Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
196
hpr_transcripts/hpr2417.txt
Normal file
196
hpr_transcripts/hpr2417.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,196 @@
|
||||
Episode: 2417
|
||||
Title: HPR2417: Transmeta Crusoe - Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient) - Trouble Shooting and Debian 9 Install
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2417/hpr2417.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:34:33
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This in HP are episode 2417 entitled Transmeter Crusoe, Fujitsu Siemens Fertro S210, Inclient,
|
||||
Trouble Shooting and Domain Island soil.
|
||||
It is hosted by A.W.U.B. and in about 13 minutes long and carry a clean flag.
|
||||
The summer is, I did amazement cleanup and got my old Transmeter CPU up and running.
|
||||
This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
|
||||
With 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
|
||||
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Good day and welcome to another Hacker Public Radio podcast.
|
||||
My name is JVP.
|
||||
You can reach me at JWP5 at hotmail.com.
|
||||
What I wanted to do today was talk to you, I cleaned up the basement and there are various computers down there.
|
||||
It was semi-emotionally and I had a throw away a lot of stuff.
|
||||
But what I kept was I kept my pies.
|
||||
So I've got four pies and an old droid and a pine 64 down there and I sort of set that up in a little cluster of things that will be various podcasts.
|
||||
But what I found was I found an old thin client, a Fujitsu S210.
|
||||
And this thing's claimed to fame was that it came with a Transmata CPU.
|
||||
And so around 2000 a company called Transmata was leasing a fabric time from IBM chip fabric.
|
||||
And they made the Transmata Corusso line of chips and this little thin client has a Transmata and it has a 512 of Mb of RAM.
|
||||
And I had lots of problems with it before and the thing is the BIOS is so old that it doesn't take well to USB DVD boot.
|
||||
And it won't do, although I did have puppy running on a Linux stick on it at one time that some reason it didn't like it anymore.
|
||||
And the neat thing about this is it has a CF card that is on a secondary IDE bus.
|
||||
And so you can boot from that bus, but you have to get media to that and install it.
|
||||
And I, man, it was a hard, hard evening.
|
||||
I tried with open Suza tumbleweed, it didn't work, I tried a boom too, it didn't work.
|
||||
And so I was like, okay, what always works?
|
||||
And I said, well, NetBSD always works.
|
||||
And...
|
||||
Damian always works.
|
||||
And so I downloaded the net install from NetBSD and Damian.
|
||||
And of course, I later found out that the real reason is that the USB ports didn't put out enough.
|
||||
So I had to have a two-prong USB adapter connected to the DVD drive.
|
||||
I happened to have a second one that did have a two-prong, rather than a single-prong.
|
||||
And the second thing was it didn't like DVD media.
|
||||
Even though it was in a DVD player that was attached to its thing.
|
||||
So I had to get CD media and I found I found I happen to have two blank CDs.
|
||||
I didn't even know I had blank CDs anymore.
|
||||
And I put the Davian 9 on it, the I-386 version.
|
||||
And I...
|
||||
Apparently it didn't like the CD very much.
|
||||
But it tilt the box a certain way.
|
||||
And finally I got the thing to boot.
|
||||
And the Davian went through...
|
||||
I tried to go through the graphical install and it was just not enough information.
|
||||
And so I went through it, had to stop and go through the text install.
|
||||
And then I couldn't get the partitioner to work.
|
||||
For whatever reason I didn't want to do it.
|
||||
And so I was like, okay, so then I had to...
|
||||
So then I was cleaning up the basement anyway.
|
||||
And so I found an old version of Puppy 5.
|
||||
And I booted... I put that old CD into the DVD player and it liked that CD.
|
||||
And so then it booted that.
|
||||
And then I got...
|
||||
She parted up from that old Puppy.
|
||||
And then I put an Etsy 2 on the 32 GB SD card.
|
||||
And then I put two and a half gigabytes of swap.
|
||||
Now the reason I did that was...
|
||||
A guy named Joe Collins recently had a video log on YouTube about the difference between a swap partition and a swap file.
|
||||
And Boone 2 was moving to a swap file.
|
||||
And while he still thought that the swap partition was the way to go,
|
||||
that he always used a magical 2.5 GB.
|
||||
And so I thought I'd give that a try.
|
||||
With the G-Parted, I made a 2.5 GB swap.
|
||||
And we did the install and did a text install this time.
|
||||
And sure enough, even on the install, it saw the swap partition.
|
||||
So the reinstall of it went really well.
|
||||
And it took a while that the TransMata CPU is only 700 MHz.
|
||||
So it took a while to maybe over an hour to get the XFCE CD done.
|
||||
And thank goodness and the text install it offered me also to get LXDE.
|
||||
And so I got it to boot and it came back and I was really worried and really worried about it,
|
||||
you know, doing all that work and it not booting.
|
||||
And so I got it to reboot and booted into XFCE.
|
||||
And it was using 384 Mbps of 512 and about 14 or 15 Mbps of swap just sitting there.
|
||||
And I was like, oh, that's an awful lot.
|
||||
And so then I was like, okay, well, what can I do?
|
||||
And so I switched into XFCE and then it was only using 128.
|
||||
And I was like, oh, that's better.
|
||||
And I looked at the browser and the email client and they had Firefox and deviled for the email client.
|
||||
And I was like, no, that's not going to work.
|
||||
It's just too big.
|
||||
And so I put links, Alpine, Nano, Nano with already there and SC on it.
|
||||
And I said, okay, well, if I need to do some real work, those console based things will do.
