Archive for the ‘1554’ Category

CES 2009: TriSpecs Headphone Sunglasses With Bluetooth

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

trispecs.gif

I′ve never seen the appeal of sunglasses with built-in earphones. OK, I suppose I get the theory, but in reality, there are time that you want to listen to you music when you don’t necessarily want to be wearing sunglasses–like at night, for example (yeah, yeah, Corey Hart, I know, I know). That said, plenty of companies have been jumping into the space with both feet ever since it was pioneered by Oakley a few years back.

The latest is Step Labs, which is showing off its new TriSpecs at CES. These guys offer “high fidelity,” according to the company, plus Bluetooth for pairing with your handset. The headphones also offer fairly good speech quality–I can attest to that, having tried out a pair last night. Also, unlike the Oakley Thumps, they actually look like something non-crazy people might wear in public.

According to Step Labs, the glasses are available now–well, sort of. The company actually doesn’t have any distribution in the States. So in the meantime, if you really want a pair, be sure to check out the site.

For PCMag′s full CES coverage, go to http://www.pcmag.com/category2/0,2806,2235882,00.asp.


Original post by Brian Heater

CES 2009: Video of Logitech’s New Gaming Peripherals

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

logitechces2009keyboard.gif

Hey, remember those new Logitech gaming peripherals that we told you about earlier today, including The Logitech G19 Keyboard for Gaming, The Logitech G35 Surround Sound Headset, and The Logitech G9x Laser Mouse? Well, the company showcased all of them–and then some–at tonight’s CES Unveiled event at the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas.

We spoke to a Logitech representative who was kindly enough to give us a guided tour of all of the company’s cool new gaming peripherals. Check out the exclusive video, after the jump.






Original post by Brian Heater

Give People the Gift of…Their Own Faces

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

headsculpturepens.jpg

“Give Someone Special Their Face for Christmas.” That’s a weird headline for a press release. Really, really weird.

But I′ll give it this: The headline did make me click through and read the whole release, if only for the sake of morbid curiosity. And believe you me, I wasn’t disappointed. Being well into December as we are, plenty of off-beat product manufacturers are swooping in for the hard sell, and given the current economic environment, the sell is getting all the harder.

So, if by now you’ve failed to choose the perfect gift for someone, ThatsMyFace is certain that it has the perfect answer: Give them their own face. Or, rather, a 3D model of their face. The company “brings traditional 2D photography and portrait sculptures into the full-color world of the 21st century. We called it ‘That’s My Face′ because that was literally the first thing I said when I saw my first facial reproduction. It’s like being face-to-face with yourself.”

That’s a direct quote from the company’s founder, Dr. Marc Cardle, who, fortunately, didn’t have a more expletive-laden response to the technology, such as, “Holy s*** that’s my face,” or, “Motherf*****, that’s my face.” (Also, one of several reasons why it’s fortunate that Rod Blagojevich didn’t found the company.)

ThatsMyFace offers a large range of products with your face on them, from a $29 keychain to a $2,000 head sculpture. It’s perfect gift for that special someone who has everything, except, you know, their own face.


Original post by Brian Heater

Nimbuzz VoIP app on Apple App Store

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

nimbuzz-iphone.jpgNimbuzz is a free app that lets you call (VoIP), chat, message, and send photos, music and video on your iPhone, which was recently made available on the Apple App Store. Using a centralized contact list you can connect with all your buddies on Skype, Windows Live Messenger, Yahoo! Messenger, ICQ, GoogleTalk, AIM, Gadu-Gadu, StudiVZ, Hyves, Jabber and Twitter, plus popular social networks including Facebook and MySpace. It features presence (who´s online and where), group calling, chatrooms, and more.

If your buddies are offline, let them know you′re trying to get in touch by sending them a “Buzz”. It will start Nimbuzz Mobile on their mobile phone. Nice feature.

