Hello,
I've mentioned this fairly recently in discussion threads on the security/surveillance concerns with x86-based platforms [1, 2], but I thought I should pass on the news that the EOMA68 initiative has opened a crowdfunding campaign for its products:
https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop
The Free Software relevance here is that the hardware to be delivered supports a completely Free Software environment, with no proprietary drivers or firmware required. More discussion of that can be found here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/freesoftware/comments/4qhm1y/earthfriendly_eoma68_c...
And Joshua Gay, of the FSF, participates in a discussion about the RYF (Respects Your Freedom) certification of one of the products in the campaign in the following message:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/libreplanet-discuss/2016-06/msg00212.html
Meanwhile, the hardware is "open source hardware" at the circuit board level, and the physical design of the laptop being offered as part of the campaign is also freely available for people to print themselves if they really want to. One of the goals is to make sustainable hardware that is not unnecessarily resource-intensive to produce, hence the unconventional use of plywood panels in the case designs.
What I find personally interesting is the modular aspect of the concept. There are lots of single-board computers but they are often either not particularly expandable or their accessories are infuriatingly specific (which may seem unproblematic if you are one of the many people using a Raspberry Pi, but the fun may lessen somewhat when they bring out a new version which is different in some way, rendering some accessories incompatible). In principle, this initiative could help people to concentrate more on developing other aspects of open computing devices.
On the topic of the perceived problems with x86 platforms and the intersection of that topic with this campaign, there's a blog post by Think Penguin who have been sponsoring this effort:
https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/crowd-funding-kick-backdoor-free-eco- consious-libre-computing
The computer cards offered employ an ARM-based CPU, and it appears possible that other architectures will be offered at some point in the future. For example, a MIPS-based card was prototyped and it has been indicated that it isn't too far behind the ARM-based card in terms of readiness, but I don't intend to second-guess those involved in any of this. I'm hoping that other cards will be offered during the campaign, but they may end up waiting until afterwards for all I really know.
Although I intend to support this effort, I am not endorsing it as such. This message is meant to inform people about the recent concrete progress of a project that has been many years in the making and has had its ups and downs, occasionally in a rather public manner [3]. There are other projects offering laptops and other "end-user-friendly" computing devices [4, 5, 6], and it is up to everyone to decide which one balances their own interests with what is being offered in a way that they find personally acceptable.
For instance, some people might find the Librem laptop [5] an acceptable platform for running Free Software despite its reliance on an Intel CPU with the notorious "Management Engine", and they may be reassured by Purism's efforts to petition Intel to release the "Firmware Support Package" under a free licence [7]. Others may not expect Intel to cooperate, leaving the Librem susceptible to the concerns raised previously. Some people wanting x86-based hardware might find something like the APU1 [8] acceptable because it employs an AMD CPU that supports Coreboot, even if the hardware is not "open source hardware" (nor is the Librem, for that matter).
I hope that, if nothing else, this has given people a few things to look at a bit more closely. I encourage people to ask questions about the campaign mentioned in this message if they are wondering about any aspect of it; there's a link at the bottom of the campaign page below the growing list of questions and answers. If nothing else, it will help people figure out where the next opportunity lies in open and free hardware for Free Software.
Paul
P.S. I would have blogged about this, but blogs.fsfe.org is not responding. But I guess the topic is worthy of discussion, anyway. ;-)
[1] http://mail.fsfeurope.org/pipermail/discussion/2016-April/010913.html
[2] http://mail.fsfeurope.org/pipermail/discussion/2016-June/011102.html
[3] http://blogs.fsfe.org/pboddie/?p=933
[4] https://www.crowdsupply.com/sutajio-kosagi/novena
[5] https://www.crowdsupply.com/purism/librem-15
[6] https://olimex.wordpress.com/2015/11/24/a64-olinuxino-oshw-linux-laptop- idea-becomes-more-real/
On 30/06/16 17:04, Paul Boddie wrote:
Hello,
I've mentioned this fairly recently in discussion threads on the security/surveillance concerns with x86-based platforms [1, 2], but I thought I should pass on the news that the EOMA68 initiative has opened a crowdfunding campaign for its products:
https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop
The Free Software relevance here is that the hardware to be delivered supports a completely Free Software environment, with no proprietary drivers or firmware required. More discussion of that can be found here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/freesoftware/comments/4qhm1y/earthfriendly_eoma68_c...
