SDIO WLAN cards gain Linux, CIFS support
March 1, 2006
Socket Communications says its wireless SDIO cards are now supported under Linux, thanks to proprietary SDIO stacks from Codetelligence and EmbWise. Additionally, the cards support the CIFS NQ storage filesystem protocol through third-party middleware from Visuality Systems, it says. (more…)
Extreme Engineering Solutions is shipping a PrPMC (Processor PMC) module targeting HPC (high-performance computing) and telecom applications. The XPedite6200 module is available with dual Freescale MPC7448 processors, and up to four modules can be installed in a single AdvancedTCA slot, the company says.
Acme Systems is shipping a Penguin-shaped case for a tiny SBC (single-board computer) powered by an innovative MCM (multi-chip module) that runs Linux. The 6.7-inch tall, 30-Euro “Tux Case” houses the company's “Acme Fox,” a 2.6 x 2.8-inch, 100-Euro, RISC-based board with Ethernet and dual-USB interfaces, and surface-mount…
US Robotics (USR) publishes source code for a variety of network devices based on Linux, including wireless access points, combo router/NAS servers, and DSL broadband routers. Downloads for its USR5461 wireless access point suggest the device runs Linux 2.4.20, and fits a uClibc-based filesystem within 2MB.
Embedded PC pioneer Ampro Computers Inc. has added another arrow to its form-factor quiver, with the introduction of its first module in XTX format, an extension to the popular ETX computer-on-module (COM) standard.
Technologic Systems will ship a new ARM9- and FPGA-powered SBC (single-board computer) next quarter, targeting high-security applications such as gaming, building security, and network gateways/firewalls.
A free application environment for Linux-based handheld and mobile devices may support lots more devices in the future, including Linux mobile phones. The GPE (GPE palmtop environment) project is planning a “device abstraction” layer aimed at simplying new device ports, according to maintainer Florian Boor.