD CAPE users are having a hard time getting touch working reliably for a
 wide range of LCD Capes on the market. I know most of us don't know enough to
 fix problems ourselves or know what the problem is actually caused by, and we
 don't know if anyone is working on these issues or if they are being ignored
 or pass over, or if 'the people' who do know what is going on just don't have
 time to look at them etc?
 
 Starting to really dislike this whole 'open' community based thing especially
 when there are issues and no one wants to own them. These issues have been
 reported for many months, and we are no further ahead.
Hi Terry,
I think you are mistaken in treating this community as some sort of
commercial product support. Everyone here is a volunteer and give freely of
their own time to support users like yourself. I¹m not sure that you will
get much help by demanding that works gets done. Also, the ARM based Linux
community went through dramatic changes (devicetree, display subsystem, etc)
since the V3.2 kernel and we are expecting things to settle down after
V3.12. There are users working on the issues your mentioned and I expect
that you will see many of these issues resolved in the next several weeks. I
just think you stepped into this at the wrong time. BTW, you are always
welcome to fix anything that is broken since everyone has access to the same
tools and source code; but you won¹t be able to do that with commercial
software. 
Regards,
John
 
 Does anyone know of anyone who is working on the LCD CAPE touch issue which is
 a problem on Angstrom (and maybe others which use the same driver/source?)
 
 Terry
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread William Hermans
Not only what John says, but if you have problems with a specific piece of
hardware made by a specific person or entity. You really need to be
demanding satisfaction from them. Not the open source community.


On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 3:12 PM, John Syne jsyne...@us-power.com wrote:



 From: Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
 Reply-To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Date: Monday, December 23, 2013 at 1:21 PM
 To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Subject: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant


 A little birdy told me that Angstrom has been abandoned for the BBB ??

 If this is the case, and seems to be the case as there hasnt been an
 update for the Angstrom image for the BBB for quite some time, and there
 are still a number of issues with LCD CAPES which have not yet been
 resolved...

 What is the 'new' standard distribution for the BBB going to be now?

 Us LCD CAPE users are having a hard time getting touch working reliably
 for a wide range of LCD Capes on the market. I know most of us don't know
 enough to fix problems ourselves or know what the problem is actually
 caused by, and we don't know if anyone is working on these issues or if
 they are being ignored or pass over, or if 'the people' who do know what is
 going on just don't have time to look at them etc?

 Starting to really dislike this whole 'open' community based thing
 especially when there are issues and no one wants to own them. These issues
 have been reported for many months, and we are no further ahead.

 Hi Terry,
 I think you are mistaken in treating this community as some sort of
 commercial product support. Everyone here is a volunteer and give freely of
 their own time to support users like yourself. I’m not sure that you will
 get much help by demanding that works gets done. Also, the ARM based Linux
 community went through dramatic changes (devicetree, display subsystem,
 etc) since the V3.2 kernel and we are expecting things to settle down after
 V3.12. There are users working on the issues your mentioned and I expect
 that you will see many of these issues resolved in the next several weeks.
 I just think you stepped into this at the wrong time. BTW, you are always
 welcome to fix anything that is broken since everyone has access to the
 same tools and source code; but you won’t be able to do that with
 commercial software.
 Regards,
 John


 Does anyone know of anyone who is working on the LCD CAPE touch issue
 which is a problem on Angstrom (and maybe others which use the same
 driver/source?)

 Terry

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread William Hermans
That is, assuming you paid money for it. If you just copied someones open
source schematics . . . well then, you're own your own aren't you ?


On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 4:11 PM, William Hermans yyrk...@gmail.com wrote:

 Not only what John says, but if you have problems with a specific piece of
 hardware made by a specific person or entity. You really need to be
 demanding satisfaction from them. Not the open source community.


 On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 3:12 PM, John Syne jsyne...@us-power.com wrote:



 From: Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com
 Reply-To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Date: Monday, December 23, 2013 at 1:21 PM
 To: beagleboard@googlegroups.com
 Subject: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant


 A little birdy told me that Angstrom has been abandoned for the BBB ??

 If this is the case, and seems to be the case as there hasnt been an
 update for the Angstrom image for the BBB for quite some time, and there
 are still a number of issues with LCD CAPES which have not yet been
 resolved...

