The future of Libre Computing: Crowd Funding Campaign Starts Now

268 respostas [Última entrada]
SuperTramp83

I am a translator!

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Joined: 10/31/2014

> Open source does not and was never intended to
teach people to value their freedom.

In fact the very same expression "open source" was coined by a bunch of businessmen who deliberately came up with it to oppose another expression which they were convinced was bad for business: "free software"

Historically, the open source movement was funded as an opposition to the free software movement, it was planned and thought in order to weak and ultimately erase the free software philosophy because greedy morons think freedom is bad for business.

Ignacio.Agullo
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Joined: 09/29/2009

This week we had an interesting discussion on the Spanish forum
about search engines, started by Nuncio Gómez. I think the topic
might be of interest for this forum, too.

These were the search engines that were mentioned, and
subsequently discussed:

-- 1: -- https://lite.qwant.com/

-- 2: -- https://ixquick.com/

-- 3: -- http://gigablast.com/?c=main

-- 4: -- http://searX.me/

-- 5: -- http://duckduckgo.com/

Also, it was mentioned Yacy, a search engine that requires an
application to be installed: http://yacy.net/

About searX.me, it was pointed that it worked without
Javascript, and also there was a reference about needing a root
certificate that can be installed:
https://github.com/asciimoo/searx/wiki/Searx-instances

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ignacio Agulló · name at domain

----------------------------------------------------------------
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.

Soon.to.be.Free
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Joined: 07/03/2016

Thank for you for your replies- I had suspected the Pi-Top would be less than ideal, but it's clearly a lot worse than I thought...

By the way, could I just clarify the "open source" point? I in no way advocate the open source philosophy, which I agree both completely ignores the key benefits of free software/hardware/culture and ignores the evidence its own points don't hold most of the time. Even the Pi-Top. which I believe trumpeted this 'advantage' during its campaign, does not use the word anywhere on its website (a DuckDuckGo search for open site:pitop.com turns up nothing). The statement which inspired the above question comes from https://lwn.net/Articles/667040/. which claims that the device is "modular, and uses free software and hardware (except for firmware on the Pi's GPU)". I do apologise for not making that more explicit in the question above.

t3g
t3g
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Joined: 05/15/2011

I'd love to have more options on the graphics side than AMD and Nvidia. Their non-free drivers are the best performing and their "open source" offerings still require non-free firmware and perform much worse than their non-free drivers.

I am a big gamer and I will admit that I dual boot with Windows but only use it for games. When not gaming, I use GNU/Linux for programming, media consumption, and general Internet use. I have tried games on a GNU/Linux box but I am conflicted since the games are still non-free even if they come DRM free from GOG. People enjoy the freedom of not requiring a Windows license, but if a GNU/Linux user plays games via Steam, it's no different than playing the games on Windows.

I just wish more developers embrace Vulkan going forward instead of using DirectX 11/12. If more devs use Vulkan and that results in better free drivers for AMD and Nvidia or another that respects freedom, then the situation becomes better. I just don't expect publishers like Activision, Bethesda, or EA to ever change.

Chris

I am a member!

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Joined: 04/23/2011

I'm hoping the graphics situation will change. We're working on it... to say the least. Don't want to jinx anything though.

Christianity
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Joined: 10/09/2012

I just donated. It looks promising!

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

thanks!

Turtleman
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Joined: 05/22/2013

I am getting the stand-alone card! I am having a lot of trouble figuring out how to add USB hubs while still maintaining the power source... does anybody have a definite recommendation?

I am looking to spend less than $15 for say, 1 female USB, 1 female micro-USB (for charging), and 1 male micro-USB (to connect).

EDIT: After some time and consideration, I decided the desktop housing is the way to go. It's only $55 at the end of the day, which is not too bad considering it is reusable.

However answers to this question would still be appreciated!

EDIT2: Another question. When the case says "DC Jack", what does that looks like? A male plug?

