home.social

Search

97 results for “pocketvj”

  1. @pocketvj I find #calcurse not that bad. I use a combination of calcurse and #when (birthdays) to display upcoming events on my home screen (#conky).

  2. @pocketvj It is possible to #SSH into the #VenusOS. Did you get this to work? There is a option in the GUI for enabling SSH.

    Then there is a software to get all values from the inverter. And I would assume, also the error codes!?

  3. @pocketvj seconded! Options for freedom-respecting software on e-paper powered devices is sorely lacking (though I'm glad projects like are there to improve the situation)

    @anders @aram

  4. @pocketvj @mikey

    I've tried #NewPipe (and #Thorium / #P2Play / #Tubelab etc). It's a good #YouTube client. In my experience, it doesn't work well as a #Peertube client. Last time I checked it had no notifications, no comments, no favoriting, basically no interaction if you're watching a Peertube video. The apps suggested have all of this.

    You're right about #Sepiasearch , although I'd also subscribe to #Peertube on Mastodon / the fedi.

  5. @dexternemrod @pocketvj Yes but updates do sneak in .....I think. This can be.monitored via alerts from Github. Strangely I had more problems when the stack was being updated because making things backward compatible and compatible with all versions was not really achieved if even possible... so now, with the "maintenance mode", so long as you can indeed flash your radios (plural, use two to at least be able to talk to yourself 😂) everyone will be on the same "page".

  6. Just came across @pocketvj via @linmob and apparently I’ve finally found the perfect device to run @postmarketOS on, the OnePlus 6 (). Thanks for posting so many things about Linux support for this phone. It’s the perfect mix of build quality, Linux support, and price that I’ve always wanted!

  7. 🎙️ had an amazing time talking to @pocketvj in postmarketOS podcast E39:

    * 1.5 years of traveling the world on bike 🚲
    * hacking
    * Flashing OP6 in a tent
    * Coding on the phone while hitchhiking
    * Video editing on pinephone pro
    * Using OCR to copy text to clipboard
    * Using LLMs as offline internet
    * Dealing with large parts of the internet being censored
    * Getting rid of almost everything
    * Taking things for granted

    cast.postmarketos.org/episode/

  8. The bureaucracy is the biggest motivation killer ever!
    We bought a farm with forest and for some reason we now have to proof that our forest is a forrest, otherwise it gets taxed as real estate... which costs very much more. in every tree is mapped in their forest system, so what 🤷
    we are in a loophole and it seems all this tax people are brainless robots..

  9. The bureaucracy is the biggest motivation killer ever!
    We bought a farm with forest and for some reason we now have to proof that our forest is a forrest, otherwise it gets taxed as real estate... like very, very, very much more. in every tree is mapped in their forest system, so what 🤷

  10. @david_bardos
    i just went through your summary, thanks🙏
    i made similar experience. was happily running ubports on a nexus for several years, the best phone i had until i lost it.
    then run pmos/sxmo on a for quite a while daily, praying when doing an update and spending months writing your own apps is a fulltime job, i still love it, but dont beleive anymore that it will make it to a phone state. /e/os is a joke, honestly. sailfishOS, for my tast too colorfull and too far off a linux system

  11. @postmarketOS
    @okias

    and everyone involved:

    THANKS FOR THE sdm845 KERNEL UPGRADE! 🎉

  12. Ghidra is addictive. Found a good entry point for the #PocketViewer simulator and now I can't stop naming variables in the decompiler.

    For those curious: plugview.plg seems to handle the screen rendering and it has a lot of public symbols and uses many known Windows APIs, so it could be a good way for me to find where VRAM resides in the emulator and maybe on the real system.
    But I also rediscovered a PV blog with lots of useful utilities (like GetOS!) and even some OS patches. I already found some useful info about the memory map in the source code for GetOS2.
    Still, reversing the simulator can be of some service yet! Right now I rely on some wonky AHK scripts to automate it, it would be much better to inject code directly into it with Frida, or to extract useful bits out of

  13. AYANEO Pocket Vert is like a modern Game Boy with a 3.5 inch, 1600 x 1440 display and Android-based OS

    The AYANEO Pocket Vert is an upcoming Android handheld that looks a bit like a Nintendo Game Boy might have if it were released in 2025 rather than 1989.

    In other words, it’s a vertical device with a screen on top and buttons on the bottom. But that screen features a high-res IPS LCD display panel and glass that sits flush with the device’s all-metal body. AYANEO has been sharing teasers for […]

    #androidHandheld #ayaneo #ayaneoPocketVert #handheldGameConsole #pocketVert

    Read more: liliputing.com/ayaneo-pocket-v

  14. Hey #Casio I have some questions...

    enum bool {FALSE=0, TRUE=1, HALF=2};

    cc: #C #PocketViewer

  15. Working on a 2-page spread #MonthlyCalendar #Stencil for 3.5x5.5" #PocketJournals

    6 rows of 7 because a few months spill across 6 week-blocks, a little note space at the bottom of the second page, a space for the month, and spaces to write in day names...

  16. #ReverseEngineering / #embedded folx, is it possible that a boot ROM is mapped near the end of the address space such that some of its contents wrap around?
    See: github.com/NationalSecurityAge
    Context: I'm trying to figure out the memory map for the #PocketViewer .

  17. Got a #PocketViewer in its original box with a dock. :moomin_yay:
    I can finally transfer files between it and my PC. UwU

  18. Trying to reverse engineer the x86 emulator in sim3022.exe from the #PocketViewer SDK. Or rather, trying to locate it in the relatively massive GUI app. I have some candidates that look like they are doing instruction or operand decoding.

  19. Oh, I think I figured out how Casio's engineers tested the #PocketViewer. It was weird that there would be no easier way to access the serial port than via the proprietary connector, which has very tightly packed surface mounted pins. There are 9 test pads on the "back" of the PCB that are obviously on the same traces that lead to the the serial connector.
    That makes my job a *lot* easier. Although it still requires disassembly, so a custom connector build is still on the todo list.

  20. #PocketViewer finally (carefully!) disassembled! Damn, that required some finesse and "I wonder what Casio's engineers were thinking" pondering and poking.
    Anyways, now I might finally get a better angle from which I can poke at the serial port.

    ps.: Thanks @rostiger for the stickers! They arrived recently and I've been putting them on things so I become more attached to them. Hopefully that will give extra motivation for their maintenance.

    cc: #electronics #theFoundry #disassembly

  21. > #OWBasic turns the Casio-PV from a standard dumb-terminal #PDA into a type of hand-held Acorn Electron #BASIC computer.

    Oh hell yes, that is my jam.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OWBasic

    So now I need to hunt down / build an RS-232 cable for this #PocketViewer I picked up. 🤔