CREDITS
People who worked on the port of Linux to the Jornada 820 include
-
Hiroshi Ishii,
who completed the initial porting effort and
first made the kernel to boot (with a console over serial).
-
George Almasi,
who did an amazing job at making the machine usable,
with console and PCMCIA support.
-
Oleg Gusev,
who not only hacked, but also patiently gathered
all the knowledge upon which we base our hacking.
-
François-René Rideau,
who started the project
and tied it together with twiddled penguin guts.
-
Alessandro Rubini,
who brought us the mailing-list, and hope in a time when it was lost.
-
David Jones,
who contributed the web pages and more.
-
Matan Ziv-Av,
last but not least, who came with his raw hacks out of space.
-
insert your name here,
don't be shy, come on and join us!
You don't have to be a deep kernel hacker
(though we could use your talents if you are):
there's plenty of work to be done packaging a nice userland.
But all this work wouldn't have been possible without the fine people from
- Sourceforge.net,
who host our project.
- handhelds.org,
who ported Linux (kernel and userland) to many handheld devices,
and on top of whose efforts we build.
- blob,
who helped us in our initial efforts to port the kernel,
including the finding of the infamous counter @ C005C080.
- ARM Linux,
who made Linux run on the ARM.
- kernel.org,
who brought us Linux, to begin with!
Finally, we must thank all the developers of free software
who brought us
the GNU development environment,
plus uClibc,
busybox
and pcmcia_cs
for our toolchain and minimal userland,
and beyond that,
all the free software that makes a usable platform out of Linux.