×¢Ò⣬²»ÊÇ´ÓpalmÉÏÔËÐÐlinuxŶ£¬¶øÊÇÖ±½ÓbootÆðlinux¡£
¿´À´Ê£ÏµľÍÊÇÇý¶¯ºÍÈí¼þµÄ·á¸»£¬ÒÔ¼°Îȶ¨ÐÔ·½ÃæµÄÍêÉÆÁË¡£
ÔÎÄÈçÏ£º
After a week of hacking, I finally convinced my Treo 650 to boot linux.
I¡¯ve
uploaded the pictures
to a page for all to see.
I have a page registered on handhelds.org where I¡¯ll be collecting information once I get a bit further. I¡¯ll try to have something available so more people can have a go at it.
To answer some of the questions people have had:
1. Will the GSM radio work? Answer: Yep! The GSM radio is connected to a UART on the processor. You activate/dial it using GSM AT commands. There¡¯s a couple of pins you need to activate to bring it up, but it won¡¯t be hard to narrow them down.
2. Can I load it without destroying my phone? Answer: Yes. The current method for loading it uses the phone¡¯s bootloader to place it in RAM. It doesn¡¯t write any permanent data to the phone yet, and it¡¯ll only be using the SD card for read/write operations anyways.
UPDATE
3. Will the CDMA radio work? Answer: Hopefully. Shadowmite pointed out that the CDMA radio uses AT commands as well. This means that a single phone program might be able to provide both GSM and CDMA service!
UPDATE
Welcome Slashdot, Digg, Engadget and other readers! The pictures are linked above, but I¡¯ll
link to them again if it¡¯s not entirely obvious.
I¡¯ve got to give credit to 1&1 hosting for holding up under a simultaneous Slashdot/Digg attack. :)
½âѹËõ½øÐÐÖÐ
boot kernel
boot success

