Mobile Linux Project In Ammo Canister 219
Chaosrider writes "Army Linux is a mobile development platform constructed from a 50-caliber ammunition canister. This site documents the development of an embedded Linux project, which features a backlit LCD screen, a VIA technologies Mini-ITX form factor motherboard and a 1U power supply. The site covers construction techniques, costs and hardware installation." The site also points to a similar PC-in-ammo-box project at Epiacenter.com.
US Government Rules Linux a WMD (Score:5, Funny)
Re:US Government Rules Linux a WMD (Score:3, Funny)
armylinux.com seems
Re:US Government Rules Linux a WMD (Score:2)
Well after a quick search of the domain for samba clients I find 5 Mac OSX systems, 1 redhat, and one unknown system.
Lovely! (Score:4, Funny)
Just the perfect thing to use on a certain company in Utah..
Re:Lovely! (Score:1, Redundant)
Silver bullet? (Score:3, Funny)
Filk version of "Werewolves in London", anyone? Maybe "Werewolf from Redmond"?
Re:Silver bullet? (Score:2)
Aaaaa-Blooooo-Screen!!!
Werewolfs of Redmond!
Homer sez: Booorrring! (Score:2)
The guy that built it actually changed all of his cable ends to fit into the custom plugs on the front of the case. He did a REALLY great job!
here's the picture [shrocks.com]
Re:Homer sez: Booorrring! (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's the real link! [shrocks.com]
Re:Homer sez: Booorrring! (Score:2)
Re:Homer sez: Booorrring! (Score:1, Interesting)
Cool, that is my PC!
not to get slashdot'ed but the link is:
http://www.zapwizard.com/lanpc
custom plugs, eh? (Score:1)
more links (Score:5, Informative)
ammobox pc [mini-itx.com]
another one [mini-itx.com]
aaaand yet another [mini-itx.com]
-your friendly mini-itx loving geek
Re:more links (Score:3, Funny)
when I get a little spare cash im getting a mini-itx machine setup to solve all my living room business.
EXCELLENT and TASTY.
Re:more links - TechTV's Yoshi built one (Score:2)
Re:And another link... (Score:2)
ammo box (Score:5, Funny)
I would love to see thos efaces at the check-in counter.
Re:ammo box (Score:1)
Re:ammo box (Score:2, Flamebait)
Hmm... Actually, it is possible that some country has a few more eNRAged wackos than others.
Re:ammo box (Score:1)
Re:ammo box (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ammo box (Score:2, Informative)
I'm not aware of any state that has a ban on .50 BMG ammo. I believe there are some states with restrictions on the use of tracer ammo on state land due to fire danger.
The temperatures required to start "cooking off" ammo are never going to happen in the cargo hold of a plane unless it crashes and burns. Remember that this ammo is intended to be chambered in machine guns that get very hot after a few hundred prior rounds.
I've never heard of any legal requirements on ammunition shelf-life (In fact I regul
Re:ammo box (Score:2, Informative)
Remember that the BATFE only handles federal law. State and local laws apply as well.
There is a federal law requiring that "handgun" ammo only be sold to those 21 and older? When was that law passed? What's "handgun" ammo?
Question: Which of these are "rifle ammo," and which are "handgun ammo?"
Embedded. (Score:5, Informative)
.
A small, but otherwise fully functional PC in a strange case is not an embedded system.
The computer that handles your car's internals is an embedded.
Your tivo is kind of an embedded system... not sure on that one.
But a full on PC inside something weird certainly isn't.
As it was once described to me.. an embedded system is a computer inside something that isn't a computer. A case doesn't count.
Those little boards the size of a dimm slice with a processor, ram, i/o, and other stuff on them are good for embedded work.
It's not about what version of linux runs, or what OS, or even what it does.. but a PC in a disguise is still a PC, not embedded.
Re:Embedded. (Score:5, Informative)
A real embedded system is the controllers for, say, an automated automobile assembly station. The device builds cars, it just happens to have a brain composed partly of linux/qnx/tron/winCE/PalmOS to do the car building.
Re:Embedded. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Embedded. (Score:2, Funny)
Linux in an ammo case is clearly "embedded", much like american journalists.
Re:Embedded. (Score:2)
Right. Just like the original poster said. An embedded system is a computer inside something that is not a computer -- just like an embedded journalist is a journalist inside something that is clearly not journalism.
