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Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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I was able to make some progress with LXDE but I can only either create a UI that works without a stylus or that leaves enough room for application windows, not both at the same time. Xfce was even worse. btw. do you know the "bodhi-close" gadget created by Jeff Hoogland [1]? It essentially creates an [X] icon in the shelf (upper panel). I've found the source code here [2], but didn't compile it myself. In the VM I was able to use the Bodhi package in Debian. In combination with a taskbar-like gadget like iTask [3] (not an official part of E17) the "illume-softkey" module (lower panel) becomes totally dispensable, which in turn frees up some precious pixels for applications. Here's a screenshot of Bodhi running in a 800x480px VM with an E17 setup that I think might work well on the N900 screen [4]. It turned out whenever I tried to put something together in Debian that might work it ended up looking like Bodhi. So @Jeff, in case you read this: Thank you! What's your preferred web browser in Debian on the N900? I believe iceweasel is too heavy and it seems some potential alternatives (midori, xxxterm) aren't actually maintained. So far I'm leaning towards qupzilla and netsurf. Quote:
As a very simple "solution", wouldn't it be sufficient to mute ALSA's lower-frequency equalizer controls? (of course that means crippling the sound even via the audio jack) What's the critical frequency? I think I remember having read something about 125Hz, but that might be totally wrong. [1] http://talk.maemo.org/member.php?u=27934 [2] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp...nt.devel/34506 [3] http://code.google.com/p/itask-module/ [4] https://wiki.debianforum.de/Datei:E17-bodhi.png |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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For Easy Debian, I found such setup most lightweight and convenient, at the same time. I see no reason why it would work differently in native Debian. BTW, it's worth to configure Openbox to start some programs without "decorations" - especially the ones that have own way of closing, minimizing, etc. Saves another bit of screen estate. /Estel *Works properly only with lxpanel from Jessie - earlier, some bug allowed certain applications to ignore "always on top" settings of auto-hiding panel, and, for example, Chromium was always on top. **The -1 pixel comes from the fact, that you need to leave hidden panel size of 1 pixel (before Jessie, min was 2 pixels, now it is 0), or Panel won't come up after restart. It's a bug - it should still appear, even when 0-sized when hidden. If it's ever get fixed, we can use full 800x480 pixels for programs. // Edit How about power-saving? I would expect that without Maemo's hack, it will use much more power (current) when totally idle and screen is disabled,as compared to Maemo/Hildon? |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
Hé hé hé :D something is cooking around! It smells goooooood :D!!!
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Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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I have tried out few browsers. I installed Iceweasel and as you might expect it ate a lot of the memory but other than that there were no real issues and I was able to install some of my favourite add-ons. It's actually quite responsive for single tab/window browsing if you don't have a lot of other stuff running. It runs much better than it does in Maemo under Easy Debian (from what I remember). Your right about Midori being a poor choice. It was recently removed from the repositories. It's back in there at the moment but it's scheduled to be auto removed again as there's a serious bug that needs fixing and no one's maintaining it. I ran into another bug when I tried it in that there was nowhere to enter a URL! If you want a really lightweight browser then I recommend links2. It does display graphics, just don't expect anything fancy like JavaScript. This might also be a good option. Quote:
There are also the Nokia PA plugins as suggested by freemangordon which would work in the short term. I say short term as I would prefer universal solution that also works with hardfp and is open source. Hopefully the Neo900 will have protection at hardware level. |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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In the meantime, you can run pm-suspend to completely suspend the device, just don't do it with the 3.16-rc1 kernel as the device will hang. |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
A word of warning to E17 users using 3.16-rc1. The E17 power saving that kicks in when idle for a few minutes also triggers the hang (it looks like it's doing a full suspend).
You could try 3.14-rc3 instead. My biggest problem with that kernel is I get frequent network errors causing SSH connections to drop and package downloads to fail. |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
with regards to the pulseaudio issue, wouldn't the meego version have the required protection we could use for armhf?
edit: it appears they might, settings refer to it https://github.com/nemomobile/pulsea...lgs/xprot/set2 |
Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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Re: DebiaN900 - A set of scripts to facilitate the installation of native Debian (WIP)
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