Alexander Stephen Thomas Ross
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Joined: 09/18/2012

On 08/07/16 11:14, name at domain wrote:
> I am getting the stand-alone card! I am having a lot of trouble figuring
> out how to add USB hubs while still maintaining the power source... does
> anybody have a definite recommendation?
>
> I am looking to spend less than $15 for say, 1 female USB, 1 female
> micro-USB (for charging), and 1 male micro-USB (to connect).

heh this was discussed on the rhombus-tech mailing list :)

lukes looking into buying some for people like ya :)

heres the links for some options i found, you can search aliexpress for
1pc if you want one now, cus the links i give where for 50pcs :)

https://public.pad.fsfe.org/p/eoma-68_crowdfund_micro-usb-otg-hub

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

5.5mm standard jack, pin positive. power supply can be anywhere between 7 and 21 volts.

we're putting an extra option on the campaign, to include one of the triple-way cables that will do micro-usb-otg-host-charging, if ever you want to get one yourself (we tested them, they work) it's here:
https://www.amazon.com/Micro-Cable-Power-Samsung-Player/dp/B00CXAC1ZW/

oh! you'll also need a micro-hdmi type D cable. please note - type D! not A, B or C - D!! so, one of these:
https://www.amazon.com/Kanex-Micro-Cable-Portable-Devices/dp/B003ULNA3K

i'll put these all down at $15 so we make something on them (helps fund the project) but if you want to get them yourself or find somewhere cheaper knock yourself out... but tell me where you got them from so i can get them too :)

lkcl
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Turtleman
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Joined: 05/22/2013

Also, sorry if this is obvious, I have never owned an ARM-based computer before. Can this boot to an external hard drive like any normal computer? I am thinking I want to use a 1 TB drive, and just boot to that.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

it's not an obvious question, so it's a good one. basically the low-cost SoCs typically don't have SATA so can't even boot from it. the iMX6 is one of the rare SoCs that actually supports UEFI... in a very weird way from what i can gather...

anyway, with this computer, basically what you'd do is, plug in a USB-to-SATA converter, put the SATA drive in that, then u-boot will recognise it as a USB drive. then, you either put u-boot onto the NAND flash or onto a Micro-SD card, that becomes your bootloader, and you configure it to boot from USB. it's all fully-documented and perfectly doable.

links
https://github.com/linux-sunxi/u-boot-sunxi/wiki
http://linux-sunxi.org/U-Boot

Turtleman
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Joined: 05/22/2013

Thank you for the info!

EDIT: So what I am getting from this is that U-boot *will not* recognize the drive if connected by regular USB? I need a SATA converter?

If it was not clear I was talking about an external portable storage device.

onpon4
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Joined: 05/30/2012

.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

> EDIT: So what I am getting from this is that U-boot *will not* recognize the drive if connected by regular USB? I need a SATA converter?

that's incorrect... or a misunderstanding, it's hard to tell which.

u-boot sort-of uses bits of the linux kernel drivers, so its capability is limited to a subset of what you can do in linux. however, booting from USB devices is something that was added a looong time ago. the linux kernel "equivalent" module that was added ages ago is "usb-storage.ko".

so any kind of usb memory stick, usb-based sd/mmc card reader, usb-to-sata converter, you should be able to boot from... *once* u-boot itself is loaded into memory and executed.

so when you say "drive connected by regular USB" that *is* a "drive connected through a USB-to-SATA converter". you can't "connect a drive by regular USB" *except* by connecting it via a USB-to-SATA converter.