|
||||
And links was really surprisingly refreshing there.
|
||||
And I got my Dory to work a little bit on it too.
|
||||
The interesting was that when I switched to LXDE,
|
||||
everything just got instantly better for some reason with that box.
|
||||
So a little bit more about the TransMata thing.
|
||||
And so it's a little bit of a living history.
|
||||
So like I said, TransMata didn't own any fabric themselves.
|
||||
So they ran it from IBM.
|
||||
And IBM made some great chips back then.
|
||||
HP did their...
|
||||
Their...
|
||||
A PA risk and even digital made some chips in their fabrics.
|
||||
They had a fantastic chip fabric.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
And so the carousel family of X-86 compatible microprocessors was developed by TransMata.
|
||||
And it was introduced around 2000.
|
||||
The carousel was notable for its method of achieving X-86 capability.
|
||||
So instead of the instruction set architecture being implemented in hardware or translated
|
||||
by specialized hardware,
|
||||
a carousel runs on a software application layer or a virtual machine
|
||||
notice a code morphing software, CMS.
|
||||
And CMS translates machine code instructions received from programs to native instructions
|
||||
for the microprocessor.
|
||||
And this way the carousel can emulate other and other instructions set architectures and ISAs.
|
||||
This used to allow microprocessors to emulate the X-86 Intel instructions set.
|
||||
And theory is possible for the CMS to be modified to implement other ISAs.
|
||||
So if you wanted to do PA risk or alpha or power, it could...
|
||||
TransMata demonstrated this by executing Java byte code,
|
||||
by translating byte codes into instructions in its native instruction set.
|
||||
In addition of an abstraction layer between the X-86 instruction stream
|
||||
and the hardware layer means that the hardware architecture can change
|
||||
without breaking compatibility.
|
||||
So just by modifying the CMOS,
|
||||
for example, TransMata Activon,
|
||||
a second-generation TransMata design has a 256-bit wide VLIW core
|
||||
versus 128-bit core of the Caruso.
|
||||
Caruso performs in some software functionality,
|
||||
traditionally implemented in hardware instructions.
|
||||
By reordering resulting in simpler hardware with fewer transistors,
|
||||
the relative simplicity of the hardware means that Caruso consumes less power
|
||||
therefore generates less heat and other X-86 compatible microprocessors in the same frequency.
|
||||
A 700 MHz Caruso ran X-86 programs at a speed of 500 MHz,
|
||||
pinium 3 processor.
|
||||
Although the processor was smaller and cheaper than the corresponding Intel processor,
|
||||
okay, and that's the one that I have.
|
||||
And while I say that it's low power,
|
||||
that I touched the box, the C200 thin client,
|
||||
and I think it's awfully warm, awfully warm.
|
||||
And so they had two versions.
|
||||
It's with the TM3200 for embedded applications,
|
||||
or the TM5400 for low-powered personal computing,
|
||||
both were based on the same architecture,
|
||||
but different in-clock frequency and peripheral support.
|
||||
And I guess that key was peripheral support.
|
||||
And the BIOS, you know, it had a USB floppy and a USB CD,
|
||||
but it didn't have any DVD.
|
||||
Okay, it does have a PCI card in it.
|
||||
I don't know where I could find PCI cards,
|
||||
but it had a serial port, which is why I've got saved from the trash also,
|
||||
because I still have a collection of sions that I want to try to talk to,
|
||||
and the sion works off of serial port.
|
||||
And I'm pretty sure Debian has some old-sion libraries.
|
||||
So the Fujitsu Siemens in Germany seems to be the big thing with this.
|
||||
And again, I put a 32 Gigabyte Transcend card,
|
||||
and it had no issues, right?
|
||||
It just went on and on and on.
|
||||
And there's several little, several little car machines.
|
||||
So the tutorials, the basic was a 210, and it was 210,
|
||||
and he had a lot of them originally came with 128,
|
||||
so I found an old 512 from a laptop and put it in, and it was fine.
|
||||
And the reason that they had the SF card was because Fujitsu Siemens
|
||||
could put their own spin of their thin client OS on it, or XP embedded.
|
||||
And so you just pop that out and pop in your Linux,
|
||||
and boom, because the machine has a secondary IDE,
|
||||
and it just boots right off.
|
||||
So that's why it didn't happen.
|
||||
And I've seen them with card readers, SIM card readers, all of them and stuff.
|
||||
I just have a basic one, a basic one there.
|
||||
And everything seems to work with Puppy,
|
||||
I had radio going on it a few years ago.
|
||||
And this time that's going to run the Sion,
|
||||
and I don't think I'm going to do very much audio with it.
|
||||
I may see if I can record some basic podcasts with it to see
|
||||
if it'll work or if it'll work or not,
|
||||
but right now it has debut and nine on it.
|
||||
It seems to be doing quite well.
|
||||
And everything seems to work fine.
|
||||
And it'll be a great project to practice with the serial interface on it.
|
||||
And really that's about it.
|
||||
So I hope you all enjoyed my thing.
|
||||
The Old Transmata does work fine with David.
|
||||
And once you get it past the BIOS and get the thing booted,
|
||||
if there's any questions or comments,
|
||||
please write me at JWP5 at homel.com.
|
||||
Thank you all very much for your time.
|
||||
And have a great day. Bye.
|
||||
You've been listening to HECCA Public Radio at HECCA Public Radio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
||||
then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
HECCA Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound
|
||||
and the Infonomicon Computer Club.
|
||||
And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
|
||||
Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
|
||||
attribution, share-like, free-to-life scenes.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user