hi, i saw your web site was encouraging people to suggest ideas for xfree86, and i figured, what the heck :)
i have an XDA-2 phone and have just recently managed to get the touchscreen driver working (sort-of) and also managed to get a basic framebuffer running. xtiny-fbdev works absolutely fine. anyway, i would like to be able to make use of the device to make a demonstration / talk, and to use it as part _of_ the talk. it occurred to me how i might achieve that, with the limited success so far. the idea is to use the XDA-2 touchscreen as a keyboard / mouse driver for another x-server. ... radical, huh ? :) in principle it's quite simple: run X on the XDA-2, run a small keyboard program on it which communicates over Bluetooth to _another_ X server on a machine running an overhead projector screen. in this way, i can walk around, i can use the XDA-2 to give the presentation, i can type on the mini-keyboard on the XDA-2 screen. in other words, the XDA-2 becomes like the new Logitech bluetooth keyboards that you can now buy for £200 in PC-World: for your £200 you get three devices - a full-sized bluetooth keyboard; a bluetooth mouse; a number-pad bluetooth keyboard with a 2-line LCD display. alternatively, you spend your £200 on an XDA-2, download linux, download some x-proxy-drivers and you get a phone thrown in as well, which is something a logitech bluetooth keyboard don't do :) in implementation terms, it's a kind-of extension of the VNC and rdesktop principle. the difference is that [some new?] x-windows program _generates_ x-events which need, somehow, to be treated as an Input device to a second x-windows server, but there is no requirement to forward the Screen events from the second x-windows server _back_ to the x-windows program running on the first x-server. i believe that, when it is put like that, there probably already exists some software (i recall seeing something like the xvfb package under debian? no, that's the virtual framebuffer one - i think i mean Xnest) which is typically used for testing purposes that could be adapted to do the job i describe. i don't really know - i'm just throwing in ideas, see what sticks :) l. -- -- expecting email to be received and understood is a bit like picking up the telephone and immediately dialing without checking for a dial-tone; speaking immediately without listening for either an answer or ring-tone; hanging up immediately and believing that you have actually started a conversation. -- <a href="http://lkcl.net"> lkcl.net </a> <br /> <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </a> <br /> _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://XFree86.Org/mailman/listinfo/devel