Re:Embedded. (Score:1)
Like, if it was fired from a 50mm gun and "embedded" into the side of a building.
Re:Embedded. (Score:2)
Re:Embedded. (Score:2)
Someone who is so supportive of the current US Government,
that they can be said to be "In Bed" with them.
How many people (Score:4, Funny)
Can you even pull your code from Linux?
Re:How many people (Score:5, Insightful)
And sorry to break it to you, but people have been putting Linux in missiles, tanks, and all sorts of other deadly devices for years. I work for an embedded systems company and I do Linux developer support all the time for people in the defense industry. Once they figure out how to get some pseudo real-time behavior out of Linux, they are very comfortable with it.
Re:How many people (Score:1)
Re:How many people (Score:3, Insightful)
But lets be honest this is not a military use of linux, its putting a board into an empty ammo box. Its no different than putting a PC motherboard into any other kind of strange box.
Personally I would like to see a very small and cheap linux server something about the size ofa large book, that I can drop onto my lan and use as a development database platform.
Re:How many people (Score:2)
This is one of those times when you fall on your ass so hard you can only laugh about it.
Lesson learned - in your rush to get an early
Kick my ass - I deserve it.
Re:How many people (Score:4, Funny)
You doofus, you're not supposed to be graceful about having your foot stuffed into your mouth. Rather, to be a TRUE geek, you are required to fly into a spitting rage, construct a multi-paragraph essay defending your point. You are to conjure up as many off the wall and ill-supported arguments as you can in an effort to win the debate.
As an aside, "winning" is not defined in terms of making anyone actually agree with you. "Winning" is defined as beating the subject to death until no one wants to hear about it again, and ceases posting to the thread. By getting in the last word, you will have earned the right to say you won the argument. If these people in the future act like you're a nimcompoop who doesn't know jack, it's just because they're jealous and closeminded.
You got a lot of work to becoming a forum junkie.
Holy Case Mods Batman (Score:4, Funny)
I really think there will be a market for Computers As Art someday. Like a woodcarving with a server in it, for some establishment that wants an ultra-fancy kiosk.
Or maybe we'll see a return of the "Electronics in Victorian Style Furniture" that was popular in the 30's, 40's.
Re:Holy Case Mods Batman (Score:1)
Re:Holy Case Mods Batman (Score:1)
Re:Holy Case Mods Batman (Score:2)
This was modded Funny(?) but I think you're onto something. I have been thinking of this for a while. I make small art boxes/miniature books and silly sculptures from bits of wood, stone and metal and I have been thinking of incorporating technology into some of them for a CPU controlled kinetic sculpture. That, and it's interesting to find oth
Re:Holy Case Mods Batman (Score:2)
I've a friend that's into that sort of thing... very cool way to spend time, money and CPU cycles
Perfect for travel (Score:1)
Use Army Mobile Linux! (Score:4, Funny)
Chat online with exciting, unusual people.
Then DDOS them!
*chuckles quietly* (Score:2)
Really, this article should be (-1, Obvious), if not (-1, Been-there-done-that)..
Re:*chuckles quietly* (Score:1)
Embedded systems is like the software that runs my microwave. Replace my microwaves software with linux, have it still function as a microwave, but maybe be able to send and recieve data from my PDA, then you've got yourself something you can call an embedded project.
Re:*chuckles quietly* (Score:2)
Re:*chuckles quietly* (Score:2)
For example, a WAP is an embedded device.. This can function as a WAP.
An electronic turnstile counter is an embedded device. This can function as an electronic turnstile counter.
These are examples of a PC as an embedded device.. I think you'd have no argument that the vehicle controller in your minivan is an embedded device, right? There's an in-house port of linux, etc, to the older style Chrysler vehicle controllers out there.. Turns your minivan into a PC.
The line is quite thin between the t
Sad thing is... (Score:4, Insightful)
Come on, there is nothing special about a case mod.
This is almost as bad as that Apple Ie project..whoopdie doo..
Re:Sad thing is... (Score:2)
It would if said WinCE installation was stable, fast and legitimate. But fuck ammo-boxes, I'm waiting for someone to stuff a computer in a magazine/clip!
Re:Sad thing is...It's not how you look, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well..yes and no. See the thing is that in that case they are simply using the case. If for example they used a fully functional ammo container, with the ammo still in it, and it did something useful. Then yes, it would be newsworthy.
