@Gargron Keep a large stake of the copyright in your control, to prevent someone deciding it's better to relicense without your consent! Give away a portion if you want that org to do enforcement on your behalf. But they don't need 100%.
@mntmn My biggest worry is that I haven't seen ix ethernet show up in many products. So what I really want is to see it everywhere, that way everyone would sell the cables cheaply. And more importantly, when you go somewhere, they "just have" the cable you need.
Like all my friends have a USB-C charger, so I can use theirs if needed to plug in.
@fsfe This is amazing! I can't seem to find a list of config settings for each modem and ISP combo. Is that available anywhere? Of course this should really be about "modem freedom" more than routers.
@mntmn Very neat. But shouldn't it enforce you push them in some order since when you pressed T it might have also sent Y and you never would have known?
IOW, suppose you take a laptop out of a box, plug it into something (usually over ethernet) and then automatically power it on, set any bios/uefi/whatever settings, and then pxe boot and install an operating system.
The missing step in hardware today is configuring bios settings. You often have to manually press <del> and then scroll through settings and so on...
@mntmn Aha! Feed-through, interesting, thanks for explaining!
pci-express is a good option for more ethernet, but that means that for the very common case of using two active ethernet ports, this blocks you from also using a non-ethernet pcie card.
I think this makes your product less competitive in the market compared to what's already readily available. Still excited for the open HW aspects though!
@mntmn If you'd prefer to do a video chat, just let me know when. Otherwise feel free to send your questions my way and I can explain how I use them, set them up, etc... HTH
@mntmn Whichever method works best for your hardware designs! There's a large demand for two port routers running Linux. (I buy and install many!) But there are not a lot of good options in the market for 6-8 port routers running Linux. Here is one example:
Happy to test out your new server and blog at purpleidea.com if interested!
@mntmn I don't know about gc7000, but IIRC in the raspi-config utility you can set some overclock settings (for CPU or GPU I forget which) and GPU memory size. HTH
@mntmn Did you look at Fedora? Since F37 they support 64-bit RPI. It's got issues compared to Raspberry Pi OS, but might be just what you need to be as upstream as possible.