(that's the bit that was unclear in the question)

however getting *TO* that point (where u-boot is in memory and has been executed) is *NOT* possible to do over anything *OTHER* than NAND, SD/MMC or the USB-OTG port, because the bootstrap ROM code inside the A20 is extremely small and extremely limited.

so boot will have to go like this:

* internal A20 BROM looks for boot0 ASCII string first on SD/MMC and then on NAND
* internal A20 BROM finds boot0 string and loads it into the 1st level cache of the processor
* bootstrap (boot0) loader is executed (from NAND or SD/MMC)
* boot0 initialises DDR3 RAM so that larger programs can be loaded into DDR3 RAM.
* boot0 loads up boot1 (from NAND or SD/MMC)
* boot1 looks for u-boot in a FAT partition (on NAND or SD/MMC)
* u-boot runs and initialises USB
* u-boot discovers a USB-to-SATA converter
* u-boot discovers a FAT or EXT2/3/4 partition on the USB-to-SATA converted driver
* u-boot finds a linux kernel on the SATA drive
* u-boot loads that linux kernel into memory and executes it
* linux kernel loads a stack of drivers and we're off

Turtleman
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Joined: 05/22/2013

OK I think I completely misunderstood. I think I get it now: say I have u-boot on an SD card. I have my distro of choice installed to a USB flash drive. Aside from some configuration I need to do before this works, my card will boot from the flash drive by default when I start up.

Is this right?

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

> Aside from some configuration I need to do before this works,
> my card will boot from the flash drive by default when I start up.

> Is this right?

yyup. by the time the linux kernel is loaded into memory (by u-boot, off the sd-card or NAND), the linux kernel will have all the drivers it needs to recognise *any* boot media that happens to be plugged in.

it's the allwinner hard-coded boot rom (hard-coded into the *processor*) that's incapable of booting from anything other than NAND or SD/MMC, so you have to bootstrap your way up in several stages to the point where all the hardware is recognised.

this is actually the "normal" way it's done, even in the intel world... it's just that the majority of the bootstrapping is done by what you know as the "BIOS". this is a leeetle bit less... less... what's the word... hand-holding, shall we say :)

Grey Moon Driver
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Joined: 02/07/2016

Hi Cris and Luke,

I tried going to the site but it's blocking me because I use TOR. Is there an alternative site I can go to read more about your project?

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

hmm you should be able to get to http://rhombus-tech.net, if you go to http://rhombus-tech.net/sitemap/ you should be able to get an overview from there. http://rhombus-tech.net/crowdsupply/ is where i'm maintaining an "alternative" set of information - mostly notes for myself. if you decide you want to pledge for any of the hardware you can email name at domain (make sure to cc me), they can explain the bank transfer process, you'll have to send them a GPG public key so they can encrypt the details to send you. also banks charge them $15 so you'll need to add that, but other than that you should be good.

Eemeli
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Joined: 01/04/2014

I am very worried about the crowd funding. 25% of the days have gone by but only 17% is funded. Is there really only so few people interested in this? I think it might be because of a lack of publicity. If it were not for these forums (and the newsletter from ThinkPenguin) I would have completely missed this so far.

I expect that a RYF certification and a post by the FSF would increase these numbers. Let's hope for that. In addition everybody please remember to discuss this topic with friends and family!

Good luck!

onpon4
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Joined: 05/30/2012

Do everything that you can to spread the word, but this trend you're seeing is not unusual. The times most people tend to donate are at the start of the campaign, when it was just announced and there's excitement, and toward the end of the campaign, if it gathered a substantial portion of its goal, because it's more certain that the campaign is going to succeed. There's normally a decline in the middle of the campaign.

The most important thing is for most of the goal to be reached by the last week, so that people see it as almost there rather than seeing it as a failure during that critical time frame.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

yeah that was a nice surprise to see it get off the ground like that. also, people who've heard of it but have not contributed yet will be thinking, "hmmm, payday at the end of the mooonth, gotta plaaan aheeeead" and so on.

as i'm here on a 90 day visa waiver in the USA, we had to go ahead on an accelerated schedule, as well as ensure that i and my family can be in taiwan during the right time-period (not summer!). we therefore didn't have time to coordinate everything (press releases) - i've only just learned a few days ago that debconf2016 had taken place, i've been so focussed on the actual details of the project! it turns out that john sullivan has been in africa (most likely at debconf), so very very busy, and so has not been accessible to discuss or approve FSF official communications.

we're all keenly aware that crowd funding campaigns are of limited duration, so if there's anyone that you feel you could reach out to, who is an FSF supporter, or whom you feel would benefit from this hardware, please do contact them yourself, that's really the main thing - let them know so that they can plan.

thanks everyone.

