Am 2008-11-03 12:59:53, schrieb Gunnar Wolf:
> Michelle Konzack dijo [Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 12:10:48AM +0100]:
> > Curently I am building a hardware where the parts cost arround 40US$ per
> > device (@10.000) and using the same microcontroller with a "big" FLASH
> > memory would mke this Hardware
Faidon Liambotis wrote:
[...]
> IMHO this is FUD well spread by companies that didn't want their IP
> "exposed". Atheros cards don't have any firmware; you can transmit in
> whatever frequency you want to with ath5k/ath9k -- ath9k is distributed
> by Atheros themselves while ath5k is nowdays endors
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Chris Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
X-Debbugs-Cc: debian-devel@lists.debian.org
* Package name: fabric
Version : 0.0.9
Upstream Author : Christian Vest Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* URL : http://www.nongnu.org/fab/
* License
Hi there!
Disclaimer: I am a member of the Debian FSO Team [1].
On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 13:35:16 +0100, David Bremner wrote:
> At Fri, 7 Nov 2008 00:27:13 +0100, Michelle Konzack wrote:
>> And as I have already written, I do not know HOW OpenMoko will solv
>> this problem, but FreeRunner/OpenMoko or
Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 00:27 +0100, Michelle Konzack a écrit :
> The problem is, that even if it is mass production since some time, I
> can not distribute the firmware as open source since it change the
> behavour of the hardware which then can distrurb the GSM network.
This reas
On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 9:47 PM, David Given <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Luckily it's very unlikely that Debian will ever having anything to do
> with the labyrinthing maze of potential lawsuits that are involved in
> GSM protocol stacks... what *is* the Debian project's policy on using
> Debian w
Does pci passthrough work with latest 2.6.26-1-xen debian kernel on both dom0
and domu?
Thanks
Darkbasic
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Josselin Mouette wrote:
> Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 00:27 +0100, Michelle Konzack a écrit :
>> The problem is, that even if it is mass production since some time, I
>> can not distribute the firmware as open source since it change the
>>
At Fri, 7 Nov 2008 00:27:13 +0100,
Michelle Konzack wrote:
> And as I
> have already written, I do not know HOW OpenMoko will solv this problem,
> but FreeRunner/OpenMoko or PurpleMagic are not allowd to run in Europe
> with Open Source GSM-Firmware. And of course, PurpleMagic has never
>
Michelle Konzack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Am 2008-11-03 12:59:53, schrieb Gunnar Wolf:
> > So probably the end result won't be shipping raw Debian in your
> > product - As you are not willing to release the firmware, Debian
>
> ??? -- I am willing to do this! It is EUROPEAN LAW whi
Hello, all.
I need help from expereinced maintainers, because I don't know, how to do it
right.
I have some QT program, qutIM, which should be builded by cmake. Also, there
is a number of plugins, who use qmake for building and are developed as
separate branches. For plugin compilation its source
A votre aimable attention,
Nous avons le plaisir de vous annoncer que vous êtes l’un des heureux gagnants
de la Tombola organisée par La BRIDGE BANK.
Cette Tombola dont le but premier est la publicité de BRIDGE BANK et
l’expansion de ses activités marketing et commerciales, est basée s
Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 19:37 +0300, Всеволод Величко a écrit :
> I need help from expereinced maintainers, because I don't know, how to
> do it right.
> I have some QT program, qutIM, which should be builded by cmake. Also,
> there is a number of plugins, who use qmake for building and are
Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 17:15 +0100, Johannes Wiedersich a
écrit :
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
> > This reasoning, as any security-by-obscurity one, is completely flawed.
> > As long as the firmware is distributed separately, you can modify it,
> > whether it is open source or not. Not having
Josselin Mouette wrote:
[...]
> Or so you think. There are people who can read assembly and hex just as
> easily as I read C sources. It would probably take only a few days of
> testing for a hacker with the appropriate skills to remove firmware
> restrictions for reaching a frequency range, for ex
Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 00:48 +0100, Michelle Konzack a écrit :
> ??? -- I am willing to do this! It is EUROPEAN LAW which make
> HARDWARE manufacturer responsable if someone MODIFY Firmware and disturb
> public e.g. GSM networks...
Bullshit. You’ll have a hard time finding a cou
Does pci passthrough work with latest 2.6.26-1-xen debian kernel on both dom0
and domu?
Thanks
Darkbasic
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Public Key 0x3CDB2D28 @ wwwkeys.eu.pgp.net
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Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Am 2008-11-04 14:02:14, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
> In other words, I think the carrot has better leverage on them than the
> stick. Of course it all depends on who we???re talking, as the stick will
> work just fine on an obscure Chinese manufacturer but not on a
> world-leading company that sells
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Josselin Mouette wrote:
> Being in favor of open-sourcing firmwares (including those controlling
> critical security devices in cars) does not mean being in favor of
> letting anyone ship their own version. In such cases, there needs to be
> some appro
On Fri, Nov 07, 2008 at 05:15:33PM +0100, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
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>
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
> > Le vendredi 07 novembre 2008 à 00:27 +0100, Michelle Konzack a écrit :
> >> The problem is, that even if it is mass production since some time,
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
[...]
> Up until 1968 the same reasoning wasused to present people from
> connecting anything but phones provided by Bell to the Bell telephone
> network. You were not even allowed to connect a modem through an
> accustic coupler.
If I recall correctly, back in the old days,
On Fri, 2008-11-07 at 20:01 +, David Given wrote:
>
> 1. Some devices require firmware blobs with no source available.
> Because
> of this, such firmware can't be distributed in Debian.
ack.
> 2. For at least some of these devices, even if the source code was
> available it would add no valu
On Fri, 2008-11-07 at 18:27 +, David Given wrote:
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
> [...]
> > Or so you think. There are people who can read assembly and hex just as
> > easily as I read C sources. It would probably take only a few days of
> > testing for a hacker with the appropriate skills to remov
On Fri, 2008-11-07 at 20:28 +0100, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
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>
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
> > Being in favor of open-sourcing firmwares (including those controlling
> > critical security devices in cars) does not mean being in favor of
> > letting
Johannes Wiedersich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Josselin Mouette wrote:
> > This reasoning, as any security-by-obscurity one, is completely
> > flawed. As long as the firmware is distributed separately, you can
> > modify it, whether it is open source or not. Not having the source
> > never prev
Robert Collins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 2008-11-07 at 20:01 +, David Given wrote:
> > 2. For at least some of these devices, even if the source code was
> > available it would add no value, because of legal restrictions
> > governing which firmware blobs can be used on that hardwa
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