Nimbuzz is pretty similar to fring, which I’ve used extensively. One thing Nimbuzz has up on fring is that it supports regional social network support including German StudiVZ, Dutch Hyves and Polish Gadu-Gadu.

Go download your copy on the Apple App Store today!

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Original post by nafiz

VoxOx 1.0.1 Released

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

voxox3.jpgVoxOx just released a new version of their “Universal Communicator”, which aims to combine VoIP, video, and social networks. VoxOx aims to take on Skype by offering more social networking features. Last year, I wrote an article titled Skype Could Trump Facebook in Social Networking, but Skype still hasn′t added social networking functionality.

In any event, today version 1.0.1 was released, less than a month after their initial launch. I was never able to get the Facebook integration to work, but it was a beta release, so I’m hoping they worked out the kinks.

Here are some new features:

New Additions
• Status field set to your auto-response message when away
• Facebook icons link out to friends’ profiles so you can write on their wall, private message them, etc
• View Facebook contact photos from their VoxOx Profile
• Text Message window remembers Mobile Numbers
• Chat to Email window remembers emails addresses

Bug Fixes
• Call-Back (Web and SMS) fully functional
• Fixed Crash bug when ending calls
• Added default group for new contacts to be saved
• Login screen text updated to “Login Automatically”
• Web Portal login back online

Some of the major updates they are working on include a new and improved user interface, more efficient memory utilization, smoother and faster SMS functionality, enhanced Facebook integration, MySpace integration, and Outlook &amp Mac address book integration.

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Original post by nafiz

DroboApps go live, they grow up so fast

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

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Data Robotics launched the Drobo dev program in beta back in July, and it looks like things have worked out swimmingly — the company just officially launched the first set of DroboApps, including an iTunes server, DLNA server, BitTorrent client, and FTP server. Over 100 developers have joined the Drobo Developer Connection, and there are more than 20 apps available now — a number Data Robotics expects to grow quickly. You’ll need a DroboShare NAS adapter to take advantage of the new apps, of course — a $199 toll we’d like to see integrated into a future unit. We’ll see how it goes, though — we see a lot of potential in this sort of NAS / server hybrid.

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Engadget Podcast 114 - 10.17.2008

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

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Desirous of more of that enlightening Engadget banter? You’re in luck! We’ve got another installment of the newly-minted Engadget Podcast on tap, featuring an in-depth exploration of thoughts, feelings, and thoughts about feelings. This week Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, and Nilay Patel take you thorough a breathtaking range of topics, with a thorough dissection of the new MacBooks / MacBook Pros, a little Windows 7 talk, and an extra deep look at the T-Mobile G1 with the help of Engadget Mobile super-editor Chris Ziegler. Prepare for extreme geek-craft… now.

Note: We had some minor audio trouble with this one, so don’t be alarmed if you hear a little crosstalk — we′ll make sure things are as magically pristine as usual next week. Also, iTunes should be back properly soon, so stay tuned.

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, and Nilay Patel
Guest: Chris Ziegler
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Dr. Teeth — The Interview Is Over

00:00:42 - Apple’s “spotlight turns to notebooks” event roundup
00:38:43 - T-Mobile G1 review
01:10:59 - Motorola Krave ZN4 officially launches on Verizon for $149.99
01:18:10 - Windows 7 to be officially named… Windows 7
01:21:18 - Engadget: now the Official Blog Partner of CES

Get the podcast

[RSS MP3] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically.
[RSS AAC] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in enhanced AAC) to your RSS aggregator.
[Zune]Subscribe to the Podcast directly in the Zune Marketplace

LISTEN (MP3)
LISTEN (AAC)

Contact the podcast: 1-888-ENGADGET or podcast (at) engadget (dot) com.