 What is the 'new' standard distribution for the BBB going to be now?

 Us LCD CAPE users are having a hard time getting touch working reliably
 for a wide range of LCD Capes on the market. I know most of us don't know
 enough to fix problems ourselves or know what the problem is actually
 caused by, and we don't know if anyone is working on these issues or if
 they are being ignored or pass over, or if 'the people' who do know what is
 going on just don't have time to look at them etc?

 Starting to really dislike this whole 'open' community based thing
 especially when there are issues and no one wants to own them. These issues
 have been reported for many months, and we are no further ahead.

 Hi Terry,
 I think you are mistaken in treating this community as some sort of
 commercial product support. Everyone here is a volunteer and give freely of
 their own time to support users like yourself. I’m not sure that you will
 get much help by demanding that works gets done. Also, the ARM based Linux
 community went through dramatic changes (devicetree, display subsystem,
 etc) since the V3.2 kernel and we are expecting things to settle down after
 V3.12. There are users working on the issues your mentioned and I expect
 that you will see many of these issues resolved in the next several weeks.
 I just think you stepped into this at the wrong time. BTW, you are always
 welcome to fix anything that is broken since everyone has access to the
 same tools and source code; but you won’t be able to do that with
 commercial software.
 Regards,
 John


 Does anyone know of anyone who is working on the LCD CAPE touch issue
 which is a problem on Angstrom (and maybe others which use the same
 driver/source?)

 Terry

 --
 For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
 ---
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread APRichelieu
Den tisdagen den 24:e december 2013 kl. 00:12:40 UTC+1 skrev William Hermans:
 That is, assuming you paid money for it. If you just copied someones open 
 source schematics . . . well then, you're own your own aren't you ?
 
 
 
 
 On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 4:11 PM, William Hermans yyr...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 Not only what John says, but if you have problems with a specific piece of 
 hardware made by a specific person or entity. You really need to be demanding 
 satisfaction from them. Not the open source community.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 3:12 PM, John Syne jsyn...@us-power.com wrote:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From:  Terry Storm terrys...@gmail.com
 Reply-To:  beagl...@googlegroups.com
 
 
 Date:  Monday, December 23, 2013 at 1:21 PM
 To:  beagl...@googlegroups.com
 
 
 Subject:  [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant
 
 
 
 
 
 
 A little birdy told me that Angstrom has been abandoned for the BBB ??
 
 
 If this is the case, and seems to be the case as there hasnt been an update 
 for the Angstrom image for the BBB for quite some time, and there are still a 
 number of issues with LCD CAPES which have not yet been resolved...
 
 
 
 
 What is the 'new' standard distribution for the BBB going to be now?
 
 
 Us LCD CAPE users are having a hard time getting touch working reliably for a 
 wide range of LCD Capes on the market. I know most of us don't know enough to 
 fix problems ourselves or know what the problem is actually caused by, and we 
 don't know if anyone is working on these issues or if they are being ignored 
 or pass over, or if 'the people' who do know what is going on just don't have 
 time to look at them etc?
 
 
 
 
 Starting to really dislike this whole 'open' community based thing especially 
 when there are issues and no one wants to own them. These issues have been 
 reported for many months, and we are no further ahead.
 
 
 Hi Terry,
 I think you are mistaken in treating this community as some sort of 
 commercial product support. Everyone here is a volunteer and give freely of 
 their own time to support users like yourself. I’m not sure that you will get 
 much help by demanding that works gets done. Also, the ARM based Linux 
 community went through dramatic changes (devicetree, display subsystem, etc) 
 since the V3.2 kernel and we are expecting things to settle down after V3.12. 
 There are users working on the issues your mentioned and I expect that you 
 will see many of these issues resolved in the next several weeks. I just 
 think you stepped into this at the wrong time. BTW, you are always welcome to 
 fix anything that is broken since everyone has access to the same tools and 
 source code; but you won’t be able to do that with commercial software. 
 
 
 Regards,
 John
 
 
 
 
 Does anyone know of anyone who is working on the LCD CAPE touch issue which 
 is a problem on Angstrom (and maybe others which use the same driver/source?)
 
