I've had some thots on this, and a useful thing that 
is theoretically doable under obsd is a forwarding mechanism 
such that a conventional potts line or cell can be plugged
in and forwarded via voip to a remote android client.  

This requires a pricey piece of hardware (Digum card) and correct 
config of Asterisk, but I wonder if something like an modem (with a 
code accessible DAC) might do. 

Dhu


On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 14:09:48 -0500
Nick Holland <n...@holland-consulting.net> wrote:

> short answer: no.
> Long answer: still no.  Too many types of hardware, too little
> documentation,  too much churn (i.e., by the time a machine was "done",
> new hw wouldn't be available for purchase), most hw has a finite life
> (i.e., embedded batteries -- once those fail, your machine is mostly
> worthless), etc., etc., ...
> 
> IMPOSSIBLE?  No.  I just can't see this as something that someone is
> going to spend a lot of time on.  Feel free to prove us wrong, write
> code, make it work, submit it.
> 
> But yes, I know what you are saying.  In 1981, I spent a lot of time
> trying to optimize a 33 byte program to 32 bytes so I could fit it in an
> on-board ROM on my Quest Super Elf.  I've been terrified to go back to
> that program and look to see how my codes skills now compare to when I
> was 15 years old.
> 
> (Hmmm....not at all what you are after, but maybe someone could write an
> armv7 emulator in the Android OS so you could run an off-the-shelf
> release of OpenBSD in as a VM in Android?  I can't decide if that could
> be in the slightest bit useful or not)
> 
> Nick.
> 
> 
> On 02/15/15 12:46, Alan Corey wrote:
> > I'm not talking full control of all functions, I just mean putting an
> > image into an sdcard partition and being able to boot it from Android
> > and use it.  Hopefully be able to build at least some ports on it.
> > 
> > OK, I'm new here.  I've had a Raspberry Pi for maybe 2 years, run
> > Debian on it but I've played with FreeBSD on there.  I've been running
> > OpenBSD on i386 machines since about 2001.
> > 
> > A few weeks ago I got an Android phone (my first), added a 64 gig
> > sdcard, installed Debian.  Frankly between Android and Debian I'm
> > getting sick of the bloatware.  20 years ago I was plinking around
> > teaching myself i386 assembly language and writing programs that were
> > under 100 bytes.  Android Studio is almost a 1 gig download and they
> > recommend 4 gigs of RAM to run it.
> > 
> > This Debian doesn't even have direct access to the hardware, you
> > communicate with it by ssh and vnc.  Can there be X video drivers, a
> > way to attach gpsd to the GPS hardware, use the Android keyboard,
> > connect to the WiFi, bluetooth, USB, camera, and sensors?  I'm not
> > sure what I want but I feel like I don't have access to the hardware I
> > own.  An OpenBSD dmesg would be a good start.
> > 
> >   Alan Corey
> > 
> 
> 


-- 
Ne obliviscaris, vix ea nostra voco.

Reply via email to