Soon.to.be.Free
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Joined: 07/03/2016

RYF certification probably isn't possible (they can't certify it until they actually get the commercially-produced version, can they?), but there aren't any known blockers.

The FSF post would be a great idea though. Could we all email pleading requests for it to somebody at the FSF?

Chris

I am a member!

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Joined: 04/23/2011

Emailing the FSF will probably not have the result you want. I wouldn't worry too much about the FSF or RYF. They'll release something before the Crowd Funding campaign is over. Ideally it would have happened already, but Josh Gay, and everybody at the FSF is kept very busy. Josh has to talk to John and figure out exactly what is acceptable to put into promotional material. As soon as John is back I'm sure Josh and John will be on top of it. We've sent a few too many emails as it is and taken up a lot of Josh's time already. Sending a bunch of emails will probably not speed things up. If anything it'll probably slow it down.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

please don't - they're on the case, remember they're just a bit overloaded that's all.

ADFENO
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Joined: 12/31/2012

I'm copying this message to libreplanet-discuss and to Alexandre Oliva
since I think it's important for them to know this message too.

I'm very worried about the crowdfunding too.

Don't worry, I *am* contributing by spreading the word about it, even
though I hardly have the salary/wage to support it financially.

My message is focused on the *possibility* to do things right from the
beginning (by explaining that it's *being evaluated for RYF
certification), and because if it's at least proven to work with
free/libre system distributions, it allows the community to use it even
in environments/situations that are hostile to free/libre software
movement.

I also have tried to counter a misinformation that is spread here in
Brazil: That "Raspberry Pi works with free/libre system distributions",
or that "Raspberry Pi is good for the free/libre software movement". And
I also tried to convince people to buy Libre Tea Computer instead of
Raspberry Pi.

However, I was recently financially and accessibly limited to how many
people I would be able to inform.

From July 13th to 16th, an event/conference happened here in Brazil,
called Fórum Internacional de Software Livre (FISL, "international forum
of free/libre software") in Porto Alegre. Lot's of people go there, and
there are lot's of "pro-open-source-only" talks there, and even some
advertising "Raspberry Pi as free/libre software friendly".

As I said: I was financially and accessibly limited to go to that event.
Financially because it's hard to find free/libre software-friendly jobs
here in the State of Santa Catarina, where I live, specially those not
requiring programming skills (I'm not a programmer). I accept work
overseas, but I haven't found such opportunity so far. I was accessibly
limited because there were no caravans/groups near where I live to take
me to the event. Big Mother agreed to pay the caravan/group travel
expenses if I could find one nearby, but I couldn't.

Perhaps we could start working on spreading representative persons of
the free/libre software movement to attend these events, not just
Stallman, Sullivan, and Gay. Oliva is one of such people but, as far as
I know, he wasn't aware of Libre Tea Computer (we probably need to ask
him this: does he participate on libreplanet-discuss mailing list?). The
way I see it, we have lost a great opportunity to stand up for
free/libre software.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

adfeno, i'd like to share some insight with you. when you "worry" people can sense it. they can hear it in your words, even if you don't actually *say* "i am worried". what then happens is... your WORRIES become fulfilled - they become true - because those thoughts "fail, fail, fail, fail" are what you tell everyone, so GUESS WHAT HAPPENS?

