IGEL Thin Client and more Puppy goodness!
Posted: 05 Mar 2011, 21:20
Where to start? First, I think, a little back story...
When I was thinking of setting up a PVR to record OTA digital tv with kaffeine, I bought Rudy Hartmann's Rausch Netzwerktechnik Model XXL-USA 1U Rackmount Server for a low-profile, low-power solution, trying to reduce my carbon footprint, be as green as possible....chicks dig it!
Well, that never happened, I put the board in a smallish ATX case, and that turned into a webserver for GF's website, for which I got a lot of help, here, thanks to all
read more...
This box is, of course, on 24/7/365.25, electric costs are high and rising, so back to being green, saving some money, hopefully
Something that caught my eye:
and I was off to the google races.
To make a long story short,
I counted 72 connectors in that laptop-memory-socket-looking-thingy and have had a hell of a time googling for something that fits there. When I look at a lower angle, I think I see a second set of contacts, making it 144-pin, which seems to be a common older laptop memory, relatively readily available. Could someone verify that for me, please, or stop me before I etrans again?
Since Puppy runs completely from memory, it makes for a relatively snappy desktop experience, except for reads, more-so writes to the CF. I have this and this on the way to improve that and because I can't help myself.
Really, http://www.lanlesalon.com is very simple, static with nobody knowing it is there, not to mention ugly and I am working on that, too. However, we want to have the presence to try to bolster business in these slow times, a little.
The cf/ide adapter fits tight down over some capacitors; it's powered through a floppy connector on the board and all I had around was this ide power connector splitter.
Also on hand was this older Kingston 512M CF card, which I formatted to ext3 on one partition using the whole space. At this point, I need to install an OS onto the flash with my desktop, running Mandriva 2010.2. Puppy Linux has proved very capable for my usage in the past and I had a CD with 4.2 on it. Booted to that livecd and running Puppy's Universal Installer, I was impressed to find a choice to install to CF connected via USB and later to be used in a cf/ide adapter, just the ticket! However, this did not boot for me, back to google.
Amongst many older reports of failure, a large amount of activity around this sort of hardware/os configuration, I wound up following Installing Damn Small Linux (DSL) Using Ubuntu.... Note the typo; unetbootin is in Mandriva contrib. I had downloaded a small version of Puppy (96M), pup-431-small.iso It was a piece of cake to start unetbootin and point it at the iso. Plugged the card back into the Igel, pressed the power button and, bingo-bango, Bob's your uncle:
I was impressed, again, how Puppy explains almost every configuration step with tips about what to do if something goes wrong: very user friendly. In the picture, I have connected a cable to the router, Puppy "Connect" walks me through dhcp almost automatic setup, and I am downloading/installing Monkey, another web server I might figure out. Again, there are copious messages about what is going on; the picture shows what happens when one clicks on "Test urls" to see if the offered repository servers are online, or not.
Thanks for your support.
When I was thinking of setting up a PVR to record OTA digital tv with kaffeine, I bought Rudy Hartmann's Rausch Netzwerktechnik Model XXL-USA 1U Rackmount Server for a low-profile, low-power solution, trying to reduce my carbon footprint, be as green as possible....chicks dig it!
Well, that never happened, I put the board in a smallish ATX case, and that turned into a webserver for GF's website, for which I got a lot of help, here, thanks to all
read more...This box is, of course, on 24/7/365.25, electric costs are high and rising, so back to being green, saving some money, hopefully
Something that caught my eye:
Installing Tinycore Linux (v2.7) with Apache and Samba
Introduction
My aim was to create a web server on a Compact-Flash based thin client. read more...
and I was off to the google races.
To make a long story short,
- I found a WinNet VI Thin Client Terminal, sold by timcstern at

- looked at this sexy 4-card pci adapter from Addonics
- decided on a single CF, direct plug-in, right-angle ide adapter from a local company to plug in the 40-pin onboard ide connector, since the pci slot was blocked by the old pc133 simm I happened to have, see pic:
I counted 72 connectors in that laptop-memory-socket-looking-thingy and have had a hell of a time googling for something that fits there. When I look at a lower angle, I think I see a second set of contacts, making it 144-pin, which seems to be a common older laptop memory, relatively readily available. Could someone verify that for me, please, or stop me before I etrans again?
Since Puppy runs completely from memory, it makes for a relatively snappy desktop experience, except for reads, more-so writes to the CF. I have this and this on the way to improve that and because I can't help myself.
The cf/ide adapter fits tight down over some capacitors; it's powered through a floppy connector on the board and all I had around was this ide power connector splitter.
Amongst many older reports of failure, a large amount of activity around this sort of hardware/os configuration, I wound up following Installing Damn Small Linux (DSL) Using Ubuntu.... Note the typo; unetbootin is in Mandriva contrib. I had downloaded a small version of Puppy (96M), pup-431-small.iso It was a piece of cake to start unetbootin and point it at the iso. Plugged the card back into the Igel, pressed the power button and, bingo-bango, Bob's your uncle:
I was impressed, again, how Puppy explains almost every configuration step with tips about what to do if something goes wrong: very user friendly. In the picture, I have connected a cable to the router, Puppy "Connect" walks me through dhcp almost automatic setup, and I am downloading/installing Monkey, another web server I might figure out. Again, there are copious messages about what is going on; the picture shows what happens when one clicks on "Test urls" to see if the offered repository servers are online, or not.
Thanks for your support.



Thanks, again, for the help along the way.
This flash module can be powered through pin 20 of the IDE connector. If the host interface does not provide power on pin 20, the included 4-pin molex pass-through power adapter may be used instead. A switch on top of the module allows configuration as Master or Slave.

Yup makes sense. I use free ones to access music servers and a lampservers (You know-Bjørk etc