Re: dfu-util help

2007-12-05 Thread Andrew Loughran

Joseph Reeves wrote:

Hello all,

Probably a the most noob question you're going to get for a while, but
I'm a bit stuck... I wanted to flash the latest Qtopia build but have
come unstuck at the first hurdle.

Running Kubuntu 7.10 and downloaded dfu-util from here:

http://downloads.openmoko.org/snapshots/2007.11/images/

I have apt-get'd the dependencies and updated etc/fstab as per here:

http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Dfu-util

But the this is as good as I can get out of it:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/DFU$ sudo ./dfu-util -a kernel -R -D ./uImage-2.6.22.5-moko
11+svnr3238-r7-neo1973.bin
./dfu-util: ./dfu-util: cannot execute binary file

Any help getting this to work would be massively appreciated!

Thanks, Joseph

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Joseph.

"sudo chmod a+x dfu-util"  I guess would be a solution.

check the perms with a ls -l dfu-util and make sure you can execute it.

Regards,

Andy

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RE: Buying Openmoko GTA02 from Europe

2007-08-23 Thread Andrew Loughran
Hi Guys,

I'm not sure if I posted to the list before, or was just chatting on IRC -
but I have been a little busy over the past few days.

I collected my neo just over a week ago (see http://blog.zrmt.com/?p=42) and
was suitably impressed with it.  I don't think there are enough
superlatives, but I'm sure I don't need to tell you guys that.

Through some rather lucky family links (my brother is dating the daughter of
a handset procurement manager at Vodafone UK) I've managed to generate quite
a bit of interest in the neo1973.  My little brother can be held responsible
for whetting the appetite of his girlfriend's father - and as he was going
on holiday to Spain this week with the family - I let him take the neo with
him to show the guy.

My gut feeling was that Vodafone would probably be one of the last providers
to support/distribute a linux-based 'open' phone given their reputation fro
crippling devices with their own version of the software, none the less I
also felt that the attempt was worth a shot - and hopefully he will see the
potential of the device.

I think the hardest thing to fight at the moment is the fact that the
current telecommunications market must undergo a paradigm shift in order to
find a way of continuing to profit (so substantially).

I'll hopefully post an interview with the guy when he returns from his
holiday.

If anyone could provide me with some good information (I do feel like I'm
going into this a little under-prepared) then I'd be happy to
accept/discuss.

Regards,

Andy Loughran

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jay Vaughan
Sent: 23 August 2007 11:16
To: List for OpenMoko community discussion
Subject: Re: Buying Openmoko GTA02 from Europe


As a programmer, even *I* might be selling them, directly, from the  
factory ..


j.

On Aug 23, 2007, at 8:27 AM, Dr. H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote:

> I am quite sure that there will be others who are longer in the  
> business
> (like http://www.handheld-linux.com to name one I know very well)  
> to resell
> the GTA02 from within Europe.
>
> But we must be aware that reselling needs some more margin for  
> handling all these
> duties, tax, repacking, shipping, insurance issues (there are a lot  
> of people involved
> who want to be paid for their services). So, the device will  
> certainly cost more than
> 450 USD + shipment.
>
> But you get all issues solved. And there will be warranty. And more  
> options
> for payment (e.g. Credit Card or bank transfer). And someone to  
> directly talk to.
>
> Am 22.08.2007 um 21:19 schrieb David Pottage:
>
>> Jean-Eric Cuendet (ML) wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>> It seems that a big problem we have here in Europe to get Openmoko
>>> devices is that the shiping costs are quite high: around  
>>> 80-100USD !!
>>>
>>> I've opened a website that will sell GTA02 devices when they are
>>> available, to other Europe countries. I'll buy quantities of devices
>>> from FIC and resell them from here, in Switzerland, middle of  
>>> Europe.
>> I am interested, but I am concerned about VAT and import duty  
>> issues, as
>> Switzerland is outside the European Union.
>>
>> I would feel much happier ordering from an importer inside the EU, as
>> that way the importer would be responsible for sorting out and paying
>> any import duties and taxes. The price I pay would include VAT at the
>> prevailing rate in the importer's country. (So it would be better to
>> ship from Belgium where it is low, rather than France where it is  
>> high).
>>
>> Unfortunately I don't get any of those advantages if buy from a  
>> retailer
>> ouside the EU. I may save a small amount on shipping, but I would  
>> still
>> have the headache of paying those taxes myself, and the posibily of
>> paying a lot more than I expect if the customs officers  
>> misclassify the
>> Neo 1973, or disagree with me on it's value.
>>> Payment will be possible through Paypal or direct postal payment in
>>> Switzerland. Shiping costs will be around 20-25EUR for countries in
>>> Europe.
>> I *HATE* paypal, so in any case, if you can find another way of
>> receiving payments that would be good.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> -- 
>> David Pottage
>>
>>
>>
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;
--
Jay Vaughan




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Re: Reactions From Other People to News of OpenMoko

2007-01-26 Thread Andrew Loughran
If anyone needs examples of how phones connect behind ones back, I can provide 
a fair few.

I had the O2 XDA Orbit.  It looks like a smashing phone, but the software on it 
lets it down massively.

The carrier have changed the software's functionality, so even when you disable 
GPRS connection (like putting the phone into flight mode, but with just GPRS) 
the software turns it back on.  This led to a bill of £26 after just 5 days of 
having the phone.  Needless to say, the phone went back, and I'm now sitting on 
my hands until I graduate from Uni, carry on my professional career, and 
hopefully get my hands on the neo1973 in September.  I must say, the experience 
with integrated GPS was probably the best thing about the phone.  I had to 
visit a client - the GPS took me to the nearest car park, then I was able to 
use walk mode to find my way right to their front door.  I had a handheld GPS 
before, which one couldn't really use to the same extent.


Bryan Fink wrote:
> Answers of the, "So I know exactly what my phone is doing at all times
> - no secrets," variety typically get you labeled paranoid.  Answers of
> the, "Because I will be able to modify absolutely anything about it,"
Really interesting thread, Bryan - and definitely worth thinking about,
because the 'pitch' to different types of people (developers, early
adopting consumers, businesses, mass market) will certainly have to vary!

I'd make one comment on the quote above. I agree that most people would
tend to dismiss unspecified fears ("this bit of hardware might be doing
something behind my back!"). But if you tie that to a more specific
example, it might help to get the concept across. I usually point out
how the priorities of end users and those of operators differ: and it's
the operators who are the manufacturer's biggest customers. For example,
some phones put "Send an MMS" above "Send an SMS" on a menu: very few
MMSs are sent in comparison to texts, but the operators are keen to
encourage take-up. Or another example: there's no technical reason why
you can't use any MP3 you've transferred to your phone as a ringtone.
But allowing that would limit a lucrative market, so most phones prevent it.

It'd be interesting to start collecting ideas of potential ways to
express the benefits to different types of customer: who would be most
interested in what type of message? When I get a minute over the
weekend, I'll add some thoughts to the wiki (which might need a
'Marketing' section...).

Cheers,

Ben

--
Andrew Loughran
ZRMT Solutions


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