:)

so can i suggest, sit down, relax, close your eyes, and imagine yourself holding one of these laptops in your hands, and celebrating with a huge smile. imagine you are booting it up for the first time, you experiment with the CTP and are amazed that it works just like a trackpad. relax and open your eyes, still smiling.

*BELIEVE*.

that's an exercise called visualisation: all the people who teach "how to succeed" courses teach this technique (in a bit more detail than the one sentence above).

when i see "we have lost..." i wonder what date it is. it is the 17th july. it is not 17th august. it is not the 26th August (the end day of the campaign), why are you saying "we have lost??" you understand what i'm saying?

*BE POSITIVE* and you will find, to your surprise, that positive things happen.

onpon4
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Joined: 05/30/2012

Indeed. And as I said before: it's normal for there to be some slowdown in contributions during this period. We just need to push it up to the point where it's almost there, and then there will be a surge of contributions at the end to push it over the edge.

Just remain positive, and continue to spread the word! :)

ADFENO
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Joined: 12/31/2012

Well then, I guess I should be more positive indeed. :)

I tend to be pessimist, most times I do it as defensive pessimism, but
other times I overdo it.

This "common agreement" between religion and science is new to me
actually.

There are some researchers that defend some form of defensive pessimism
as a way to counter some problems, but judging from the answers of the
makers of the project, I see they already exercised preventive actions
based on their defensive pessimism.

Thank you very much for all your replies. :D

hack and hack
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Joined: 04/02/2015

For the science behind this idea, this is all I've found, and you better take it with a grain of salt: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygmalion_effect
A major limitation of this experiment was its inability to be replicated well. "Most studies using product measures found no expectancy advantage for the experimental group, but most studies using process measures did show teachers to be treating the experimental group more favorably or appropriately than they were treating the control group...because teachers did not adopt the expectations that the experimenters were attempting to induce, and/or because the teachers were aware of the nature of the experiment.

And also this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guided_imagery#Evidence_and_explanation

But I've read somewhere a very rational explanation: if you say to yourself that you can't do something, you might not even try.
Or you would try, but half-heartedly, inconsistently, or self-sabotaging in some way, since you think it's meant to fail.
After all, we can be fooled into believing something is true or not. And we can definitely fool ourselves.
BUT (non-religious) faith in oneself without action is definitely BS in most cases (at best, it makes you feel better if ill maybe).
You must do the work consistently. The whole point is to get yourself moving, doing the work to be done, specially when you don't feel like doing it.
So motivate yourself by all means, but more importantly: work your ass of, consistently.

In the S02E02 of Mr.Robot ([POTENTIAL SPOILER AHEAD]), there's an unflattering example of this.

If someone has solid scientific sources, the skeptic I am is interested.

In sports psychology, as far as I can tell, you want to have positive expectations to get motivated. But you still have to do the work. Which you can do ;)

Soon.to.be.Free
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Joined: 07/03/2016

Your evidence and conclusion would appear to be solid, but they aren't entirely relevant to the point.

Although a 'positive mindset' doesn't increase your chance of success with actually succeeding in a work project (like designing and manufacturing the card), it makes a huge difference in marketing. In order to get somebody else excited about a project, thus convincing them to invest, you have to believe yourself it will work out. Otherwise, your words sound artificial and empty.

Hope that helps :).

hack and hack
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Joined: 04/02/2015

Thanks for your input.
You mean communicating emotions then?
Then I agree,
but I would say some people can sell garbage (fas food, sodas for example), So to me the selling part is more like acting. You have to believe you can achieve something though, either the income from the crappy product if cynical enough, or making a positive change, or both, etc.