If for example it was a gun with Linux on it that kept count of bullets fired, barrel wear, ammo left in clip, average recoil per shot etc. That'd be cool.
In the case of the
Skeleton mod! (Score:3, Interesting)
Someone, someday, will have to make a "mod" using one of those high school classroom skeletons. Now *that* would be a gothy mod:
* Motherboard (including the processor, or heart of the system) suspended in the chest cavity.
* Hard drive (long-term memory) mounted in the cranium.
* Power supply (fuel source)
Re:Sad thing is...It's not how you look, but... (Score:2)
Like... aim?
No maybe like keep count of the numbers of bullets and play some fitting music...
Hell it could keep count of the bullets, the rate at which they are being used and predict the remaining firing time.
Re:Sad thing is...It's not how you look, but... (Score:2)
Or my favorite, "Hmm hmm hmm, wasted."
Re:Sad thing is...It's not how you look, but... (Score:2)
How about "Killing Spree!"
Once Again (Score:5, Interesting)
It goes without saying, of course, that this wouldn't be news if the installed OS was anything but lunix.
They epia boards are relatively gutless, and frankly the "easy way" to make a small form factor PC. I want to see some FlexATX boards with honest-to-god processing power in these boxes.
Myself, I'm working on fitting a flexATX board with a P3 800 (I cant remember the model now, I got it on eBay for 20 bucks on a whim) into a hacked PSX arcade stick. With built-in tv-out and mame it'll make a really funky portable arcade. Of course, I have big heat issues and others to solve, which makes it fun.
I've built other boxes with great success using Shuttles spacewalker mainboards (I think the FV25 is the greatest thing since sliced bread for a small, cheap, but useful PC)
I dunno, this just isnt all that interesting. You may as well just crazy glue a Zaurus inside the ammo box. It'll be faster.
Re:Once Again (Score:1, Informative)
You have to RTFA, he's running XP.
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Oh, it'll run Windows (if you must...)
Re:Once Again (Score:1)
I'd be impressed if someone shoved any board with a 1.6ghz P4 into a NES/Ammo box, or whatever, because then they have to solve some really sticky heat and space issues. It's not the form factor of the board since FlexATX and MiniITX are really, really close in size. (flex can technically be taller, I think 9x7.5 inches, but many boards available are the square 7x7 variety)
I'm just say
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Re:Once Again (Score:2, Interesting)
The fan doesn't have to sit on the CPU as per convention, in such a small box you could set it up such that air is drawn through a front vent, channelled through the heatsink, and funnelled straight out the back. You turn the seeming disadvantage of very little space into an advantage (no stale air pockets, constant flow like a little windtunnel)
This is the approach I'm taking with my portable arcade project, and it works exceedingly
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Mounting the fan onto the processor is only done in commodity Intel/AMD PCs. Actually, Dell uses a 4" or 5" case mounted fan and a duct like you describe. Most high end equipment does the same
Re:Once Again (Score:2)
Intel Pentium M processor running at 1600+ MHz [lippert-at.com] with a mini-itx form factor, courtesy of mini-itx.com [mini-itx.com]
Tech-TV (Score:2)
big deal (Score:3, Funny)
Show us something 0rIginal.
text (Score:5, Funny)
error in sql-statement: mysql_query, err-no: 1040
qry: update nuke_counter set count=count+1 where (type='total' and var='hits') or (var='MSIE' and type='browser') or (var='Windows' and type='os')
description: Too many connections
error in sql-statement: mysql_query, err-no: 1040
qry: select year from nuke_stats_year where year='2003'
description: Too many connections
Warning: mysql_num_rows(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in
error in sql-statement: mysql_num_rows, err-no: 1040
description: Too many connections
error in sql-statement: mysql_query, err-no: 1040
qry: insert into nuke_stats_year values('2003', '0')
description: Too many connections
Not Bullet Proof... (Score:1)
Re:Not Bullet Proof... (Score:2)
Here you go [mini-itx.com]
ask and ye shall recieve....
Disturbing (Score:2, Flamebait)
The site appears to be slashdotted, and I haven't actually been able to see it myself, so I hope that what I'm about to say isn't overly judgemental. I just don't understand what this fascination with military hardware is about, and I find it somewhat disturbing. A computer constructed from a 50 caliber ammunition cannister? Why on earth would someone want that? Why would you want hardware that reminds you of a technology that's been used to kill hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of people? Why is
Re:Disturbing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Disturbing (Score:1)
Re:Disturbing (Score:2, Insightful)
(I am making a point here...sometimes it's good to use old war materials for something more peaceful...)