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Original post by Trent Wolbe

Vista, Server 2008 could get their SP2s before Windows 7 kicks them out of the house

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

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Maybe you’re running a six-year old pirated copy of XP because you still don’t trust Vista — “I’m waiting on one more Service Pack, just to be extra sure,” you say. If that’s the case, you might have to come up with a new excuse soon: Mary Jo Foley over at ZDNet is reporting that a beta build of Vista Service Pack 2 is already in the hands of some software and hardware partners, and that Microsoft intends to deliver both Vista SP2 and Server 2008 SP2 before it launches Windows 7 — err, 6.1, no wait, yeah let’s go with 7 — which it supposedly hopes to release June 3rd of next year. At present we know very little about SP2’s features, but we’re sure you have a few ideas.

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Original post by Samuel Axon

How does MS number thy Windows? Let Mike Nash count the ways.

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

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How does MS number thy Windows? Let Mike Nash count the ways.While we were hoping for a bit of naming intrigue for the new flavor of Windows, Microsoft has chosen to simply call it Windows 7. Fair enough, we said, but some netizens are perplexed about where that number came from and, after reading Mike Nash’s explanation on the Vista blog, we are too. His numbering scheme goes like this: there were three versions of the original Windows, with NT dubbed 3.1. Then came 95 as version 4, with 98, 98SE, and ME all considered minor updates. 2000 got the next major update to 5, while XP is 5.1, Vista is 6, and this new one is labeled 7. The confusing bit is that it’s actually numbered 6.1 internally, a minor version change for the sake of application compatibility. It’s still a little early, since the official coming out party isn’t until later this month at PDC, but if NT wasn’t considered a full step above Windows 3, we’re not entirely sure why this should be over Vista. We’re also not sure why we care.

[Thanks, Andrews S.]

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Original post by Tim Stevens

ASUS readying touchscreen Eee PC and laptops for 2009 Windows 7 launch?

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

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With HP’s touchscreen laptop looming on the horizon, out come the leaks of an ASUS touchscreen lappie scheduled for launch in the first half of 2009. Touchscreen Eee PCs too (finally, right?) if DigiTimes‘ sources at panel makers are correct (which they tend to be with regard to ASUS). According to the Taiwanese industry rag, ASUS will likely use either a 12.1-inch or 11.6-inch touchscreen panel developed by AU Optronics (AUO) or Chi Mei Optoelectronics (CMO). What’s odd here is the claim by sources that the touch-panel notebooks “are expected to take advantage of Windows 7” and presumably the new Microsoft OS’s multi-touch capabilities. Strange, since Windows 7 isn’t officially expected until sometime in early 2010 — a date looking more and more like a publicly padded goal to avoid the bashing Microsoft received for its Vista delays. The whispers certainly add a bit more credence to rumors of a 2009 release as expressed by Bill Gates himself, or more specifically June 3rd, 2009 as allegedly marked in the internal Microsoft calendar.

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Original post by Thomas Ricker

Windows 7 to be officially named… Windows 7

Monday, October 13th, 2008

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Microsoft is expected to be handing out pre-betas of Windows 7 to devs at WinHEC and PDC soon, and it looks like it’s settled on an official name for its next-gen OS — ahem, Windows 7. Yep, the code name is the real name, which is a first for Windows. According to Mike Nash on the Vista blog, the company went with Windows 7 because it “just makes sense″ as the seventh release of Windows, and MS doesn’t want to come up with a new “aspirational″ name like Vista — it “doesn’t do justice″ to the goal of staying “firmly rooted” in the ideas of Vista. Which probably explains why it looks so much the same. Sure, call it whatever you like, just get it out the door on time, okay?

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Clouds on Vista’s horizon to be dubbed Strata?

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

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Windows Cloud becoming Windows Strata?

