PBX PCI adapter runs Linux, Asterisk
June 11, 2009
Positron Telecommunication Systems is shipping a PBX PCI adapter with telephony and Ethernet ports, based on the open source Asterisk telephony engine. The Linux-based V-114 is an “Asterisk PBX on a card,” complete with hardware echo cancellation, and supports any desktop OS, says Positron. (more…)
A kernel hacker from Intel has posted a Linux driver for USB 3.0, making Linux the first operating system (OS) to support the new connectivity standard. Sarah Sharp (left) announced that her xHCI-compliant driver for USB 3.0 will be supported in Linux 2.6.31 in September.
Linus Torvalds (pictured) announced Linux kernel 2.6.30, adding several new filesystems, including the NILFS2 log-structured filesystem. Linux 2.6.30 enhancements include a local caching layer for NFS data, the RDS server cluster communications protocol, the Tomoyo security module, and support…
MEN Micro has announced a new COM (computer-on-module) format and an Intel Atom-based module to go with it. The ESMini format, MM1 module (left), and available XC4 carrier board target “aggressive designs” for commercial vehicles, railways, avionics, and industrial automation, the company says.
Automotive instrumentation provider Yazaki North America announced an instrument cluster display based on embedded Linux, designed for reconfigurable dashboard TFT/LCD displays. The instrument cluster prototype is built around a PowerPC-based Freescale MPC5121e system-on-chip (SoC), and offers 3D effects, says…
BenQ is readying a netbook boasting an 11.6-inch display, optional HSPA, “eight hour” battery, and the largest (500GB) HDD (hard disk drive) we've heard of. In addition to offering the “Joybook Lite U121 Eco” for Linux and Windows XP, BenQ also announced an upcoming Android netbook.
Elektrobit Corp. (EB) demonstrated a cellular-voice-enabled mobile Internet device (MID) reference design that will run Intel's next-generation Moorestown mobile processor on the “Moblin v2 for MIDs” stack sometime next year.
As promised, Palm's Linux-based smartphone went on sale Saturday, available exclusively for Sprint networks, says eWEEK. Early reviews have been favorable, although analysts worry about the lack of software and the ability of Sprint to effectively market the Palm Pre (pictured), says the story.
Acrosser is shipping a fanless, 3.5-inch single-board computer (SBC) that supports Linux. The AR-B5250 ships in versions supporting different Pentium and Celeron CPUs, all of which offer Intel 910GMLE chipsets with GMA900 graphics, and provide dual gigabit Ethernet ports and multiple I/O, says the company.
Ibase Technology is shipping an “ultra-compact” signage computer with independent HDMI outputs supporting 1080p resolutions. The SI-28 Signature Book 2 runs either a dual- or quad-core AMD Athlon, and offers an ATI E4690 GPU, gigabit Ethernet, four USB ports, and wireless options, says the company.