But I was referring more to the attitude one should have when facing hardships/challenges, whether in designing, manufacturing, selling, whatever.
It's just that I'm very skeptical towards some attitudes more than others.
I'm all for faith (in oneself) as long as the results are tested, measurable and reproducible.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

> In sports psychology, as far as I can tell, you want to have positive expectations to get motivated. But you still have to do the work.

fascinatingly - and this is a major off-topic distraction i know - a trick taught by physiotherapists that train olympic athletes is to IMAGINE that they are doing the whatever-sport-it-is-that-they-do, whilst relaxing at night in bed. it turns out that merely IMAGINING doing the action - as long as you *have* actually done it - can trigger tiny muscular twitches that cause your muscles to gain around 70% of the benefits (increased muscle mass, maintaining "tone") as if you were *actually doing the real exercise*.

so, as a tennis player, i tried this one day, lying in bed, half-asleep - luckily there was nobody in the bed next to me - because i tried "imagining" a huge forehand stroke, my arm jumped up involuntarily and smacked the wall :)

but going back to the original study, imagine that you are the "gatekeeper" on the brownian-motion "thought experiment", the one where you have to open the gate at the time that the "atoms" are coming towards it. what if you didn't *believe* that the pressure would be reduced by opening the gate, such that when an atom came towards the gate, you *didn't take the opportunity and didn't bother opening the gate*?

this is about the simplest most blindingly-obvious way to illustrate that our belief affects the outcome, even when presented with "random chance aka opportunity".

in treating every conversation on reddit - some times i am tired and don't do it - but in treating every conversation on reddit as an "opportunity" i have actually influenced individuals who would otherwise simply not have known the difference, and would not have pledged on the campaign. the fact that i answered their questions (promptly) has made all the difference. it's a frickin lot of work but i have time, so why not.

hack and hack
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Joined: 04/02/2015

You mean visualization techniques? Yes I've heard about them. I mean it's definitely used by athletes around the world, but for example, the idea in basketball that a shooter having a good streak should keep having the ball is false. Statistics revealed that a player in such state doesn't put more baskets in. Yet even the best coaches keep believing that stuff. But it seems visualization has measurable effects, so I'll check it out, thanks.

I'm not sure I understand the example about atoms. You mean beliefs affect outcome because they can make us "not try", thus reducing the chances of success to zero? If that's what you mean, I totally agree. I vaguely (sorry) remember an experiment about flies in a box with glass covering the box. After several attempts, the flies stopped trying, even when the glass wasn't there anymore.

For now, here's what I'm sure of:
- Telling myself that I can do something (not necessarily right now), will motivate me to try, and try again. Trying implies some possibility of success. Not trying removes all chances of success.
- The keyword here is not belief only, but trying, as in doing the work consistently. It's not easy.
- Meditation, visualization, both have an effect on the mind, on emotions at the very least. It helps feeling better, more focused, which improves the work to be done.
- I like the opportunity mindset you describe. Definitely, changing how I feel about the work to be done matters. The only thing is it's better to do the work regardless of my mood than spending too much time trying to get myself in the mood (I've seen people do that).

The temperature makes it hard to think straight, hopefully I make sense.

paradox
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Joined: 06/21/2014

contributed! good luck.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

thanks paradox! really appreciated

muhammed
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Joined: 04/13/2013

Does anyone have a photo of the clear-and-translucent laptop?

What's it like to assemble the laptop?

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

hi muhammed,

the clear / transluscent one i've not printed out yet (but i do have some translucent PLA and have printed parts with it) - i'm not sure if i'll use PETG or PLA. clear PLA tends to come out partly opaque, whilst PETG stands more of a chance of being clearer.

assembly of the laptop is very much like assembling a 3D printer. i've done 3 full casework sets now, and it's a matter of following things logically step-by-step and taking care. however unlike a 3D printer you'll only need some screwdrivers, maybe a craft knife, and you certainly won't need a soldering iron.

i will be doing the assembled laptops myself, and i will be using those to create detailed and comprehensive instructions, including video segments. if you are familiar with the build instructions for chris palmer's "mendel90", that is the standard of documentation that i will be creating. i'll also be available online to help people out.

muhammed
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Joined: 04/13/2013

Thanks Luke.

