Dr. H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote:
>> Open hardware means availability of schematics and gerbers,
> Are they available for the Neo?
No, Neo is not open hardware either.
Even if it was it would not be easy to produce.
I have a reflow oven and could do it, but I think
it would end up costing just as m
Sorry,
I did copy the wrong link. Here is the correct one for the LCD-PDA
module.
http://www.compulab.co.il/x270em/download/
Am 29.10.2007 um 00:41 schrieb Doug Sutherland:
Open hardware means availability of schematics and gerbers,
Are they available for the Neo?
Really open hardware wou
Am 29.10.2007 um 00:41 schrieb Doug Sutherland:
Open hardware means availability of schematics and gerbers,
Are they available for the Neo?
Really open hardware would be if you get all the files to produce
your own silicon :-)
not source code, and this is not open hardware. Driver code
is s
Open hardware means availability of schematics and gerbers,
not source code, and this is not open hardware. Driver code
is still in the software realm. For compulab's PXA270 boards,
this is their listed OS support:
http://www.compulab.co.il/x270em/html/x270-em-os-support.htm
Since they list lin
> > > Compulab does have, and has always had, very interesting
> > > embedded boards.
> does anyone know the word on openness of their hardware?
If you want open hardware, Balloon boards at http://balloonboard.org/
seem the most likely candidate, buy enough and you can specify your
own components
On 22/10/2007, Ian Darwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Doug Sutherland wrote:
> > Compulab does have, and has always had, very interesting
> > embedded boards. But before you get excited about this one
>
> The quantity 1 prices are 2.5x the listed prices which are for quantity
> 1000. Add in a GPS,
Doug Sutherland wrote:
Compulab does have, and has always had, very interesting
embedded boards. But before you get excited about this one
that the article states "starting at $122" ... Unless they have
changed their way of doing sales, you don't just buy one
module, you buy an evaluation kit,
Compulab does have, and has always had, very interesting
embedded boards. But before you get excited about this one
that the article states "starting at $122" ... Unless they have
changed their way of doing sales, you don't just buy one
module, you buy an evaluation kit, which runs up close to
$2
Peter Viani wrote:
I'm sure many of you saw this on Engadget Mobile:
http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2007/10/18/compulabs-em-x270-brings-diy-to-smartphones/
Pretty cool looking hardware. Oh the possibilities for the people that
know more than I...
I agree, definitely cool. Now I just need
http://www.compulab.co.il/x270em/html/x270-em-datasheet.htm
On Friday 19 October 2007, Peter Viani wrote:
> I'm sure many of you saw this on Engadget Mobile:
> http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2007/10/18/compulabs-em-x270-brings-diy-to-sm
>artphones/
>
> Pretty cool looking hardware. Oh the possibil
I'm sure many of you saw this on Engadget Mobile:
http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2007/10/18/compulabs-em-x270-brings-diy-to-smartphones/
Pretty cool looking hardware. Oh the possibilities for the people that know
more than I...
___
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