Ühel kenal päeval (kolmapäev 16 mai 2007 9:54 am) kirjutas Uwe Hermann:
> On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 05:51:57PM +0300, Indrek Kruusa wrote:
> > Ühel kenal päeval (esmaspäev 14 mai 2007 10:03 am) kirjutas shirish:
> > > Hi all,
> > > Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> >
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 05:51:57PM +0300, Indrek Kruusa wrote:
> Ühel kenal päeval (esmaspäev 14 mai 2007 10:03 am) kirjutas shirish:
> > Hi all,
> > Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> > products page as well as vendors lists & went to the sites but failed
> > to fi
>I have been looking at the alternatives. While don't know about the others
> but this is not so nice to see of DDWRT http://xwrt.blogspot.com/
There are a number of Open Source projects in the router space, some of
them do a really admirable job. DD-WRT is taking flak at the moment
because
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Hi,
On 5/15/07, Uwe Hermann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 02:55:50PM -0700, roger wrote:
> > > First of all thank you for answering to my query.
> > > I'm still slightly confused. As per Linuxbios wiki page says it is
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 02:55:50PM -0700, roger wrote:
> > First of all thank you for answering to my query.
> > I'm still slightly confused. As per Linuxbios wiki page says it is to be
> > used
> > also in embedded devices. I have been reading the wikipedia pages on the
> > the Linksys
On Monday 14 May 2007 10:20:10 ron minnich wrote:
> one interesting thing: the BIOS costs are one reason that x86 has had
> trouble getting acceptance in the embedded space, i am told (by
> embedded systems vendors).
Another problem is that there's no x86 hardware to be accepted, at least in
cert
On Tue, 2007-05-15 at 02:58 +0530, shirish wrote:
>
> First of all thank you for answering to my query.
> I'm still slightly confused. As per Linuxbios wiki page says it is to be used
> also in embedded devices. I have been reading the wikipedia pages on the
> the Linksys WRT54G series
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 02:58:44AM +0530, shirish wrote:
> > > Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> > > products page as well as vendors lists & went to the sites but failed
> > > to find anything.
> >
> > Since there are no x86 compatible routers, your question does
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Hi Luis,
On 5/14/07, Luis Correia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi!
>
> On 5/14/07, shirish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> > products page as well as vendors lists & went
I have been told that there are routers using linuxbios, but that's
all I've ever been told.
one interesting thing: the BIOS costs are one reason that x86 has had
trouble getting acceptance in the embedded space, i am told (by
embedded systems vendors).
LinuxBIOS fixes this problem. Things like E
Hi,
On 14.05.2007 09:03, shirish wrote:
> Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> products page as well as vendors lists & went to the sites but failed
> to find anything.
Extreme Networks offers routers which run linux (MIPS64 architecture).
I have no idea what sort o
Ühel kenal päeval (esmaspäev 14 mai 2007 10:03 am) kirjutas shirish:
> Hi all,
> Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
> products page as well as vendors lists & went to the sites but failed
> to find anything.
You may find something by googling routerboard+linuxbios
c
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 12:33:44PM +0530, shirish wrote:
> Are there routers which are using linuxbios?
Not that we know of.
> D-Link 502-T
> its pretty similar to how linux is .
Many consumer network appliances are embedded Linux systems.
They usually run on an ARM CPU and there has not
Hi all,
Are there routers which are using linuxbios? I looked at the
products page as well as vendors lists & went to the sites but failed
to find anything.
In case, there is an device like that would it be possible say to use
such a device & send diagnostic messages using telnet or something
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