When Ballmer dropped a few sprinkles of information about Vista’s successor, he dubbed it “Windows Cloud,” but said the real moniker would be unveiled at the Professional Developers Conference later this month in LA. That show’s agenda was recently posted, and interestingly contained a number of sessions under the header “Windows Strata,” leading many to believe that it’s the true name of Redmond’s next offering. That the section was quickly changed to “Windows 7″ makes things all the more suspicious, but don′t go cyber-squatting WindowsStrata.com just yet (oops, too late). Strata — a term that can apply to the layers of the atmosphere — might be more of a general classification for numerous cloud computing-related offerings destined for all manner of devices. But if so, why rename the sessions, and why the secrecy? And, most importantly, why are we so intrigued?

[Via CNET]

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Original post by Tim Stevens

Schwinn debuts Toshiba-powered Tailwind electric bike

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

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Schwinn has been pretty big on electric bicycles for some time now, but it seems to be particularly excited about its new Tailwind bike, which it says “sets a new standard for the electric bike industry.” That boasting is apparently due in large part to the bike’s use of Toshiba’s newfangled Super Charge ion Battery (or SCiB), which has a promised 30-minute recharge time, or about an eigth of that of competing bikes. The rest of the bike’s specs also look to be up to Schwinn’s usual high standards, and include a Shimano Nexus 8-speed internal geared rear hub, a brushless motor with 180 watts of continuous power or 250 watts at peak power, a rear roller brake system, double wall alloy rims, and Continental Town Ride tires, to name but a few premium features. Just don’t expect any of that to come cheap, as the bike is set to retail for $3,199 when it hits shops early next year.

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Original post by Donald Melanson

PIKA WARP Appliance adopted by Schmooze

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Today, as I’m blogging from the ITEXPO press room I learned that the PIKA WARP Appliance has been adopted by Schmooze (aka the Yiddish Asterisk ). If you recall, I reviewed the PIKA WARP Appliance last week. The WARP Appliance can run Asterisk, FreeSWITCH, and now Schmooze.
Thumbnail image for pika-warp-appliance-1.jpg

Schmooze Communications will be using PIKA WARP the Appliance as the hardware component in a new line of its PBXact business telephone systems.

Schmooze president Tony Lewis and his development team are major contributors to FreePBX, one of the top graphical user interface (GUI) applications in use today that provides pre-programmed functionality for users wanting to ease the configuration of the Asterisk open-source platform. While there are a number of GUIs on the market, FreePBX has emerged as one of the industry standards that, when combined with PIKA WARP the Appliance, provides developers with a superior solution for cost-effective, scaleable and customizable business phone systems. Schmooze Communications sees compatibility between the WARP appliance and FreePBX to be a boon to both the open-source development community as a whole and to Schmooze specifically. To this end, Schmooze collaborated with PIKA Technologies and the FreePBX project to integrate the necessary software components on the WARP platform in order to support FreePBX

“When we surveyed the market for an embedded hardware product for our PBXact system, PIKA’s WARP appliance was clearly the market leader,” said Lewis. “When it comes to embedded appliances, WARP has the best feature set and the most flexibility at the best price. WARP allows us to easily roll out a stable, price-competitive phone system to our small-to-medium business market segment. While this market segment continues to be dominated by less functional key systems, we believe the WARP appliance with its new software enhancements will provide us with the ability to compete in this market and provide customers with much more functionality and future resilience for the price.”

Schmooze’s plan to integrate the PIKA Warp platform into its product line comes on the heels of recent unique additions to Schmooze’s other product lines, such as the Schmooze Magic Button, a speech recognition platform. With the Magic Button, your voice can now control any function on a phone normally performed by a complicated combination of key presses and star codes. From making, routing and forwarding calls, to conferencing in a co-worker or being notified by an automated attendant when a co-worker returns to the office, the Magic Button allows users to control their entire communications experience with their voice. Schmooze is also a market leader in the integration of communications enhancing phone handset applications, such as visual voicemail, Microsoft Exchange integration, and user presence.