Could you post a pic of the material if you have a chance, and how the material(s) might correspond to the laptop: http://lpxshow.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/eoma_02-e1454448637648.jpg

Good luck in your crowd funding campaign; I hope that you guys succeed.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

thanks muhammed!

ok that photo was the second prototype, i'd experimented with ABS for the sides and for the screen-hinge after leaving the first prototype in a bay window, in the sun where i had photographed it... you know what's coming next don't you.... it had melted because PLA has a glass point of 60C :)

so that's why the left and right sides in that photo are white: it's "plain" ABS which has a glass point of 110C. however i didn't like the quality of ABS, so i will not be using it. instead i will be trying PETG.

the materials that i've used for the laptop so far are Faberdashery's PLA. Robot Silver, Transluscent Black, Village Green - they don't do that beautiful dark purple any more, sadly. their web site is http://www.faberdashery.co.uk, you can review their materials and if you use facebook they have people posting stuff there. faberdashery's PLA is known amongst the "power users" of the 3D printing world to be EXTREMELY good. people order it for delivery world-wide because they've never been able to find anything equivalent.

i did try some of 123dprint.nl's apollo series "Budget" PLA.... it was so ludicrously low quality as to be borderline mis-selling and deceptive marketing. fortunately after explaining to them that even when the filament was left in a 3D printer without doing anything, just the bearing and gear pressing against it, after two days of pressure the filament would just FALL OFF it was such bad quality, they gave me a full refund without even having to pay postage costs. they recommended some of their PETG, i bought that instead, and have been really happy with it.

now, i haven't had a chance to 3D print up some of the laptop parts with their PETG yet: it has a much higher glass point and is structurally stronger than PLA, so i am looking forward to trying it out.

so. when i am in S.E. Asia i will be endeavouring to source materials that are as good quality as Faberdashery's. if i can't find any i'll just have their filament imported (!). there aren't that many laptop pledges so this should be absolutely fine.

mzs114
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Joined: 09/27/2013

Hi lkcl,

I am thinking of backing the card, the desktop case and the cable set.
I have some questions.

When I back multiple projects will the shipping charges be clubbed to the maximum amount among them or charged separately?
Did you ever consider Olimex boards as alternative? They claim that as OSHW.

lkcl
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Joined: 03/29/2015

> I am thinking of backing the card, the desktop case and the cable set.

great. that way you'll be able to have 3 native full-speed USB2 ports (2 on the desktop, a 3rd via the OTG-Host cable)

> When I back multiple projects will the shipping charges be clubbed to the maximum amount among them or charged separately?

for USA there's no shipping charge as we've taken that into account. for outside of the USA, Crowd Supply, from their long experience, has an estimated average based on weight and destinations world-wide. so we'll be charged for total weight of the items, rather than by volume.

> Did you ever consider Olimex boards as alternative? They claim that as OSHW.

NO.

you may not be aware that tsvetan was one of the first few people to join arm-netbooks, because it was where you could get information about the Allwinner A10. i worked to get the source code out of Allwinner, but there were sections that were still GPL-violating at the time. over the next few years people such as Henrik (linux-sunxi u-boot), and the people who now make up the linux-sunxi community developers, worked just as hard to reverse-engineer the remainder of the code.

i had already decided that i was not going to sell GPL-violating products, and i told Allwinner as much - holding off release of the EOMA68-A10 Computer Card (which later became the EOMA68-A20). now, i was surprised to learn that Olimex had created their A10 board. and guess what? it contained a GPL-violating bootloader and a GPL-violating linux kernel. this was fixed *later* but it was already too late: Olimex had - and still have - lost their right to distribute products with either u-boot or the linux kernel source code.

now, when i pointed this out on the gpl-violations mailing list, he attempted to divert the attention from himself with ridicule, claiming that "how could I, who had never succeeded to release a product, tell him that he was in the wrong?"

