Koen Kooi wrote:
Frantisek Dufka schreef:
Yet when usb cable is
inserted kernel says something about full speed config. Unfortunately
full speed is 12Mbps USB 1.1 speed. USB 2.0 is called high speed.
usb 2.0 high speed = 12Mbps
usb 2.0 full speed = 480MBps
welcome to usb marketing speak :(
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Frantisek Dufka schreef:
Koen Kooi wrote:
Frantisek Dufka schreef:
Yet when usb cable is
inserted kernel says something about full speed config. Unfortunately
full speed is 12Mbps USB 1.1 speed. USB 2.0 is called high speed.
usb 2.0 high speed
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Koen Kooi schreef:
Frantisek Dufka schreef:
Koen Kooi wrote:
Frantisek Dufka schreef:
Yet when usb cable is
inserted kernel says something about full speed config. Unfortunately
full speed is 12Mbps USB 1.1 speed. USB 2.0 is called high speed.
Hi,
There didn't seem to be a .install file that you mentioned. But I
noticed that the debian/tmp directory doesn't seem to be the place
where the compliled libraries are taken from by dh_builddeb. It seems
that the corrent place is debian/packagename. I copied the libraries
from tmp to that. So
A device entry in /dev doesn't actually mean your kernel has support for the
device. I expect your kernel doesn't have loopback device support. Cat
/proc/devices, under Block devices: you should see 7 loop, i.e.
Block devices:
1 ramdisk
3 ide0
7 loop
9 md
11 sr
22 ide1
253
Koen Kooi wrote:
And by the looks of it the omap1710 as well :(
Yes, found it - drivers/usb/gadget/omap_udc.c
* omap_udc.c -- for OMAP full speed udc; most chips support OTG.
No word about high speed. Looks like high speed UDC is rare thing.
Found only this
Hi,
On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 15:30 -0700, ext Shane Bryan wrote:
I was just reading that HildonApp has been depricated in 2.0 as per
the porting HOWTO, so I am wondering if maybe the gazpacho installed
via apt-get is not actually compatible with Maemo 2.0? I am
suspecting this may be the case,
Greg,
thanks for the writeup - it is very helpful.
-Vlad
On Sun, 2006-10-01 at 17:13 -0700, Greg Morgan wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hello,
Some time ago a developer asked how to get going with the Maemo Garage
once his project was approved. I have been hacking
It seems that GTK community (as well as KDE) had faced at some point
similar problems - their solution was GnomeFiles (KDE Apps)
(http://gnomefiles.org/index.php, http://www.kde-apps.org/).
-Vlad
On Sat, 2006-09-30 at 05:24 -0700, Greg Morgan wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: