> On the note of "if only we could properly finance you", I actually
> happen to know some very good recently retired ASIC design engineers,
> and if there were "proper" financing available, I might be able to
> convince them to come out of retirement and work on a libre LTE modem
> ASIC project
> > and thus will void your device's (FCC/CE/...)
> > approval
>
> The fact that a modem running your official firmware that falsely
> believes itself to be quadband when running on triband-calibrated hw
> VIOLATES the actual technical specs for the transmitted signals can
> only mean that the
Afaik you can use it legally if you connect it directly to your own base
station.
If you connect it by shielded cable or if you place both in a big shielded
box.
I.e. if the spurious emissions stay below some defined level and don't
disturb
If you can demonstrate you know what you
Well, first you start with an existing phone design, where the
production line is all tooled up, and you start with making
sure the tantalum in the capacitors is only from conflict-free
regions. That probably adds $2 per phone, and a whole lot of
arm-twisting with suppliers (which is the really
I changed the subject..
This is quite an interesting endeavor.. I'm hoping the fairphone group
will engage the OpenMoko community as well as other open source hardware
groups.
I would like to see Fairphone start by sponsoring making CAD drawings
for the OpenMoko Freerunner cases in OpenSCAD or
.
--
Troy Benjegerdes'da hozer' ho...@hozed.org
Somone asked my why I work on this free (http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/)
software hardware (http://q3u.be) stuff and not get a real job.
Charles Shultz had the best answer:
Why do musicians compose
On Wed, Jan 02, 2013 at 11:23:38AM -0500, Ian Darwin wrote:
On Wed, Jan 02, 2013 at 05:17:16PM +0100, Jeffrey Ratcliffe wrote:
Hi Troy,
On 30 December 2012 21:08, Troy Benjegerdes ho...@hozed.org wrote:
I can do this with a GTA02 (wifi built-in, and USB-host mode), or *maybe*
My
Does this one have wifi?
I have whatever version only had bluetooth.
I'd be quite interested in both if I had a clear path how to run them
without needing to have the battery (as an always-on touchscreen for
home automation).. see http://androidthermostat.com/
On Sun, Dec 30, 2012 at 12:44:13PM
for the fpga ;)
--
--
Troy Benjegerdes'da hozer' ho...@hozed.org
Somone asked my why I work on this free (http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/)
software hardware (http://q3u.be) stuff and not get
On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 08:16:03AM +0800, Paul Wise wrote:
On Sat, 2012-11-10 at 18:57 -0500, Harry Prevor wrote:
Sorry for bringing this somewhat old topic up, but why did this have
to be done? I can understand restricting editing to registered users
only or adding CAPTCHAs to prevent
On Mon, Nov 05, 2012 at 07:46:44AM +0100, Christ van Willegen wrote:
Hello Troy,
On Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 6:54 AM, Troy Benjegerdes ho...@hozed.org wrote:
What I'd really like to be able to do though, is fix the simulator
code so I can try out UI protocol development without having to load
I've gotten rather excited recently about the wikireader since they
can be had for under $15, and this looks like an ideal platform to
make a nice touchscreen interface for home automation and other things
you might want to do with other open hardware like the Arduino.
I started by hooking up the
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