Pocket Linux Server Showdown 31
phaedo00 writes "Ars Technica has put together a review of two pocket Linux servers (the Gumstix Connex 200 and the Waysmall 200BT). The review covers all aspects, including programming for the devices and their respective communities: "As with any OSS-based project, the community is what makes the Waysmall powerful. It's the community that comes up with novel applications, and develops new uses for the existing hardware. The Waysmall community is coming together as evidenced by several very involved projects and a healthy online presence in the wiki and mailing lists. Additionally, the Gumstix developers seem to be taking active roles in the community, folding community recommendations into their products as well as offering leadership and advice. Somewhat more organized and comprehensive documentation would be welcome, but not if it comes at the expense of accuracy, which the current documentation seems to have in hand.""
Stay tuned! (Score:2, Funny)
hopefully TFA isn't hosted on one.
BlackDog and Waysmall, actually. (Score:4, Informative)
uses for Gumstix Connex (Score:3, Interesting)
The only thing that came to mind about these was what a great distributed cracking tool they would be. I can't recall the first place that I read about the idea (2600? phrack?) of putting a small wall-mount box in a telco closet leaching off the nearest T1. It would be soooo easy. Although I've never done it, I've often planned it out in my head. I worked for a couple companies that h
Downloading the Internets (Score:4, Funny)
I thought the internet that I downloaded last week was the only one, looks like I'll have to find the other ones too
Re:Downloading the Internets (Score:2)
My other favorite was "mis-underestimate" used in reference to the views of his critics. I used that term correctly in a paper on underestimation of nonconvex functions...
why? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:why? (Score:2)
Sam
Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
From the article it seems that it basically piggybacks onto a desktop computer, and them allows you to connect to it (in the articles case via X11) and run some applications... Given that it needs a much more powerful computer to control it what is the difference between it and a USB memory stick with applications that can run on the host os... The programs may be running on the blackdog instead of the host, but so what.
Gumstix on the otherhand looks like a nice solution for a robotics project I have starting in January...
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:1)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
All the host computer does is supply hardware. If I ask you where your computer is and you point to the monitor... I'm not goint to be able to explain this.
The BlackDog doesn't have 1. A video card 2. a nic 3 a keyboard port 4 a mouse port 5 a usb port 6 a firewire port. You desktop on the other hand does. So If I want to check my mail I pop in my BlackDog, "borrow" the 6 items I don't have that I need to use, and exit when finished, leaving nothing behind. I don't need your comput
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
Just to nit-pick, you are not using the USB or
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
You assumed that the only USB device on the host is the BD. But if the host has others there are ways to use them (like a USB keyboard and Mouse) Firewire access I'm now told is flakey. (don't have a way to test so
I do understand what it is... I'm using it right now..... doH!
You don't need admin access on the hosts. It runs at, well, what windows calls user
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
"You plug it in and the computer starts churning. Several minutes later Windows asks you if it's okay to install this and that driver. As things are starting to look like they're getting good, the Windows XP SP2 firewall asks to let a half dozen ports open so the BlackDog can contact military spy satellites. Then, you need to reboot. So you reboot. You plug the BlackDog in, the computer churns for a couple minutes, more questions are asked regarding drivers and ports. And you need to r
Seems far from useless (Score:1)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
"You can only install it on machines you have administrator access on."
So which is it? Is the article wrong? Does it not need any custom drivers? You CANNOT install drivers on a Windows machine unless you have admin access...
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:1)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:1)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
So the blackdog can get network access via usb without installing any drivers? Or does it just mount as an external disk/cdrom, in which case its just an expensive USB stick? And do you access it via X11 if you want a GUI? or do they have some "funky" program to get graphical access... If the software is running on the blackdo
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:1)
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:2)
Memory Stick. If you get a nice big stick, and compile your programs to run from the stick, for both Windows / Linux etc, then you can have all you stuff / settings with you. As the BD will only be able to run software that is compiled for i
Re:Blackdog... Whats the point? (Score:1)
Flying webservers are neat but (Score:2)
I tried Soekris (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I tried Soekris (Score:2)
And now a general message: Children; with the GPL - no source means no freedom to distribute, always get the source at the same time as the binaries and you will never be stuck.
Sam
Re:I tried Soekris (Score:2)
The coolest Pocket Linux Computer right now .. (Score:2, Informative)
What this really is. (Score:2)
1. You aren't going to be able in the immediate future to compress a 8-way opeteron Raid 5 terabyte server into a pocket device.
2. That 500 dollar video card you just bought won't help you read e-mail faster. (gameing may rock, video editing may be helped but e-mail just won't care)
3. More Ram just like anything else h
Review (Score:1)