>On Sat, 01 Jun 2013 00:39:25 +0200 >"Armin K." <kre...@email.com> wrote: > > On 06/01/2013 12:27 AM, Bruce Dubbs wrote: > > > > [snip] > > > > Is there any interest in LFS for the Pi? > > > > -- Bruce > >
Yes, absolutely. However, think as much as I can, I can not think of anything to DO with the Pi. And, in general, I don't buy things if I can't think of at least one thing to do with them before I buy them. I mean, I *could* browse the Web with it, or write programs with it, or play games on it, or play games with it, but I can do all those things with my current computer. And I ain't letting go of it before it dies a glorious number-crunching death. Maybe I can make it as a permanently-online computer, sort of like a personal persisten emissary to the Internet, but that would require an inbound link. See, that just might work. If I can convince the rest of the household to permanently open port 80 (or whatever) on the router, maybe I *can* make a persistance-server. But I will then somehow have to solve the dynamic-IP problem. Anyway, I'm too busy right now fighting with the secret and sacred knowledge of circutry to spent a lot of time with the Pi. Maybe in autumn. > From what I've heard - it's an ARM board. LFS only supports > x86/x86_64 and it doesn't support cross-compiling. CLFS does support cross-compiling (obviously :) ). -- You don't need an AI for a robot uprising. Humans will do just fine. --Skynet -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-dev FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/faq/ Unsubscribe: See the above information page