From: Helge Hafting <helge.hafting@hist.no>
To: Tomas Carnecky <tom@dbservice.com>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Kernel thoughts of a Linux user
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 09:07:32 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <41A19E44.9080005@hist.no> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <419CFF73.3010407@dbservice.com>
Tomas Carnecky wrote:
> Gerold J. Wucherpfennig wrote:
> > - Replace DRI with sth. slimmer and intoduce real kernel drivers
>
>> and introduce real kernel drivers which handel all the initialization
>> and interrupt handling (only minimal hardware abstraction). One goal
>> is to
>> remove X.org's PCI magic. Ultimately this shall give framebuffer and X
>> the same basis. This was summarized on kerneltrap.org.
>
>
> Is it possible to have two or more 'workstations' on one computer?
Yes - thats what the "ruby" kernel patch is all about. I have a computer
with two "workstations" at home. Compared to two computers, it
saves space, power, parts, and above all - administrative work. Only one
machine to upgrade, secure, configure.
> A 'workstation' is a monitor, keyboard, mouse etc. tied together and
> represents a place where someone can work.
> I know it's possible to do this using a Xserver (running two Xservers on
> different virtual consoles, each with its own
> configuration/keyboard/mouse/monitor), but I'd like to realise it more
> low-level, on the level of virtual terminals, so that each 'workstation'
> would have it's own 'Ctrl+F1', 'Ctrl+F2' etc.
Sure - ruby gives you that. X may need a patch in order to support
ctrl+F2... on the scond keyboard, as the second console uses vt numbers
from 17 to 32.
>
> Background:
> Today, you can buy video cards with two connectors for monitors, or even
> put two of those cards into one mainboard, making it possible to connect
> four monitors to one computer. A P4 HT enabled CPU would be enough for
> four office workers who edit text documents, unless they aren't playing
> games :) So you could cut costs by buying one set of Mainboard/CPU/RAM
> and then for every worker just a monitor/keyboard/mouse.
> Places like internet-cafes could profit, they usually have many same
> computers side by side, each with the same configuration, but on many no
> one is working, they just run and consume energy.
Yes, you can do that. The limit seems to be how many monitors you can
connect - there seems to be no practical limit to how many USB keyboards
& mice you can use. The lengt of wires might also be a problem
with more than four.
Helge Hafting
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-11-22 8:02 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 30+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-11-18 17:59 Kernel thoughts of a Linux user Gerold J. Wucherpfennig
2004-11-18 18:50 ` Greg KH
2004-11-18 20:00 ` Tomas Carnecky
2004-11-18 20:46 ` Jan Engelhardt
2004-11-18 20:52 ` Tomas Carnecky
2004-11-18 21:05 ` Jan Engelhardt
2004-11-18 21:15 ` Chris Friesen
2004-11-18 21:17 ` Jan Engelhardt
2004-11-18 21:29 ` Chris Friesen
2004-11-19 12:02 ` Paulo Marques
2004-11-19 12:05 ` Jan Engelhardt
2004-11-20 2:14 ` Alan Cox
2004-11-22 8:07 ` Helge Hafting [this message]
2004-11-22 8:38 ` Jan Engelhardt
2004-11-24 10:23 ` Helge Hafting
2004-11-22 11:17 ` Tomas Carnecky
2004-11-24 10:20 ` Helge Hafting
2004-11-24 11:31 ` Tomas Carnecky
2004-11-28 19:10 ` Helge Hafting
2004-11-19 5:04 ` H. Peter Anvin
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-11-20 10:31 Gerold J. Wucherpfennig
2004-11-21 18:29 ` Greg KH
2004-11-22 21:33 ` Gerold J. Wucherpfennig
2004-11-22 18:40 ` Greg KH
2004-11-22 18:52 ` Måns Rullgård
2004-11-22 9:54 Adam J. Richter
2004-11-22 14:54 Adam J. Richter
2004-11-22 20:21 ` Maneesh Soni
2004-11-22 15:32 Adam J. Richter
2004-12-14 18:02 Jan Engelhardt
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