More info... _________________
To be precise, please follow this procedure, as well as mailing to the soc2006support mailing list. http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php/Developers_Program This will reduce time delays and let me sort through and prioritize requests. Regards, Jim Gettys OLPC -------- Forwarded Message -------- From: Jim Gettys <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: One Laptop Per Child. Date: Mon, 05 Jun 2006 20:47:44 -0400 At some point soon we'll put a machine up on the public internet. Note that as others have pointed out, a good way to simulate most of an OLPC system is to set memory=128 (or maybe memory=112), on an old laptop, and turn off swapping. Also, there is a full up OLPC Fedora derived environment you can run under qemu available today. Also note the stated goals found here: http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php/Developers_Program#Goals First preference will to to projects that really need the unique capabilities of the hardware, as described at http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php/Hardware_specification I'd love it if someone could write a tool that would compare the libraries/binaries in the OLPC environment an application and tell us what, if any, dependencies are missing; to first, and second, and third order this is a normal x86 system on which software should "just work", so long as it is not memory hoggish nor depends on stuff we don't consider part of the standard environment. This doesn't mean other stuff won't be able to run: just that its footprint will necessarily be larger, and we don't have space to run arbitrary amounts of libraries and random junk. Regards, - Jim On Mon, 2006-06-05 at 13:37 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Mon, 5 Jun 2006, Chris DiBona wrote: > > Anyhow, email soc2006support if you are interested, but remember that > > we have very few of these kits available to us, so you should be > > -really- really- really- interested, as if you think it will just rot > > in your parts box, that is a kit that may be of better use to another > > person on this list. > > I don't know how many people this would help, but would it be > possible/helpful/etc. to have one in a shared location? The Google > Santa > Monica office would work for me... but, I would need access on the > nights/weekends. Not that I really think Inkscape will run in a low > memory > environment :), but for other people. It's kinda like timesharing of > ol'. > > --Ted > > > > -- JaneW _____________ Jane Weideman mobile: +27 83 779 7800 Canonical Ltd. -- edubuntu-devel mailing list edubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-devel