iW00t macrumors 68040 Original poster Nov 7, 2006 3,286 0 Defenders of Apple Guild Jan 14, 2007 #1 Apparently the TV is powered by the previous generation Pentium-M chips, so it is a x86 chip after all! Wonder how long it'd be before someone manages to make Linux run on it.
Apparently the TV is powered by the previous generation Pentium-M chips, so it is a x86 chip after all! Wonder how long it'd be before someone manages to make Linux run on it.
V vniow macrumors G4 Jul 18, 2002 10,266 1 I accidentally my whole location. Jan 14, 2007 #2 iW00t said: Wonder how long it'd be before someone manages to make Linux run on it. Click to expand... ...or someone hacks the embedded OS its using onto a generic PC.
iW00t said: Wonder how long it'd be before someone manages to make Linux run on it. Click to expand... ...or someone hacks the embedded OS its using onto a generic PC.
iW00t macrumors 68040 Original poster Nov 7, 2006 3,286 0 Defenders of Apple Guild Jan 14, 2007 #3 vniow said: ...or someone hacks the embedded OS its using onto a generic PC. Click to expand... Not much point in that isn't it? The whole idea of the TV is that it is a small quiet equivalent of a modern day VCR (sans the R bit).
vniow said: ...or someone hacks the embedded OS its using onto a generic PC. Click to expand... Not much point in that isn't it? The whole idea of the TV is that it is a small quiet equivalent of a modern day VCR (sans the R bit).