Re: Linux on access technology

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I think it will be interesting to discover what Linux interface possibilities become available after American Printing House For The Blind starts marketing the Orbit 20 cell refreshable display in the end of 2016. Price point is supposed to be competitive too.

On Wed, 25 May 2016, Kirk Reiser wrote:

Date: Wed, 25 May 2016 09:08:49
From: Kirk Reiser <kirk@xxxxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.
    <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux. <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Linux on access technology

Just as a point of interest, my wife uses her braillite-40
everyday. We replaced the batteries and charging circuit with more
modern ones about ten years ago. She really likes it and is always
worrying about what she'll do when we can't repair hers any
longer. It's editor is clunky but beats the shit out of the editor in
devices like the Alva units.


On Tue, 24 May 2016, Tom Fowle wrote:

I worked on a project to try to develop a TTY modem for the Braille Lite,
Dean was extremely tight about giving me any info about how the lite was
done.  I believe they used a Hitachi HD64180 microprocessor which was a Z80
offshoot. Pretty sure they had no more than about 2 megs of ram and
probably
64K of eprom Don't know about the clockspeed but bet it was pretty kreeky. I don't believe it was ever field upgradable, Dean said something to me
about using Ymodem to upload programs and having nothing but trouble with
it.
Considering the instability of the hardware I think it'd be a bucket of
squashed worms.
Tom fowle

On Tue, May 24, 2016 at 08:48:08PM -0500, Glenn wrote:
Hi,
I am wondering if anyone is working on a light-weight version of Linux to
work on some of the legacy technology.
I am thinking of devices such as a Braille Light 40 and the like.
I don't know how much RAM these devices typically used, or if they can be
upgraded, the last time I had one open for some battery work, it seemed that all the components are soldered down.
I imagine that it would take a .BIN file to prompt it to load Linux.
My thoughts are that it could give a bit more usefulness to these old
devices.
I think otherwise, it's just a clunky Braille display.
Thanks for thoughts.
Glenn
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