And Joshua Gay, of the FSF, participates in a discussion about the RYF (Respects Your Freedom) certification of one of the products in the campaign in the following message:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/libreplanet-discuss/2016-06/msg00212.html
Hi,
This looks fine for something for light work, but doesn't really look like something I would want to use every day. I would prefer a more powerful workstation type computer similar to the Talos boards being proposed by Raptor (or something MIPS based, which is also an open architecture).
To give you an example, on my laptop (which runs entirely free/libre software, but not hardware unfortunately), I'm presently using 4.8 GB of RAM. I'm not even doing anything fancy - I'm using Firefox (admittedly with many tabs), I'm checking email, I'm using IRC and IM, and I have some editor windows open. This admittedly says something about the modern state of software being bloated, but that is besides the point.
Meanwhile, the hardware is "open source hardware" at the circuit board level, and the physical design of the laptop being offered as part of the campaign is also freely available for people to print themselves if they really want to. One of the goals is to make sustainable hardware that is not unnecessarily resource-intensive to produce, hence the unconventional use of plywood panels in the case designs.
I agree. Now more than ever it's important to have open hardware (especially in this age of rogue intelligence agencies), but I also believe in choices. Something like this wouldn't cut it for my needs. This also doesn't address the dire need for server-class libre hardware, which at the moment, there really is not any. The UltraSPARC T2 was GPL'd, but since Oracle bought out Sun, they've been keen to shut everything away.
What I find personally interesting is the modular aspect of the concept. There are lots of single-board computers but they are often either not particularly expandable or their accessories are infuriatingly specific (which may seem unproblematic if you are one of the many people using a Raspberry Pi, but the fun may lessen somewhat when they bring out a new version which is different in some way, rendering some accessories incompatible). In principle, this initiative could help people to concentrate more on developing other aspects of open computing devices.
It is an interesting concept, but this also does not really address higher-class needs, as stated above.
On the topic of the perceived problems with x86 platforms and the intersection of that topic with this campaign, there's a blog post by Think Penguin who have been sponsoring this effort:
https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/crowd-funding-kick-backdoor-free-eco- consious-libre-computing
There are plenty of problems with X86, including memory areas even ring 0 cannot access. See https://www.blackhat.com/us-15/briefings.html#the-memory-sinkhole-unleashing....
The computer cards offered employ an ARM-based CPU, and it appears possible that other architectures will be offered at some point in the future. For example, a MIPS-based card was prototyped and it has been indicated that it isn't too far behind the ARM-based card in terms of readiness, but I don't intend to second-guess those involved in any of this. I'm hoping that other cards will be offered during the campaign, but they may end up waiting until afterwards for all I really know.
ARM is a rather closed architecture requiring licensing agreements for modification and is closely held by ARM holdings. Getting some documentation for ARM processors actually requires signing an NDA. This includes features such as Jazelle off the top of my head, but I know there are others.
Although I intend to support this effort, I am not endorsing it as such. This message is meant to inform people about the recent concrete progress of a project that has been many years in the making and has had its ups and downs, occasionally in a rather public manner [3]. There are other projects offering laptops and other "end-user-friendly" computing devices [4, 5, 6], and it is up to everyone to decide which one balances their own interests with what is being offered in a way that they find personally acceptable.
More agreement; I do support such an effort, but I can't fully endorse it myself.
