
The entire video is embedded after the break. But this promotional video for the Sceptre Videotex Terminal claims that it is the solution to the information overload of the time. We can’t say we ever really thought that the problem with the early 1980’s was too much information in the hands of the people. Posted in Raspberry Pi Tagged keyboard, kindle, screen, terminal, usb Retrotechtacular: 1983’s Answer To Information Overload It turns out it can also be used to host multiple users on the same terminal session. We’ve used it a lot to keep programs running on a machine after we’ve exited from an SSH session. decided to take a USB keyboard along with him, but how is he going to use it to control the terminal screen on the Kindle? The answer is the ‘screen’ application. The problem with the technique is that you’re going to go crazy trying to use the tiny keyboard that is built into the eBook reader.

MAC TERMINAL EMULATOR USB INSTALL
This happens via USB, and requires that you Jailbreak the kindle and install a package called USBnetwork. The Kindle is merely connecting to the Raspberry Pi through a terminal emulator. All it was going to take was some creative hacking to get it working as a display for the single-board computer. This was an easy association to think up, since he planned to bring the Kindle along as his reading material anyway. With the help of his Kindle he used a Raspberry Pi as his travel computer.
MAC TERMINAL EMULATOR USB SERIAL
Posted in hardware Tagged att, modem, motorola, reverse engineering, root, serial port, terminal, u-verse, uart IOS Terminal Debugging Toolĭo you think you could travel for the entire summer and leave your laptop at home? did just that. This allows routing to be handled by a router (novel idea huh?). By enabling it the modem does what a modem is supposed to do: translate between WAN and LAN. The hardware is more than capable of behaving this way but AT&T has disabled the feature with no option for an unmodified device to use it. We think the biggest improvement gained by hacking this router is true bridge mode. The second is a method of rooting the device from its stock web interface. The first is a hardware hack that gains access to a shell though the UART. Luckily he was able to fix almost everything that was causing him grief. Motorola makes this exclusively for AT&T and there are no other modems on the market which can used instead.

Unhappy with the performance of his U-verse modem decided to dig in and see if a bit of hacking could improve the situation.
