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Posts: 28 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ USA
#1
Can anyone tell me if any of the following programs are compatible with the N800? In order for me to log on to my company's system it says I need one of these to work. I am willing to pay a bounty if anyone can get one of these to operate on my N800. Side note: my company uses a system called Saber. Thanks

Linux


Linux RPM (self-extracting file) filesize: 19.39 MB Instructions Verify Now

After installing Java, restart your browser and verify Java has been installed correctly.

Linux (self-extracting file) filesize: 19.89 MB Instructions
Linux x64 * filesize: 19.33 MB Instructions
Linux x64 RPM * filesize: 18.79 MB Instructions
* Please use the 32-bit version for Java applet and Java Web Start support.
 
Posts: 540 | Thanked: 387 times | Joined on May 2009
#2
These devices are ARM architecture. They are not x86 and certainly not x86 64-bit compliant. If you have the full source code then someone should be able to compile it for NITs. However Java...don't have full Java support. Certainly not Sun Java.

That said you may want to go with a MID or UMPC that are x86.

It may be possible to get working but will be painful and unless your company has a Linux department that understands the importantance of supporting different architectures then you are fighting a downhill battle.

FYI OS2008 (and all of the NITs' OS200X if I'm not mistaken) is Debain based, not Redhat but that is the absolute least of the problems and could be resolved with alien if not for the architecture mix-mash. Sorry.

Link to the files might be able to do something.
 
Posts: 253 | Thanked: 104 times | Joined on Aug 2008 @ Midwest, USA
#3
It might be possible, but would likely require a lot of time and headaches. Your best bet is to seek out an alternative program which would also work on your company's system and doesn't require Java. I'm not familiar with Saber, so I don't know if they exist, but it never hurts to do a little google searching.
 
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Posts: 117 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ New Hampshire, USA
#4
Hi guys, noob here. Would VNC into a desktop (or a pogo plug for real hawtness) running the software work? If so, there's a bounty worth earning.
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#5
Depends whether there's VNC server running on the system. I suspect it is some sort of web portal done in Java, and he needs a JVM on his NIT for it to work.
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pokey's Avatar
Posts: 117 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ New Hampshire, USA
#6
Originally Posted by nowave7 View Post
Depends whether there's VNC server running on the system. I suspect it is some sort of web portal done in Java, and he needs a JVM on his NIT for it to work.
Could you explain that in just a bit more detail? I didn't realize that VNC relied on Java.
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Posts: 107 | Thanked: 94 times | Joined on Dec 2007
#7
Originally Posted by pokey View Post
Could you explain that in just a bit more detail? I didn't realize that VNC relied on Java.
VNC doesn't depend on Java. VNC are programs and a protocol for what amounts to remote desktop viewing/interaction. There are VNC *clients* that are written in Java. In fact there are a multitude of VNC clients for virtually any OS and device you can name. There was even a client for my dear old Palm Pilot (not that a tiny screen and 4 bit grey scale was all that useful )

What he is suggesting is using VNC to connect to a desktop PC which is has that Saber client software installed.

Last edited by sljonson; 2009-09-16 at 15:36.
 
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Posts: 117 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ New Hampshire, USA
#8
Right, so my question was: Is that feasible?

Since it doesn't sound like it's going to run naively on the Nit, could he install the Saber client to a desktop pc (at home, or in his office), then use the n810 to VNC into the desktop and do his business that way? I've never used VNC, and I'm only assuming that it is a two way connection that could be used to control the pc remotely from the n810. It sounds like a reasonable way to be mobile, if it's workable at all.

It sounds like saber is a Linux app packaged for redhat/fedora etc..., because he mentioned Linux RPM. If I had to run a Linux application 24 hours a day, on a remote computer, for a single user, I would look into running it on a $99 pogo plug. It uses like half a watt and is tiny and out of the way. He could leave Saber connected all the time on the pogo plug, and only connect with the n810 when he needed to use it. He just might need a second account on the saber server so he could use it normally from his desktop.


Sorry if I garbled my original question. Sometimes I forget that everybody else does not think like me.

68Guns, does that sound almost lie what you're trying to do?
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Last edited by pokey; 2009-09-16 at 16:48.
 
Posts: 28 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ USA
#9
Well i have sabre on my desktop at home and it runs Win XP. I know for a fact that the latest Iphone can access Sabre. My company just released a statement saying that Sabre can now be accessed with WN Mobile 5.0. Here is a screenshot when i try to access it on my N800Name:  screenshot01.jpg
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Posts: 28 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ USA
#10
To be clear, I'm trying to get it to work on my N800 when I am away from my desktop. Thanks again for all the imput.
 
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