No it is. Just use the compilers for the other arch.
On Aug 12, 2013, at 21:35, Devyn Collier Johnson
wrote:
>
> On 08/12/2013 07:23 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
>> On Mon Aug 12 19:15:36 EDT 2013, devyncjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
>>> Aloha Plan9 fans!
>>>
>>> I am new to Plan9 and I plan to u
On 08/12/2013 07:23 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
On Mon Aug 12 19:15:36 EDT 2013, devyncjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
Aloha Plan9 fans!
I am new to Plan9 and I plan to use it for robotics. However, I am
unable to find a Python3 interpreter that would run on a Plan9 system on
an ARM system. Does s
On Mon Aug 12 19:15:36 EDT 2013, devyncjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
> Aloha Plan9 fans!
>
> I am new to Plan9 and I plan to use it for robotics. However, I am
> unable to find a Python3 interpreter that would run on a Plan9 system on
> an ARM system. Does such a package exist?
not out o the box
No, sorry.
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 7:13 PM, Devyn Collier Johnson
wrote:
> Aloha Plan9 fans!
>
>I am new to Plan9 and I plan to use it for robotics. However, I am unable
> to find a Python3 interpreter that would run on a Plan9 system on an ARM
> system. Does such a package exist?
>
> Mahalo,
Aloha Plan9 fans!
I am new to Plan9 and I plan to use it for robotics. However, I am
unable to find a Python3 interpreter that would run on a Plan9 system on
an ARM system. Does such a package exist?
Mahalo,
devyncjohn...@gmail.com
On Mon Aug 12 12:37:14 EDT 2013, ara...@mgk.ro wrote:
> I'm curious where one can find a mips machine that can run a current
> version of Plan 9.
by the way the mips gif images are "fixed" by reverting the addition
of 16-bit color map code. (tif, if you must ask.)
- erik
Thanks.
--
Aram Hăvărneanu
/sys/src/9/rb
http://routerboard.com/RB450G
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 9:35 AM, Aram Hăvărneanu wrote:
> I'm curious where one can find a mips machine that can run a current
> version of Plan 9.
>
> --
> Aram Hăvărneanu
>
>
I don't care about a MIPS terminal, but a MIPS CPU server would
account for some nostalgia factor.
--
Aram Hăvărneanu
It would be awesome (even if incredibly stupid without a mouse option
and due to the small screen) to run it on a Ben Nanonote (MIPS, little
endian IIRC, without floating point unit/extensions)
Ruben
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 6:35 PM, Aram Hăvărneanu wrote:
> I'm curious where one can find a mips
I'm curious where one can find a mips machine that can run a current
version of Plan 9.
--
Aram Hăvărneanu
I'm not absolutely sure if this settles it, but bInterfaceSubClas is 1
Boot Interface Subclass so it should (according to what I've read
around usb.org and Wikipedia) support the usb boot protocol for
keyboards... I'm completely unsure :/ Maybe I should grab a Logitech
K120 (the plain, old simple k
On one of the other operating systems, 'lsusb -v' should give lots of
information
about the device, some of which might be useful.
I have no idea... How can I check?
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 5:41 PM, Richard Miller <9f...@hamnavoe.com> wrote:
> The plan 9 usb keyboard driver only implements the simplified
> 'boot protocol' which most, but not all, keyboards support.
> Maybe this particular one doesn't?
>
>
The plan 9 usb keyboard driver only implements the simplified
'boot protocol' which most, but not all, keyboards support.
Maybe this particular one doesn't?
Hi all,
I am trying to use a Cherry USB Keyboard (with ID card reader... of
course I don't need the reader with P9 but it's the USB keyboard I
have at hand) with P9 in the Raspberry.
The keyboard works just fine with all other Raspberry OSes I have
tried (Raspbian, RaspBMC and IIRC, I also tried
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