> From: "Luiz Gustavo dos S. Costa"
> Date: Thu, 24 Nov 2016 01:23:58 -0200
>
> 2016-09-30 7:32 GMT-03:00 Francisco Gaitan :
> > Hello arm@,
> >
> > Peter J. Philipp kindly donated me a Banana PI R1 to test, I have
> > successfully installed OpenBSD-current. Wifi works fine even without
> > con
2016-11-25 8:24 GMT-02:00 Mark Kettenis :
>
> You are trying to boot from an SD card I assume?
Yes, sure. is a Samsung 16Gb class 10
>
> Your image shows:
>
> => MC: SUNXI SD/MMC: 0
> Unknown command 'MC': - try 'help'
>
> Did you type that?
I can not interact in some shell, i do not seem to a
Hi gugabsd,
See this post: http://www.rootbark.com/articles/openbsd_on_banana_pi_r1/
On 11/25/2016 11:09 AM, Luiz Gustavo dos S. Costa wrote:
> 2016-11-25 8:24 GMT-02:00 Mark Kettenis :
>> You are trying to boot from an SD card I assume?
> Yes, sure. is a Samsung 16Gb class 10
>
>> Your image sh
Because typical small touch screens eg. those that work with Rpi are not
working with OpenBSD, does that mean the alternatives are pretty much going
to be at least 2-3x bigger in form size if a small handheld computer was to
be made? I looked up USB display examples and that may seem like it can
w
In general do most programmers consider ARM to be something cool to program
for? Eg. compared to programming for older arch eg. x86 or PPC? Or does it
not really matter? I only know basic high level programming so I still do
not understand low-level programming. I just wanted to know with all the
2016-11-25 14:30 GMT-02:00 Shazaum :
> See this post: http://www.rootbark.com/articles/openbsd_on_banana_pi_r1/
>
pkg_add u-boot
Thanks !! i will try with this version from pkg binary. I used a
compiled version from ports.
--
Luiz Gustavo Costa | +55 (21) 9-8834-6998
-
2016-11-25 15:20 GMT-02:00 Luiz Gustavo dos S. Costa
:
> 2016-11-25 14:30 GMT-02:00 Shazaum :
>> See this post: http://www.rootbark.com/articles/openbsd_on_banana_pi_r1/
>>
>
> pkg_add u-boot
>
> Thanks !! i will try with this version from pkg binary. I used a
> compiled version from ports.
>
Guys
Arm's dominance in the embedded sphere is based upon it's licensable ISA.
It is a proprietary instruction set architecture, which can be licensed by
any chip manufacturer, and embedded into SoC's for a fee.
In the offing is the new RISC-V architecture, which is an open source ISA,
(32, 64 a