Linux on a Used Cash Register: Reloaded 141
plimsoll writes "Hot on the heels of the original cash register running Linux, dumpster-diver Aaron Benoy has implemented his own GNU/Linux POS project with a twist: Ruins in ASCII, a late IBM 4694 removed from its case and reloaded with Linux to become a self-described 'video sculpture' showcasing 'an infinite loop of 180 distinct 7-second long video clips of various abandoned, ruined or otherwise vacant buildings and infrastructure' on its 9-inch paper white phosphor terminal display. Southern geeks can see it unveiled tonight at the Atlanta Underground Film Festival."
Interesting Art (Score:5, Interesting)
There was a time Westerners saw art really as a Machia, something you made and / or engaged in. Science and art were really the same endeavor for people like the Greeks. No division in our mental lives.
For some reason, just the description of this project makes me happy.
M
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Interesting Art (Score:1)
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2)
M
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2)
The same could be said about virtually anything - including the geek arts. Actual artists will be the first ones to admit that anything can be art, and anyone can make art - that art doesn't exist outside of the i
Re:Interesting Art (Score:1)
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2)
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2)
Re:Interesting Art (Score:2)
As our understanding of the Universe increased, the worlds of the arts and sciences grew apart by necessity. The gap between the two and philosophy also increased. We now have the tools to increase scientific knowledge scientifically, not just by thinking, writing, and pondering.
I think the distinction is a useful and valid one, despite it not being such in the times of the heights of Greek civilization, Galileo's time, or oth
Not that cool? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not that cool? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not that cool? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not that cool? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure that makes this less cool, since
(1) it's a freekin' cash register
(2) it's definitely isn't your typical slashdot-geek's video subsystem.
The 'found in a dumpster' bit is pretty cool
Re:Not that cool? (Score:5, Informative)
The list of video cards used in the 4694 makes me think that the claim 'incapable of displaying anything but text' sound more than a little fishy, too.
From the manual, again :
frickin' Rage 128 Pro?!? I *just* retired a machine with that card in it...
Re:Not that cool? (Score:1)
I got my fileserver, which is a Dell Dimension M166 (as in 166mhz) to recognize a 120 gig hard drive. Its been serving MP3s and acting a jukebox/fileserver ever since. Its pretty amazing that Dell even still supports this old beast. Too bad I could never get it to recognize more than 64 megs of RAM. if anyone reads this and knows how to get it recognize more, please drop me a message!
zosX
Re:Not that cool? (Score:1)
Re:Not that cool? (Score:1)
It would never support above 128GiB (137GB) though, since that is a hard limit for EIDE before the new extentions.
The site is now on a XP1600+, cutting render/database times from seconds to less than 100ms...
Re:Not that cool? (Score:2)
Re:Not that cool? (Score:2)
They are also designed like tanks - putting up with day in day out heavy abuse. I
Been there, done that. (Score:2)
geek question (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:geek question (Score:4, Informative)
Color tubes restrict how you can mount them. The guns are either arranged in an equilateral triangle (point up) or in a horizontal row with a pattern of red, blue & green phosphors to match.
Monochrome tubes give you a lot of options. Only one gun centered in the neck. No pattern of colored phosphors on the screen. It's all white so it's just spread inside the front of the tube. You can rotate the tube anyway you want, giving you infinite possibilities if it's round.
Old B&W TVs with round tubes made use of this. Most components were on a chassis at the bottom so it isn't top-heavy. Tuner & other controls somewhere near the top so it's easy to reach. Tube rotated to the side opposite the tuner so it's away from everything -- usually a bit above horizonal because the HV power supply will be at that end of the chassis & it's rather large.
Re:geek question (Score:1)
Outside of the world of TV's, such as CRT-based calculators, radars, medical equipment, etc. there's a lot of variety in where the anode cap shows up. If the accelleration voltage is low enough (older 5" or smaller CRT's), it's just another pin on the base of the tube (but that's really rare).
Re:I can better that... (Score:5, Insightful)
here in NYC, a lot of things run windows. When you go to penn station, the NJ Transit ticket machines are running NT 4. I've seen errors on them in the past, they software that's actually driving the display's UI and all that is just a visual basic application. Sometimes they crap out or bluescreen. not very often, though. I've only seen it happen 4 or 5 times in the past couple years. It's really neat to watch them reboot the system. You can see it pinging all its ticket servers and stuff. I assume they have the servers' firewall configured in such a way as to only allow incoming traffic from known IPs, either that, or their attached to a private network. either one wouldn't surprise me.