For instance, some people might find the Librem laptop [5] an acceptable platform for running Free Software despite its reliance on an Intel CPU with the notorious "Management Engine", and they may be reassured by Purism's efforts to petition Intel to release the "Firmware Support Package" under a free licence [7]. Others may not expect Intel to cooperate, leaving the Librem susceptible to the concerns raised previously. Some people wanting x86-based hardware might find something like the APU1 [8] acceptable because it employs an AMD CPU that supports Coreboot, even if the hardware is not "open source hardware" (nor is the Librem, for that matter).
See above about x86 concerns; x86 hardware cannot be truly called libre in any sense.
I hope that, if nothing else, this has given people a few things to look at a bit more closely. I encourage people to ask questions about the campaign mentioned in this message if they are wondering about any aspect of it; there's a link at the bottom of the campaign page below the growing list of questions and answers. If nothing else, it will help people figure out where the next opportunity lies in open and free hardware for Free Software.
Paul
P.S. I would have blogged about this, but blogs.fsfe.org is not responding. But I guess the topic is worthy of discussion, anyway. ;-)
[1] http://mail.fsfeurope.org/pipermail/discussion/2016-April/010913.html
[2] http://mail.fsfeurope.org/pipermail/discussion/2016-June/011102.html
[3] http://blogs.fsfe.org/pboddie/?p=933
[4] https://www.crowdsupply.com/sutajio-kosagi/novena
[5] https://www.crowdsupply.com/purism/librem-15
[6] https://olimex.wordpress.com/2015/11/24/a64-olinuxino-oshw-linux-laptop- idea-becomes-more-real/
[7] https://puri.sm/posts/bios-freedom-status/
[8] http://www.pcengines.ch/apu1d4.htm _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list Discussion@fsfeurope.org https://mail.fsfeurope.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion
On Tue Jul 12 00:20:13 CEST 2016, Elizabeth Myers wrote:
On 30/06/16 17:04, Paul Boddie wrote:
What I find personally interesting is the modular aspect of the concept. There are lots of single-board computers but they are often either not particularly expandable or their accessories are infuriatingly specific (which may seem unproblematic if you are one of the many people using a Raspberry Pi, but the fun may lessen somewhat when they bring out a new version which is different in some way, rendering some accessories incompatible). In principle, this initiative could help people to concentrate more on developing other aspects of open computing devices.
It is an interesting concept, but this also does not really address higher-class needs, as stated above.
I see where your concerns are but my perspective is that we won't see an iteration or extension of the concept unless this first step is successful.
I'm probably unusual in that I'm less bothered about upgrading to more powerful hardware than my current desktop system. Like Paul, I'm more interested in the modular concept and possibilities for standardisation that it brings:
http://www.boddie.org.uk/david/www-repo/Personal/Updates/2016/2016-07-21.htm...
Of course, the standard itself won't have any weight to it if there are no products using it, so I see this campaign as an important way to prove the concept.
Regards,
David
How does one get a blog aggregated on planet.fsfe.org? Is there a process for doing that?
Apologies if this is answered somewhere. I looked at the Wiki briefly but didn't see anything obvious.
David
On Wed, Jul 27, 2016 at 01:32:59PM +0200, David Boddie wrote:
How does one get a blog aggregated on planet.fsfe.org? Is there a process for doing that?
Apologies if this is answered somewhere. I looked at the Wiki briefly but didn't see anything obvious.
We will need the URL of a RSS or Atom feed for your blog.
Our web editors can then add this to the configuration of the blog aggregator.
Traditionally this has been done by the system-hackers team (system-hackers@fsfeurope.org), but today anyone on web@fsfeurope.org has at least the necessary access to do this too.
On Wednesday 27. July 2016, Paul Hänsch wrote:
We will need the URL of a RSS or Atom feed for your blog.
Our web editors can then add this to the configuration of the blog aggregator.
Traditionally this has been done by the system-hackers team (system-hackers@fsfeurope.org), but today anyone on web@fsfeurope.org has at least the necessary access to do this too.
Thanks. I'll talk to the web@ team.
David