Skip to Content

Posts Tagged ‘lca2007’

Regulatory Binary Free ipw3945 Drivers for Linux

Permalink

Puffy vs the Blob

Today at the Kernel Introduction Keith Packard corrected Jonathan Corbet and said that the Linux ipw3945 wireless driver no longer requires a binary regulatory daemon to run. After poking around the Sourceforge project website for a second I couldn’t find the code and asked Keith about it.

It turns out the binary free project is now hosted at bughost.org. At this time the new driver requires running linux-wireless git tree so it isn’t easy to use and build like the old driver but the lack of a binary userspace daemon should guarantee that the code is merged into mainline sometime in the future. Thanks to Intel for finding a better solution to this.

LCA Day #2

Permalink

The talk “Demystifying PCI” in the LinuxChix miniconf by Kristen Carlson Accardi was a highlight of day two. Using sysfs and lspci on a running system was an effective way to introduce the PCI bus and is certainly more entertaining than reading the PCI spec. A couple of new things I picked up from the talk: lspci -x prints out the configuration space of the PCI devices in hex which lead to the observation that the vendor code for Intel is 8086, ha!

It was also good to meet Kristen in person; she had helped me with a patch for adding the docking station entries to sysfs. Hopefully we can get her down to Oregon State to give a talk to our open source development class.

Google Tab at LCA2007

After the conference on Tuesday Google sponsored a party for all conference goers. It was a great night to meet and chat. In particular I got a chance to meet a few of our donors including conference organizer Lindsay Holmwood. Thanks again to everyone who donated.

LCA Day #1

Permalink

I had been meaning to post daily updates from LCA but the conference is just too awesome to get a chance to blog- ROCK!

Debian Miniconf #6
As a Debian groupie I started the conference off with a brief by the Debian project leader (DPL) Anthony Towns. The first minute of the talk was really strong. Then his phone rang and he took the call! It was the first time I had ever seen this at a conference.

After a good minute of “uh huh *pause* yes, yes, ok ok” he got off the phone and asked one of the audience members to call his mum. Naturally, everyone was very confused. It turned out he was moving today and his mom was the only person in the area to look after the movers.

With that brief interruption the Debian miniconf was off!

A few of the highlights:

  • Funny: m68k buildd is keeping up properly thanks to an emulated build box running on amd64
  • Hopeful: the rework of the GNU Free Documentation License to fit into the DFSG
  • Sad: There were updates on IceWeasel. Why is Sun better at working with Debian than the much more open Mozilla Corp?

bluetooth cameras

The next talk was interesting because of the problem domain: honey bees. Jamie Honan, the presenter, was trying to find a way to keep an eye on his remote bee hives to prevent them from swarming. The problem with a swarming hive is that his next door neighbor is allergic to bees. The best detection method of a swarming hive is smacking the hive and listening to the frequency of the reaction. He didn’t have a mechanical process for smacking the hive yet but a device like the Fascinating Electronics USB servo controller that I brought along for show and tell would work great.

The last session I went to before the embedded show and tell was a talk by Keith Packard on the direction that X.org is heading. If all goes according to plan it shouldn’t be necessary to have much of an xorg.conf in a few more versions as most everything will be hot-pluggable. w00t!

It was a great day. Thanks to the Seven who are putting this week together.