Subject: Re: News...
To: Neil A. Carson <neil@causality.com>
From: Andrew Gillham <gillhaa@ghost.whirlpool.com>
List: netbsd-advocacy
Date: 10/08/1998 14:19:10
  by homeworld.cygnus.com with SMTP; 8 Oct 1998 18:19:17 -0000
  by firewall.whirlpool.com with SMTP; 8 Oct 1998 18:19:14 -0000
From: Andrew Gillham <gillhaa@ghost.whirlpool.com>
Message-Id: <199810081819.OAA29166@ghost.whirlpool.com>
Subject: Re: News...
In-Reply-To: <361CA1EC.59A7E89A@causality.com> from "Neil A. Carson" at "Oct 8, 98 12:28:44 pm"
To: neil@causality.com (Neil A. Carson)
Date: Thu, 8 Oct 1998 14:19:10 -0400 (EDT)
Cc: netbsd-advocacy@NetBSD.ORG
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Neil A. Carson writes:
> ...useful for events?
> 
> A friend of mine, Andrew McMurry (who also did FileCoreFS) has started
> porting NetBSD to the Psion Series 5a organiser (and later probably the
> Geofox too). It looks like:
> 	1) We might beat Linux to being the first unix to run on a Palmtop
> 	2) We'll have something even cooler than a Shark to show at events
> 
> 	Neil

There is "microcontroller linux" running on the PalmPilot.  I don't
know if that counts, since it has no mmu.

What I would like to see, is NetBSD running on a Windows CE platform.
The Phillips Nino is a R3000, and the Phillips Velo 1 (and 500?) has an
R4000.  Considering we have support for MIPS already, it should be easier
than the Hitachi SH3(?) based Windows CE boxes.  
A 75Mhz R4000 with 32MB seems like it would be "snappy" compared to 
a 18Mhz ARM7000.. :)  Not that there would be anything wrong with
having both.

-Andrew
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Andrew Gillham                            | This space left blank
gillham@whirlpool.com                     | inadvertently.
I speak for myself, not for my employer.  | Contact the publisher.