Dear All,
after some usefull suggest from this group I'm thinking to start with the
TS-7500 board.
>From this point of view I like to ask if someone here have get some feeling
>with this board just to know what is the think of who have worked or are still
>at working with this board.
By the web I've see that such board can be bootable by SD card with Debian then
I like also to know if there is a way to interface the board with VGA monitor
in order to develop GUI applications, there is some think, suggest about this
request?
Thanks in advance.
My best regards
Pow
--- In Don Tucker <> wrote:
>
> I recently started a development project using a TS-7260 and some of
> TS's expansion boards. I was relatively new to Linux (user-level
> proficiency, no developer/network/admin-level proficiency), and my
> previous experience with embedded systems was with XScale devices and
> WinCE. I ended up way underestimating the time it would take to develop
> our system. My experience has been that it is often difficult to find
> out how to do exactly what you want to do, but the answer is usually out
> there, either on this discussion group, or in some sample code on TS's
> ftp site, or buried in some manual you have yet to peruse. TS's tech
> support is often helpful, but it can take a day to get a response, and
> going back and forth toward a solution can take a few days. I did not
> use embedded Linux, but rather Debian on an SD card. Once you find out
> how to create a Debian image and boot to it, you may then find out that
> the kernel that you have in your image does not support some feature you
> want to use (like iptables or iproute, for instance). Then, you will
> have to become familiar with how to configure and rebuild your kernel
> and have it be compatible with the user space. It's not that difficult,
> but there is a not exactly newbie-friendly learning curve. I agree with
> Bill that if your system allows, going with one of TS's more recent
> releases may be preferable.
>
> Don
> On 3/15/2011 12:55 PM, William C. Landolina wrote:
> >
> > As somebody who is shipping a TS-7200 based product and was about to
> > design a from scratch EP9304 system (a successor to the EP9302) when
> > Cirrus stopped product development on this line I'm not too concerned
> > about availability. I talked to Cirrus at the time and again a couple
> > of years later and their answer was that they are going to manufacture
> > these chips for as long as they have customers to buy them. Cirrus is
> > not providing support for the chip today but it is well understood and
> > what warts it has are well documented.
> >
> > That said, for a new project TS has other boards that are comparably
> > priced, have more bang for the buck, and have better main-line kernel
> > support for Linux. Your out-of-the-box experience will likely be
> > better with a newer TS product. Particularly support for 2.6 kernels
> > is sketchy - TS doesn't support 2.6 on the TS-7200 in any meaningful
> > way and do-it-yourself 2.6 kernels based on patch sets floating around
> > the web can be problematic if you are not ready to dive head first
> > into kernel configurations and debugging. [There are excellent patch
> > sets out there but it is not a place I'd recommend starting out on the
> > path from XP to Linux if you are more focused on getting your
> > application working than kernel hacking.]
> >
> > You will experience serious culture shock if you switch from something
> > like Microsoft Visual Studio to the Eclipse based Linux development
> > environments. They both get the job done but the user interface
> > philosophies are very different. Most everything you are used to in
> > the Windows development world has an equivalent on Linux but it will
> > take you a while to learn where everything is. Maybe like moving from
> > New York to Paris.
> >
> > Good luck,
> > Bill.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: <ts-7000%40yahoogroups.com>
> > <ts-7000%40yahoogroups.com>] On
> > Behalf Of entity2k10
> > Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2011 11:58 AM
> > To: <ts-7000%40yahoogroups.com>
> > Subject: [ts-7000] TS-7200 a point about this board
> >
> > Dear All,
> > this is my first post.
> > For a new design I'm going to use a embedded solution like the TS-7200
> > board equipped with the CIRRUS EP9302 ARM9 processor.
> > Because I've read more over the net regarding this chip I like also to
> > know what is the think of this community regarding EOL estimation and
> > board usage with full Linux distribution.
> >
> > First question then is kindly ask you if someone have ufficial
> > information regarding the EOL for this chip and then for the board,
> > I've asked infos to TS and CIRRUS without feedback until now...
> >
> > Second question is about the Linux environment, I like to use Linux in
> > order to make my first step in this word from WinXP and Intel based
> > embedded PC mainly for a reduction cost reason, I've to be honest.
> > >From ufficial TS documentation I've read that such board can work
> > with the TS-Linux embedded OS (preinstalled into the NOR flash) or
> > with Debian distro installed on a external CF, regarding this stuff I
> > like to know some think, idea from people that are using such solution
> > with this board, just to know what I can attempt to found into the
> > future during my application developing stage.
> >
> > Thanks to all for every hint and useful suggest.
> >
> > Regards
> > Pow
> >
> > ------------------------------------
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
>
------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ts-7000/
<*> Your email settings:
Individual Email | Traditional
<*> To change settings online go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ts-7000/join
(Yahoo! ID required)
<*> To change settings via email:
<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
|