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Reply to: Linux in a shoebox
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Previously on "Linux in a shoebox"
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OK I reckon the Cisco SPA3102 Telephone Adapter will do everything I need without me having to start fiddling around with soldering irons.
Pity though in a way - I was quite looking forward to delving into Asterisk, or even having to write linux device drivers.
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Are you are building a home pbx. you want asterisk & voipinfo. Plenty of embedded ones 2 line.
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If you are probably better off buying a 2nd hand cheap old rubbish laptop, operate it from mains and install a dedicated linux distro. It will work better and it will be cheaper that any of these overpriced small form factor boards.
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Bingo! Just found this web page, dated today![*]
But that seems to be for a US system. Will it work for BT phones I wonder?
edit:[*] DOH! He just has today's date in the header - The date at the bottom of the page is in 2008 (which isn't too bad I suppose)Last edited by OwlHoot; 6 April 2012, 14:13.
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Originally posted by petergriffin View Post
Is the Genesi smarttop too big? It's around 130 Euro.
Trouble is I know next to nothing about the hardware side - You're talking to somone who has bought the wrong kind of broadband router - twice!
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how fast do you need?
NSLU
Beagleboard
Apple Tv
Or get a cheap Android tablet / box < £100.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/cideko-andro...-player-587489
They will do video / audio processing and draw a few watts.(as will Pi when it surfaces)
--- Mid range
NAS such as Stora & Synology mid range bottom. (I have apache,rrd,mysql &dokuwiki running on my Stora - see openstora). Plus rsync. Headless / web
Look at Parky towers for re-purposed thin clients. (sort of got VDR running on a debian Neoware ca21).
---- Bottom end - serial terminal
Omnima
Livebox (livebox hah is cool).
ddrwt & openwrt have support for just about any router.
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostI'm sure I've asked this before, but can anyone recommend a small book-sized, preferably diskless box suitable for running linux.
It must be large/flexible enough to install a decent modem & sound cards, or have these built in, because the purpose is to write an app to function as a hand-rolled phone answering machine.
Also, any _recent_ references to a linux answering machine project would be very welcome, and +ve rep will be dished out like confetti to anyone who can help
P.S. I guess I'll need a small dinky screen to go with it. But the idea is not to have an energy-hogging noisy monster, just an unobtrusive ansphone.
The smallest most sensible option is a mini-itx board (17cm x 17cm). Most come with one or two dimms, have one or two pci slots (for those with one pci slot, a pci riser card is only a couple of quid). For such a project, you dont need a dual core atom board which sell for £30-£100 on ebay. Instead all you need is something like a via board with a 500mhz cpu. I would make sure you go for a fanless board. I get them off ebay auctions all the time for less than £15 per board and they are great for what you want to use them for as well as other uses. The psu will probably be the most expensive part at around £20+ for one with an adaptor included. All in all, once you scavenge parts together, you can build a setup for under £50.
The case is really up to you. I find most off the shelf ones hideous looking and expensive so I make my own. The only ones I do like are the clear acrylic ones but they do cost £20-£30.
Next, you really need to minimise the amount of add in cards. Once everything is working, then you can get on to the fun part of programming it for use as an answering machine. Also consider scalability, because one feature that springs to mind as useful is to have it hooked up to you home network so you could connect securely to the PC from your smart phone/lappy away from home and listen to your messages and perhaps respond to an urgent one.
Originally posted by rsingh View PostRaspberry Pi - when its finally available.
He wants flexibility to use add in cards, something which is a bit trick for the PI ! Also the PI isnt the only pico-itx board out there you know. Via has a board only a little bigger than the PI.
Oh and just to willy wave, guess who got bumped up the list from queuing to order, to payment and awaiting shipment allocation the other day? That's right, sometime this century, I should be getting one to play with.
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Linux in a shoebox
I'm sure I've asked this before, but can anyone recommend a small book-sized, preferably diskless box suitable for running linux.
It must be large/flexible enough to install a decent modem & sound cards, or have these built in, because the purpose is to write an app to function as a hand-rolled phone answering machine.
Also, any _recent_ references to a linux answering machine project would be very welcome, and +ve rep will be dished out like confetti to anyone who can help
P.S. I guess I'll need a small dinky screen to go with it. But the idea is not to have an energy-hogging noisy monster, just an unobtrusive ansphone.Tags: None
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