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Original post by nafiz

PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk Review

Friday, September 12th, 2008

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There is no doubt that open source Asterisk has taken IP telephony by storm resulting in many vendors offering solutions based on Asterisk. Because the “free” Asterisk software is open source, it has helped drive down the cost of installing an IP-PBX. Only one major cost factor remains - the hardware. If you install Asterisk on a traditional PC, you have several hardware components - the motherboard, the CPU, the memory, the hard drive, the power supply, CD/DVD drive, etc. Some of these hardware components aren′t necessarily required to operate a fully-functional IP-PBX or could be replaced with inexpensive alternatives. For instance, instead of a hard drive, why not use Flash memory? It’s cheaper, more reliable, is more easily upgraded, and can be easily swapped after a failure. It also uses less electricity than a hard drive resulting in a “greener” Asterisk solution. When you consider how tight profit margins are when offering an IP-PBX to the SMB market, shaving off a few dollars in hardware costs can be a huge pricing competitive edge. For these reasons, PIKA Technologies offers an embedded Asterisk appliance called the WARP Appliance targeting the SMB market with a cost-effective telephony development platform. PIKA pointed out that WARP is not exclusively tied to Asterisk explaining, “Our customers have developed call logging system, IVRs, predictive dialers and 50% of them use Asterisk, 50% don’t.”

The PIKA WARP Appliance isn’t a turn-key Asterisk IP-PBX, but instead is a development platform that enables resellers and VARs configure Asterisk 1.4.x to their liking, and then offer a customized version of Asterisk through their distribution channel. In fact, PIKA sells what they call the “PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk Developers Kit”, which includes a PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk, one 4 port FXO (trunk) module, one 4 port FXS (station) module, one SD Memory Card (1Gb), one Serial Cable (programming), a network cable, and Getting Started Guide. The PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk Developers Kit is discounted to $550 (limit 1 per company) to encourage developers. The normal non-discounted list price is $725. The main concept behind the WARP Appliance is to offer resellers and VARs an inexpensive Asterisk hardware platform that they can OEM and offer under their own brand name. I should also mention that the WARP Appliance now also works with FreeSWITCH, so developers can also choose to embed FreeSWITCH instead of Asterisk. In fact, any telephony application such as IVRs, call logging, predictive dialer etc. built using PIKA’s telephony APIs can be integrated onto the appliance, whether it is a proprietary application or based on an open source platform.

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Back Panel and the cover taken off to show the inner guts of the WARP Appliance

Importantly, the Kit comes with 4 analog phone ports and 4 analog trunk lines, or essentially a 4×4 “development” phone system, which is perfect for many SOHO and SMBs. In fact, considering many IP Phones are >$200 and analog phones can be had for $20, one should not underestimate how many small businesses would like to dip their feet into VoIP but aren’t ready to commit to expensive IP phones. The PIKA WARP Appliance allows them to get a fully-featured Asterisk IP-PBX while offering up to 4 analog phone stations and 4 analog trunk lines. In fact, resellers can even offer 8 analog stations by swapping out one FXO card and instead including two FXS cards - all modules can be mixed and matched in any combination, including BRI in future For inbound and outbound calling the reseller can offer 100% SIP for the trunking side, which has the added benefit of lower per minute charges compared to traditional PSTN dialing. The configuration of the appliance is modular and can include up to 9 ports of a combination of FXO/FXS/BRI plus VoIP stations and trunks.
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Top View looking inside the WARP Appliance

While there are many DIYers (Do It Yourself) out there that have built their own home-brewed embedded Linux Asterisk appliances, PIKA has spent considerable resources on choosing reliable embedded hardware and performing quality assurance (QA) testing. When building your own appliance, DIYers have to be concerned with EOL (end of life) on components such as motherboard, memory etc and have to deal with software installation issues and integration with the hardware (ie. drivers)

WARP comes pre-loaded with the 2.6x Linux Kernel (stripped down PIKA version) and includes SSH (Dropbear), Asterisk and Asterisk GUI (1.4.x), database (SQlite3), Httpd (webserver), PHP5, NTP, DHCP, TFTP server & client, as well as VLAN and DNS. As previously mentioned, you have the ability to add any software package that your application requires.