Even the Amtrak ticket machines run on computers. When you see the tech guy open the machine's case, there's a little beige tower inside with a keyboard and mouse.
lately, everything seems to be running windows. Frequently, in times square, the huge animated billboards will be bluescreened. It's pretty funny. You'd think that software for made for doing this stuff wouldn't crap out. You'd hope that no one installs quake on these machines or any other non-related software, but I guess people do.
I guess putting quake on the adserver box is to a windows geek what putting linux on a toaster is to a real geek.
Re:I can better that... (Score:4, Funny)
I'd love to see Quake broadcast on one of those screens above Times Square. Better yet, CounterStrike, with a CNN-style text crawl at the bottom of the screen:
If anyone can pull this off during the GOP convention I will pay them $1000.
k.
Re:I can better that... (Score:2)
i guess that's why they tell you to proofread before posting, eh?
Huh? (Score:2)
Perhaps you meant 1MB, in which case, the answer is uCLinux.
Reusable acronym (Score:5, Funny)
POS is such a great acronym : when the equipment is new, it means Point-Of-Sale, and when it's old and obsolete, it doesn't need to change acronym.
Kind of like "PC", come to think of it...
Re:michael you bum (Score:2)
POS System (Score:1)
Re:POS System (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:POS System (Score:2)
Re:POS System (Score:2)
Re:POS System (Score:2)
Cash Register And Pc?
A little contrived, perhaps.
yeah! (Score:2, Funny)
Since we're talking about ASCI - does anybody know where I can find this aalib demo just about anybody is talking about?
Re:yeah! (Score:2)
Videos I'd like to see (Score:5, Funny)
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
--Your bonus card has saved you $0.00 this year. Thank you for shopping at Linux Mart--
Re:Videos I'd like to see (Score:1)
Are people buying copies of the operating system it runs. $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 --Your bonus card has saved you $0.00 this year. Thank you for shopping at Linux Mart--
Yeah, I know it's a troll, but the money you save with linux (assuming you downloaded a free version and paid nothing) was the money you would have spent on another operating system, not some vapid discount you got for not paying "full price." Unless you believe you save $100.00 when you buy XP at $100 less than the suggested retail pric
Re:Videos I'd like to see (Score:2)
Correction (Score:1)
$699.00
$699.00
Subtotal $2097.00
Tax $178.25
Total $2275.25
--Your compliance with intellectual property law has saved you $997,724.75 in lawsuit settlement fees this year. Thank you for shopping at Linux Mart--
Re:Correction (Score:2)
The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:5, Interesting)
This is unfortunate. My father's company [bikeworld.com] runs FreeBSD and OpenBSD on all of its servers but I still have to support over 35 Windows 2000 desktops here at our stores because there is no *nix alternative. Retail is the perfect place for Linux and the BSDs. Retail people need simple, easy-to-use interfaces and they do not want to deal with the problems associated with administering Microsoft OSes (worms, spyware, etc). I would love nothing more than to replace every single Windows desktop in this company with a X11-capable thin client.
Thoughts?
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:3, Interesting)
All I was looking for was a simple, NCurses based interface - a POS does not need X and the added overhead and boot time associated with it. I keep checking every few months, but there never seems to be anything worth the effort of migrating to. I've seriously considered picking up PostgreSQL myself to try to implement something as
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
On second thought, I agree with you on the ncurses interface. The speed should be a lot better and memory usage a lot less. The problem is development tools. Are there any good rapid development tools for ncurses apps? I guess I should look into Java/ncurses and Perl/ncurses interfaces.
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
http://kfa.cx/products.php?product=WITS
Requirements are simply PHP and MySQL, some reports use libgd to generate graphs. Being in PHP, it will run on any system (although I recommend a unix based system,
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2, Interesting)
The sad thing... (back on topic) (Score:2)
A lot of their functionality is web-based. They use XML extensively to shovel data back and forth between systems like the front lanes, tool rental, returns, etc. [ My speculation is this might have something to do with why they chose Microsoft -- the introduc
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:3, Informative)
Nope, not an option. I'm a very experienced Perl programmer but that's irrelevant. A Web-based application cannot open cash register draws, draw to an LCD, or print receipts...at least, not without a really kludgy server-to-client piece.
