Schiphol airport uses active millimeter wave screening
I was quite surprised that Amsterdam airport is beginning to introduce
active millimeter wave screening instead of the good old metal detectors.
The specific device seen in operation at one of the queues between the
international and the Schengen area of the airport was L3 Communications ProVision(TM).
While doing some research about this subject on the net, I discovered
cargo X-ray solutions such as those described in
this article. You can mount a mobile unit onto a track and then go as deep
as 200mm of steel to x-ray through the metal plating of a cargo container. This
is really scary stuff...
[ /electronics |
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I don't work for Google - no matter what the rumors say
A number of people have recently independently approached me about rumours that
I'm now working for Google/Android, after having left OpenMoko, Inc. in
November 2007.
According to one source, some friend who visited Android was told by Android
that I would be now working for them. There is no truth to this.
Please put an end to those rumours. I'm not working with or for either Google
or Android. There also are no plans to do so, and there have never been any
negotiations, aside from the usual Google headhunters that approach anyone
visible in the FOSS world every so often - which I always decline, indicating
that I am not interested in a dependent employment position, no matter for
which company.
I will continue to be doing freelance contract work on projects that are
interesting to me and within my fields of expertise. Should anyone chose to
approach me with an interesting technical Android system-level and/or hardware
related project, that would certainly potentially be interesting. But I'd look
at it like any other inquiry.
[ /linux/openmoko |
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KLM also using Linux in their Entertainment System
The intercontinental KLM flight from Sao Paulo to Amsterdam was using a fairly
new (05/2007) Boeing 777-300, and it was equipped with something like an 8"
wide screen entertainment system, not unlike the one that I saw some months
back in a Shanghai Airlines flight.
This time I had the luck to see the Linux based system boot twice. The boot
time is horrible (on the order of 4 minutes) and you can see many hardware
details. It's using a Geode type CPU and a realmagic GPU, has a natsemi
Ethernet chip and the credit card reader is actually a USB HID device.
All over the place they have fairly low-level debug code spit out to the
console, this really looks like "it worked on one developer board, ship it to
the airline" product. You can see mistakes in shell scripts ("ls: no such file
or directory" and similar stuff from init scripts, as well as debug code from
their UI applications.
It would really be interesting to get my hands onto an Ethernet link in that
in-plane network. Guess one could have quite a bit of fun with that :)
I've taken a series of snapshots throughout the boot process. Will post them
once I'm back home and find time to wade through the holiday pics.
[ /linux |
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Back from holidays
I'm currently sitting at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, waiting for the last
connection in my Recife - Sao Paulo - Amsterdam - Berlin return trip.
I'll be wading through the several thousand emails over much of the next
couple of days, so please give me some time to get back to you.
[ /personal |
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Receiving the 2007 FSF Award for Advancement of Free Software
The news has already made it to the net during my (offline) holidays, so this
entry in my journal will come hardly as a surprise to you: The Free Software
Foundation Award for the Advancement of Free Software 2007 has been granted to
me :)
I am deeply honored to be the recipient of the award, joining the list of (much
more distinguished) recipients of the award. At the same time I'm sorry to not
having been able to personally attend the awards ceremony. I've outlined the
three key reasons for this in the statement that I prepared to be read at the
ceremony.
[ /linux |
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Update from first week of holidays
For those of you who're curious: The first week of holidays went just fine,
spending something three days in Sao Paulo and three days in Curitiba In
Curitiba, I had a rental car and went to Vila Velha, as well as driving the
serpentines of the Rua Graciosa through Morretes to the Beach. Oh, and
obviously in Curitiba I had to go to Homem Pizza and Happy Burger, the two
restaurants that I frequented the most while working at Conectiva 7 years ago.
The biggest problem so far was the malfunction of the in-room Save of the Hotel
in Curitiba, resulting in not being able to access any of my cash reserves,
credit/debit cards, passport or laptop for two days. They actually had to
physically break the safe open since the lock mechanism was stalled/clogged in
a way that it did no longer move.
Now I've just arrived in Recife, where after two days, the journey will
continue towards Porto de Galinhas.
[ /personal |
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