--RJ
Re:Disturbing (Score:1, Funny)
I for one (Score:1, Funny)
This is nothing. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This is nothing. (Score:1)
Fit a Linux machine into a .50 caliber *cartridge* and we'll be talking.
<dogbert>Bah!</dogbert>
Fit one inside a 1/35 scale model [eduard.cz] of a .50 cal ammo cannister.
w00t!!! (Score:2)
Thank you again slashdot.
Dammit, I made one of these (Score:4, Interesting)
Take a look yourself here. [theblight.net] It's running Gentoo now instead of Redhat, and there have been some other subtle modifications in that time, but it's largely the same machine. And 30mm explosive rounds are a TON more manly than wimpy 50 caliber. hehehehe
Re:Dammit, I made one of these (Score:1)
As soon as I read mini-itx, the mod's potential impressiveness is cut in half, because I know no matter how cool it looks, it can't function as anything more than an mp3 player or word processor.
Case mods should be judged on both looks and how well they can play games.
Re:Dammit, I made one of these (Score:1)
I run Ghost Recon at 1600x1200 without a hitch, unless it's 90+F outside (we rarely use the AC here).
One of the additions I've made since making that page was adding a 120mm intake fan on the side aimed right at the GeForce3. I used a PSU voltage switch (the red one that lets you pick 110 or 220V) to adjust the voltage the fan receives - either 9V or a full 12V (it's a noisy, noisy bastard.)
And to anyone who thinks it's sick or strange to use military hardware...It's made with my tax do
Ba-da-bing (Score:1)
But seriously folks...
Mis-Labeled and Old-Hat (Score:4, Insightful)
"Embedded" is more about using cpu power in non-PC applications. its not about making small PC's
Secondly, so what? Those boards are behing shoved in all sorts of strange 'boxes'... This is just yet another
Re:Mis-Labeled and Old-Hat (Score:1)
WE GET IT ALREADY, you can put mini-itx mobo's in places that you can't put other mobos.
Also, while we're on the topic, small LCD screens are no longer "kewl" either, they're readily available, and not all that expensive, and easy to interface to.
VIA M10000 and HW MPEG (Score:2)
Re:VIA M10000 and HW MPEG (Score:1)
If, at the end of the day, you're computer cant play funky games, your case mod has failed it. Who needs a funky modded machine to run type up word documents?
Re:VIA M10000 and HW MPEG (Score:2)
The supported windows drivers crash XP hard. All i can get out of D-link tech support is to try different PCI slots. (if only they knew)
I thought it was funny that the 3rd party unsupported drivers (madwifi) work better than the supported ones.
Mobile Linux Project (Score:1)
It has to be said... (Score:1, Funny)
Links for the sites in subject (Score:1)
This could help find the WMD... (Score:2, Funny)
2. CIA makes a discrete phone call to SCO.
3. SCO sends an army of lawyers over to Iraq to sue anyone with "ammo".
4. ???
5. Profit!
I'm waiting for a mini-ITX board with good 3D... (Score:2)
Kind of like the Indrema, only real.
Jon Acheson
Yo (Score:2)
Armed geeks (Score:3, Funny)
In other news... Spamix! (Score:2)
Iva Knowlife, the project leader for the linux-in-spam project, Spamix, stated that while it won't have any display or input devices, it supports gigabit ethernet and has a high geek factor, so the whole world should know about it. When asked what the practical purpose was, he said "Hell if I
Times are a changin. (Score:3, Interesting)
He'd get a good kick out of seeing a computer running out of one.
wbs.
Slashdot Effect - take note (Score:2)
If you wanna post pics of your latest project, think about the design of your site, us who call ourselves slash have little mercy for ye of large files.
The Slashdot Effect - Take note (Score:2)
If you are going to post snaps of your latest project, please consider the design of your site - for we who are slash have little sympathy for ye of large files...
Not really embedded Linux (Score:2)
Re:wow AMAZING (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd love it if they'd email me when they come on, shut off, especially when the water level rises and they dont come on.
A buddy of min
Re:...Imagine... (Score:2)