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2, Insightful)
I was planning on writing an extension to firefox to control a draw. And there are plenty of programs on the net linking a LCD with a webpage with input. As for printing, css can handle that. The program could even have predefined label sets that work. As an added bon
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
Well, actually I just saw a web-based cash register app.
It comprises of Slackware 9.1, Mozilla Firebird (using a very tiny bit of XUL), GT.M (for local data caching and server comms).
What's more it runs on very modest hardware (think 233Mhz) and there's nothing kludgy in the whole architecture (except maybe the XUL bit).
80N
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
In any case, web browsers don't make a good interface. POS applications need a lot more interaction between various peripherals and the display.
I started writing an app for the original register (Score:2)
I was the one that had the extra time on my hands to take apart one of my mom's surplus registers. I oringally got it to see what was inside, so we could figure out what could run, whether we could put wireless on it, etc. (My mom's store in in PHX, I'm in San Diego, so I was sort of exploring on my own.)
I suspected that it was a normal PC all along, but my mom didn't get manuals or
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2, Interesting)
Our store would also run a Linux based POS system if there was a decent one available, although not because of any so called "problems associated with administering MS OSes)". A cash register is generally a single purpose machine running one or two apps, tops. Our W2K POS machines only rebott/get turned off when the power goes out. They're
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2, Insightful)
Are you serious?
http://www.linux-pos.org/ etc. Have you ever even looked up "Linux pos" on google. There are many stores which are currently using Linux in POS devices. Shit, call up NCR, IBM etc. Or Did you mean OSS as in open and Free with source, Professionally done sitting there on the Net just waiting for you? Because if that's the case I suggest you forget that and call up any
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
That's what I was looking for. I can get Linux for free, a browser, email client, etc. Why not a POS system? As is all of the free, OSS ones are incomplete or just flat out suck.
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
I've been to linux-pos.org already. The problem with most of the available Linux POSes is that they are custom-tailored to specific applications. I've found POS software for gas stations, for restaurants, video stores, but nothing that is generic enough for our retail environment (bicycle stores). I need something that can handle cash register stuff and also work for phone order entry. This means that it must have a customer database (complete with address, phone, email, etc) and a speedy way of enterin
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
The whole point of OSS is that people that need a solution write it and share it with others.
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
I would not mind at all picking this project back up, and I still have notes and partial code. If anyone is remotely interested drop me an email.
Really what I would appreciate is someone to use the software in a retail enviroment and work out the bugs once it gets polished up a bit. This would require inventorying the entire
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:1)
These people may be able to help. (Score:1)
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
It's taking me a little extra time, since I'm making the system much more flexible than the client requires so
Re:The sad thing... (slightly OT) (Score:2)
Linux booths... (Score:2, Interesting)
windows booth (Score:1)
The Unbearable Lightness of ASCII (Score:1)
Incomplete (Score:5, Funny)
In that case, they should have somehow involved the vi editor.
Re:Ruins in apache (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ruins in apache (Score:1)
I work with these!! (Score:5, Informative)
"hardware so old it is incapable of displaying anything but text"
Speaking as someone who writes software for these boat anchors, I would like to point out that they have VGA monitors and can display 640x480 graphics in black and white with the standard 9" monitor or, with the optional 9" color monitor, 16 colors. My company, which does custom retail software, has several customers running these units. Most still on DOS, but a few on Windows NT.
Re:I work with these!! (Score:3, Informative)
uhh. (Score:1, Funny)
Ironic typo? (Score:2)
"Ruins in ASCII"
Re:Ironic typo? (Score:1)
Re:Ironic typo? (Score:1)
There is irony, though, in that their webserver is now in ruins.
Windows P.O.S. (Score:4, Funny)
Excuse me sir, will that be crash or charge?
Re:Windows P.O.S. (Score:1)
Yes, in this context, the acronym does indeed need to be spelled out...
Re:Windows P.O.S. (Score:1)
(we all know bashing is best in a *nix environment)
How 'southern' do we need to be? (Score:3, Funny)
All of those in the southern hemisphere repeat after me...
You Insensitive Clod!
Technologicaly late ^^ (Score:1)
Re:Bad Link (Score:2)
google cache [66.102.7.104]
and this, too [66.102.7.104]