 
 
 
 Terry
 
 
 -- 
 
 For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
 
 --- 
 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 BeagleBoard group.
 
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
 email to beagleboard...@googlegroups.com.
 
 For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
 
 --- 
 
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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread Terry Storm
Hi
Thanks for the reply.
Yes I have tried contacting the manufacturers however one is a hardware 
only provider (4D) for the Capes (they fully support their other stuff), 
and the other one (CircuitCo) which 4D Cares are based on according to 
their datasheet, doesn't seem to support software and points us here, or 
simply doesn't reply to emails. I'm not the first person to mention this 
about CircuitCo by the way. At least 4D do reply and tried to help, but 
they cant support the software.

Sorry if I sounded demanding, just frustrated more than anything.

Fully understand the community is made up of people who do this for no 
money etc, however who is actually responsible for open source software, I 
dont know. No one person I assume, and therefore no place for me to find 
answers? This is the only place I know to raise it.

In terms of fixing stuff myself. I wouldnt know where to start. I purchased 
the hardware thinking/hoping that the standard software provided would work 
correctly. In most cases it is fine, but when dealing with a touch screen 
that doesnt touch due to software, its kinda frustrating. That said it 
works fine on Android so it proves the hardware is OK, so CircuitCo and 4D 
get off the hook in that respect as the hardware is fine, its just the 
software seems to need some improvements.

I guess all I wanted to hear was what you said, that things are being 
looked at by someone, and their should be fixes coming out soon. Question 
though, where does the average Joe Bloggs who came in to the BBB from 
nothing, has no idea about linux and how everything works, find out what is 
being worked on so a silly Joe Bloggs like me doesnt make a rant post to 
try and figure out where they stand...?

So is Angstrom Dead, or is that rumor false?
This new 3.12 you mention, I assume that is the kernel. Is a new Angstrom 
being built based on that? 
I believe Debian, Ubuntu and Angstrom, no doubt more, have the same touch 
issues, which is I gather based on the kernel having a problem (3.8?).

I'm a linux noob if you haven't guessed.

Thanks
Terry

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Re: [beagleboard] Angstrom Abandoned for BBB? Rumor + a Rant

2013-12-23 Thread Robert Nelson
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 7:24 PM, Terry Storm terrystor...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi
 Thanks for the reply.
 Yes I have tried contacting the manufacturers however one is a hardware only
 provider (4D) for the Capes (they fully support their other stuff), and the
 other one (CircuitCo) which 4D Cares are based on according to their
 datasheet, doesn't seem to support software and points us here, or simply
 doesn't reply to emails. I'm not the first person to mention this about
 CircuitCo by the way. At least 4D do reply and tried to help, but they cant
 support the software.

 Sorry if I sounded demanding, just frustrated more than anything.

 Fully understand the community is made up of people who do this for no money
 etc, however who is actually responsible for open source software, I dont
 know. No one person I assume, and therefore no place for me to find answers?
 This is the only place I know to raise it.

 In terms of fixing stuff myself. I wouldnt know where to start. I purchased
 the hardware thinking/hoping that the standard software provided would work
 correctly. In most cases it is fine, but when dealing with a touch screen
 that doesnt touch due to software, its kinda frustrating. That said it works
 fine on Android so it proves the hardware is OK, so CircuitCo and 4D get off
 the hook in that respect as the hardware is fine, its just the software
 seems to need some improvements.

 I guess all I wanted to hear was what you said, that things are being looked
 at by someone, and their should be fixes coming out soon. Question though,
 where does the average Joe Bloggs who came in to the BBB from nothing, has
 no idea about linux and how everything works, find out what is being worked
 on so a silly Joe Bloggs like me doesnt make a rant post to try and figure
 out where they stand...?

 So is Angstrom Dead, or is that rumor false?
 This new 3.12 you mention, I assume that is the kernel. Is a new Angstrom
 being built based on that?
 I believe Debian, Ubuntu and Angstrom, no doubt more, have the same touch
 issues, which is I gather based on the kernel having a problem (3.8?).

 I'm a linux noob if you haven't guessed.

Every developer starts out as noob.  Sometimes, all it takes is some
software itch you personally want done...

Regards,

-- 
Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

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