With that initial explanation out of the way, in 2022 I’ve been getting my Chumby working with the mainline Linux kernel and slowly trying to submit fixes upstream for issues as I find them. To be clear, I’m not trying to get the stock Chumby software working with the new kernel. That’s likely impossible. The stock software is heavily dependent on Flash which is a dead end. I’m just getting the new kernel running well enough so that I can develop my own custom software for it. I’m going to write a few posts about that process and some of the fun challenges I had to overcome. This first post in the series will talk about some of the work I did with U-Boot.
If you’re into Linux kernel development, there’s massive number of devices out there running outdated kernels you could be updating for fun, in your spare time.
I had forgotten how lovely iOS icons used t look. “modern” designers seems to have a lot to learn from the past.
how did my post end up on this article. this article did not even exist on the page when i wrote it. It is supposed to be on the ios on qemu article. Thom, could you move it to the proper article?
I think that above post is for the previous OSAlert article….
Love the Chumby Box. “it’s like, totally awesome” “it has the Wi-Fis!!”
A nice blog post showing what sort of effort it is to port OSs around.