[ale] USB host mode on android tablet
Ron Frazier (ALE)
atllinuxenthinfo at techstarship.com
Fri May 4 12:14:47 EDT 2012
If you can't get a USB keyboard to work, you could try a bluetooth
keyboard. I have this bluetooth keyboard / case from Kensington and I
like it very much. Some tablets will support USB host mode out of the
box, but many won't.
http://www.kensington.com/kensington/us/us/p/1715/K39519US/keyfolio%E2%84%A2-pro-2-universal-keyboard-case-for-10-tablets.aspx
Sincerely,
Ron
On 5/4/2012 12:01 PM, Steven A. DuChene wrote:
> Also I note that plugging a USB keyboard into an Android device does not seem to work. From what little I have read it is because USB host mode is not enabled in early versions of Android. It is possible to somehow either add this functionality via replacement kernel modules or perhaps even rebuild a new/different kernel for one of these devices to enable this? I have looked at some of the dmesg output from one of my el cheap'o tablets and I see some things happening there when I plug in a keyboard but not enough apparently. It looked like the appropriate modules for USB devices were loading so it seems like the hardware is there but not completely functional.
> --
> Steven DuChene
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
>
>> From: "Steven A. DuChene"<linux-clusters at mindspring.com>
>> Sent: May 4, 2012 8:42 AM
>> To: Ale at ale.org
>> Subject: [ale] hacking an android tablet to single function device
>>
>> Since Andriod tablets have become so cheap lately (Pandigital for $29.99 plus $4.99 shipping) I would like to see if it is possible to re-purpose one to do server as sort of a single function display device. Does anyone know if it would be possible to reconfig an Android tablet to NOT have a full desktop interface with icons and things and instead have it boot up to the display of a single application?
>>
>> Also I noticed some of these tablets use a ARM926EJ-S CPU that is supposed to enable the direct execution of 8-bit Java bytecode in hardware and has an MMU on the chip (not always a given for ARM CPUs). Does that mean it would be possible to run a standard Java application without the load of a full JVM? Is all compiled Java code end up being 8-bit bytecode that could be directly run on this CPU?
>> --
>> Steven DuChene
>>
>>
--
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Ron Frazier
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linuxdude AT techstarship.com
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