Thanks,
dgdimick KC6AUP
-------------------------------------- There is no future until we settle our past...
On Thu, Jun 19, 2014 at 1:16 AM, IZ3GME Marco iz3gme.marco@gmail.com wrote:
Sure it works! I already tested it on RaspberryPi and some Olinuxino boards also
73 de IZ3GME Marco
On 19/06/2014 06:03, Denis Dimick wrote:
Nice.
I was thinking about seeing if the RaspberryPi would run Chirp. Since all you really need is the Python Libs it should work fine.
On Jun 18, 2014 7:51 PM, "Michael Dodds" <mike@doddstech.com mailto:mike@doddstech.com> wrote:
My new Rev C BeagleBone Black arrived today and I decided to see if
it
would run Chirp successfully. Short answer: yes it does :) The Rev C version comes with 4 GB of onboard flash and comes preinstalled with Debian 7.4 with an LXDE desktop. The older versions came with Angstrom Linux and only had 2 GB onboard storage. You could use one of those by loading Debian or Ubuntu on a 4GB or larger
micro SD
card and booting from there. The default user is debian and will sudo with no password, so it's
not
the most secure setup, but that is easily changed if you like. Here is how I did it: Open up LXterm from the Accessories menu and type: sudo usermod -a -G dialout debian This adds the debian user to the dialout group so you have access to
the
USB ports. Then I cheated a bit: While in LXterm I did this: sudo apt-get
install
chirp. This installs a truly ancient version of Chirp, but takes
care of
all the dependencies for you. When it completes, type: apt-get remove chirp. That removes the old version of chirp but leaves the dependencies. Then download the latest version of Chirp (the tar.gz Linux source version) From LXterm, type: cd /home/debian/Downloads and hit enter. Then
type:
tar -zxvf chirp* (no sudo needed here) This will extract the tar.gz file into a directory under Downloads, chirp-0.4.0 in my case. Then from the file manager in the GUI, navigate to that directory and double click on chirpw and click on execute in the dialog that pops
up.
I'm not sure if there is a practical use for running it in the BeagleBone, but it works every bit as well as my "real" Linux box
does
and reads/writes just fine to all my radios, it's fun, and Linux has
no
issues with the counterfeit Prolific USB programming cables. I'm sure you could get fancy and actually install it, but it works
just
fine without it. 73, Mike -- *Michael Dodds* *1390 Excalibur Dr.* *Macon, GA 31220* *478-314-4119* *mike@doddstech.com <mailto:mike@doddstech.com>* “*Never worry about theory * *as long as the machinery does* *what it's supposed to do.” - Robert Heinlein* _______________________________________________ chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com <mailto:chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com> http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users
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