On 02/09/07, Rene Herman rene.herman@gmail.com wrote:
On 09/02/2007 07:50 PM, Adrian McMenamin wrote:
They've actually said they'd make their engineers available to the person writing the device driver.
If you feel you'll be okay getting a driver going starting from nothing but an email address, great!
Especially given that hardware would need to be supplied -- which ofcourse to some degree means committing upfront -- I would want to first flaunder around on my own a bit while judging whether or not I'd be capable in the first place and judging what information I'd need from the contact. I also expect the same holds for more subscribers so if you _are_ willing to start under these conditions, I'd say go for it.
If you'd bothered to talk to the company rather than spoit, you'd know that they are prepared to supply the hardware and make engineers' time available. They also say, as has been reported to the list, that a new driver shouldn't be too difficult as the device is very similar to existing supported cards.
Flame wars are easy to start and free software developers love to get on their high horse. But we should stick to the facts: this is a company that wants to work with the community. They couldn't supply a particular type of documentation but they were prepared to do just about anything else needed to get the card supported: I know this because I sent them an email and asked for the facts, rather than took what appeared in the list as gospel.
I'm quite tempted to step up to the wicket on this one, and volunteer to do it. But I think there are probably better people out there...
I doubt it. There are only a few people on this list experienced enough to be able to say they'll be able to get a good result upfront and since they haven't been volunteering, I'm afraid you're as good as it gets! :-)
First thing is getting the hardware I guess. I'm quite sure that once things are working at least basically, there will be help available from this list.
Rene.