The N900 (and the Maemo platform) allows the user to, for lack of a better word, “turbo-charge” the Application Manager by opening up a variety of advanced features locked away by default.
this thread should be removed...
if no one knows about the redpill-mode, no one will try it.
if people read about it, its inevitable that people will try it just out of curiosity. and some people WILL screw up something
if people read about it, its inevitable that people will try it just out of curiosity. and some people WILL screw up something
And they will turn up here asking for help.
They will get a right royal ticking off for dabbling with stuff they didn't understand and treating n900 like a toy. But you know what? They'll get help in restoring their device, too.
this thread should be removed...
if no one knows about the redpill-mode, no one will try it.
if people read about it, its inevitable that people will try it just out of curiosity. and some people WILL screw up something
Thats censorship. Censorship is the worst idea in the history of all ideas.
I remember that with the N800/810, the red pill would make a bunch of new applications available, like the apache webserver and the postgresql database. Do you think these will be available without red pill mode in the N900? It was a hog, but I liked having postgresql on my N810.
I am not trying to raise the ire of the "No Red Pillers", but I had only used it these last few years to get the hidden packages.
I remember that with the N800/810, the red pill would make a bunch of new applications available, like the apache webserver and the postgresql database. Do you think these will be available without red pill mode in the N900? It was a hog, but I liked having postgresql on my N810.
I am not trying to raise the ire of the "No Red Pillers", but I had only used it these last few years to get the hidden packages.
I would expect that you can just 'apt-get it' from the command line as usual.
-jkq
PS. No octopi were taunted in the making of this post.
I remember that with the N800/810, the red pill would make a bunch of new applications available, like the apache webserver and the postgresql database. Do you think these will be available without red pill mode in the N900? It was a hog, but I liked having postgresql on my N810.
I am not trying to raise the ire of the "No Red Pillers", but I had only used it these last few years to get the hidden packages.
No, actually, it didn't make "new software packages available". At best it only displayed *every single* software package available in the repositories, which is absolutely useless.
Does a user need to know that libsdl2.0 is available? No, of course not. Is there any use of having people see libxerces show up in the middle of their applications? Not in the least. There are specific software categories, and the user* categories are the ones being displayed. System dependencies, or dependencies which have no UI (libraries) at all shouldn't be displayed.
The reason you saw Apache and Postgre appear was because those packages had been poorly ported initially. They should've been part of the user* packages, obviously.
Clean apt cache - Blue Pill mode bins the apt cache by default, and Red Pill allows you to turn this bandwidth wasting behaviour off. Good, on a mobile, I'd have thought.
Hmmm. How often do you need those packages after installation?
deleting .debs is a good behaviour, especially on a mobile device.
Saving .debs on MMC (and copying them from there to a PC hard drive) is the only way you will keep your Maemo device running once the next device appears. The same applies to tarballs. We don't pay for them, but someone has to maintain the repositories they come from, and an older repository needs as much maintenance as the current ones. Particularly when it comes to something like extras-devel or unofficial repositories, it is hardly surprising that packages become unavailable after a time.
I believe the warnings about the red pill and have never used it, but CrashandDie's post is not the way to persuade ewan, who obviously knows what he is writing about. The standard installation procedure is monstrously wasteful of bandwidth. Your package might be single-digit kB, but you first have to download the whole Application List, which for some repositories extends into MB. If you need to restore a backup while travelling somewhere without wifi and roaming data costs 8 cents/kB, you will regret every deletion, even if your device is the latest one.
The answer to ewan is that he doesn't need red-pill mode to do what he wants. If he wants to save a .deb from the Maemo repositories, he can go to http://maemo/org/downloads/ instead of selecting his app from the Application List in Application Manager. When he taps "Install" on the Maemo Download page for his app, another Download Page will appear, giving a choice of "Install", "Save" or "Cancel". He can save the package wherever he wants. Alternatively, he could go directly to the repository on his browser, and download from there. (This may be the only way for Garage apps and other less-official downloads.)
It may be even easier to download the .deb to PC and copy it from there to MMC. It depends on how much searching you have to do to find it.
Originally Posted by
Why do we not want the install .debs to be put on the MMC? Because the MMC can be pulled out at any time (microSD or USB cable being plugged in). I don't know the implications of such a use-case, but I can't imagine it working out slickly and smoothly.
There seems to be some confusion here. Downloading a .deb to MMC and installing from there doesn't mean you will install it to MMC. Especially, it does not mean that you will subsequently be running the app from MMC. (To anticipate quibbles, we are not talking here about running the rootfs from a media card partition. I gather that that will be unusual, and perhaps impossible, on the N900.) Unless Application Manager has become much less smart for Fremantle, it will install a .deb from MMC to exactly the same place on the rootfs as if the .deb had come directly from the repository.