when he brought out the A64 laptop, he got a lot of flak for attempting to sell a product that, once again, contained binary-only proprietary components, many of them also GPL-violating at the time. when he was questioned on his blog about this he wrote, "To be honest I really don't understand all the fuss about this binary nonsense, and I'm getting really fed up with it". i wish i had taken a screenshot because two days later he'd taken his response off the blog.

against this background, can you perhaps appreciate why i would not wish to use or endorse Olimex products? tsvetan is interested in making money, and he'll sacrifice ethical considerations to get it. i will not, because i know that the cost of sacrificing ethics is far greater than *any* amount of money that can be had for doing so.

mzs114
Desconectado
Joined: 09/27/2013

I have been following your work for sometime now and I do appreciate the work you have put. It is confusing when many projects start claiming their work as "Libre".

lkcl
Desconectado
Joined: 03/29/2015

thanks mzs114. yehh... we know... the FSF was not very happy to learn that the creators of the "Librem laptop" had not done their due diligence before using the word "Librem". i had a lot of explaining to do there, about why i was happy to use Crowd Supply when they'd backed that project, and it boiled down to two main things: one, they trusted the creators of the Librem (and didn't know that it implies certain freedoms and that due diligence has to have been done in order to be able to use that word) - Crowd Supply certainly know now because we explained it to them! but two, they're very very much "on the ball", are much smaller and more selective, and just generally have this much better "vibe" about them which has an eco-angle. they've backed some really really beautiful projects, including a carbon-fibre surf board that uses balsa wood (very light-weight), an awesome USB-stick computer, an educational robotics kit, and many more. so.. yeah. it just felt right.

muhammed
Desconectado
Joined: 04/13/2013

Sorry for all the questions -- and thanks for taking the time to answer ... just a few more from me

For the laptop, does the LCD connect to the Computer Card via a LVDS? Will your business sell different LCD screens (perhaps higher res, perhaps just replacement screens) in the future that we can buy and swap in to the current laptop body (perhaps with a case mod, perhaps not)?

Will your business sell replacement keyboards, batteries, wiring, battery controllers(?), etc?

Is Parabola appropriate if I want a stable, reliable OS to use for work? I have heard over the years that Parabola is for advanced computers and that people who use Parabola must regularly fix bugs because Parabola gets all the newest updates. I am fairly novice and won't have time to learn how to fix bugs ... reliability is really important to me. Would Debian be safer in this regard? How can I use Debian while sticking with Trisquel's principles?

Eemeli
Desconectado
Joined: 01/04/2014

I have been using Parabola on my main work laptop for two years now. Not a single time did I have any problems that would cripple the system. Occasionally (for me, it happened 1-2 times in two years) some package updates to a newer version while another one still would like the old version. However typically this fixes itself after upgrading again a couple of days later. Of course, if you want to do something advanced (e.g. use two pairs of headsets with cloned sound) then you have to figure out how to do it, but at least you have the option to do it.

However if I know I have a very tight deadline, and I cannot afford any delays, I would avoid running "sudo pacman -Syu" (the do-it-all command to update and upgrade) until I'm less stressed.

Parabola encourages you to learn how things work though. If you want to use Parabola, I highly recommend you to learn to install it following the guide at

https://wiki.parabola.nu/Installation_Guide

In the x86-world I would say that if you want something to "just work" then install Trisquel. If you want regular updates, newest packages, and are willing to learn a bit of new things, then go for Parabola. However in the ARM-world there's really only one choice for a freedom-respecting OS (Parabola).

ADFENO
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Joined: 12/31/2012
muhammed
Desconectado
Joined: 04/13/2013

Hi Adfeno; your post is blank on the forum

ADFENO
Desconectado
Joined: 12/31/2012

Hm... OK, let's see how it turns out if I disable automatic OpenPGP
signing just for now.

This comment should appear in the forums now.

Last thing I remember saying was: GuixSD can also be used in the ARM
"world". :D