Hello,
@olsen
for your question about ideas for setting up support, for me personally
having a user2user mailinglist would be just fine. Perhaps the web
Google Groups service could be used. Maybe someone here knows
if it is possible to use this in a moderated mode, and if
this suits the intended use at all.
A searchable archive of notes would be nice to have, and probably a Wiki, too. I'm still looking at the options, and the cost involved. If this turns out to be affordable, it won't affect the price of the stack, I hope. Now that everybody seems to suggest that going beyond 25€ would not be a good idea, this is probably what the upper end of the scale must look like.
Thankyou for the speed tests on base hardware. Networking easily wins
over sneakernet for moving larger files, and convenience often wins
over any speed limitations there might be.
I was asked, over at eab.abime.net, how today's most commonly used configurations would fare, and I promised to look into providing the figures by this weekend. This turned out to be an interesting exercise all by itself, before I even managed to run the tests. Looking for the NIC, the power supply, the mouse, the video cable, etc. I discovered stuff I thought I had lost years ago, and I also found and fixed two bugs in Roadshow and the PPP drivers as well.
Also I cant wait to try your stack on my A1000/68010 A590/acard/CF/2MB
RX500/1MB Zorro/A2065 setup. Here a GUI-less stack with a relatively
low memory footprint would be very useful.
Roadshow works surprisingly well on a configuration like that. The hardest part of testing on the A600 was in sitting down, cross-legged, in front of the TV and typing on that tiny keyboard. My back still aches, just thinking back to it.
Btw, for those having a network interface on many systems, and wanting
to run more than one system at the same time, perhaps you could share
your thoughts on this? I feel that complicated license terms tends to
put people off, personally however, I would not mind having some kind
of site license option.
The original plan was to let you install and use your copy of Roadshow on up to two machines without your conscience bothering you. If you wanted to use it on more than this number of machines, then, scout's honour, you should have chipped in for another copy of the package.