pika-appliance-pick-packages.jpg

I got to test drive the PIKA WARP Appliance in the lab and was pretty impressed how easy it was to load firmware, add packages, and build a fully-functional copy of Asterisk. The unit includes a RAM disk, full root access, 256MB of RAM, and 256MB of Flash for loading the Linux kernel. Additionally, you can add an SD memory card for additional memory storage, useful for storing voicemail. The processor is powered by a AMCC Power PC 440EP, which operated at 533MHz. The outside of the unit features a 2 x 20 backlit LCD display, with API-controlled front-panel scroll button. You can even control the LED with simple shell commands.

Make the LED red:
echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/warp-red/brightness
echo 0 &gt /sys/class/leds/warp-green/brightness

Make the LED green:
~ #> echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/warp-red/brightness
~ #> echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/warp-green/brightness

Make the LED orange:
~ #> echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/warp-red/brightness
~ #> echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/warp-green/brightness

To turn the LED off you just echo 0 to both.

I learned this tip on David Clarke’s blog/community. David is the Business Development Manager at PIKA Technologies and he started the blog of a place where developers can find 3rd party add-ons such as various Asterisk GUIs and WARP tips. It is relatively new but content is growing daily. You can check it out here: www.pikawarp.org

The back of the unit includes Music-on-hold audio in, paging system audio out, an SD slot, a single Ethernet port and one USB port. I’m told PIKA is working on a dual-Ethernet port WARP Appliance in the near future. This would allow the appliance to add NAT firewall capabilities. Importantly, the unit includes a power failure switchover emergency PSTN port. In the event of a power failure, you can still make an outbound call, i.e. 911.

The appliance can run software from flash memory or via a network file system (NFS) located on your development computer. According to PIKA, “Initially, you will use NFS to execute the software( kernel and ramdisk). NFS will be the primary method for running software on the appliance during development. It is faster to boot using NFS, updates to files can be done without taking the time to write new images into flash and, depending on the file type being modified, without rebooting.” There are 3 methods available to load software onto the Appliance.
a) svn checkout of PADS
b) tarball of PADS
c) pre-built images file for the appliance

Building the software is very straightforward using PADS (Pika Application Development Suite) to compile the various packages and then transferring it to the WARP Appliance. You can also compile directly on the WARP Appliance itself using gcc. (See: http://pikawarp.org/?p=53) If using PADS, your development computer requires the following Linux packages in order to use PADS:
• A serial client (e.g. minicom on Linux or HyperTerminal on Windows)
• TFTP (Trival File Transfer Protocol) Server
• NFS (Network File System) Server
• WGET
• Subversion (SVN)
• AUTOCONF
• AUTOMAKE
• LIBTOOL
• NCURSES
• SSH client
• GCC 4.x or greater

On your development Linux PC you go to the location of your unpacked source or SVN checkout of PADS and simply type:

#make menuconfig

This command displays the package selection menu. This will include default menu selections, but you can easily add/remove packages from the Appliance. Next you select ‘Exit, choose ‘Yes’ when asked if you want to save your configuration and then enter the command:

#make

This will build the software with the packages you chose. When the build is complete, you will have an NFS mount point at <Your PADS path>/build_warp/root.

The software image for the kernel (cuImage.warp) is created during the previous step. To create software images for the ramdisk and the persistent file system, you simply enter the command:

#make image

The following compressed images will be located in <Your PADS path&gt;/images:
• cuImage.warp (kernel)
• uRamdisk (ramdisk)
• image.jffs2 (persistent filesystem)

The next step is loading the images into the appliance. There’s a few ways of doing it, including entering a special bootloader mode called U-Boot and using a serial cable and software like HyperTerminal. But a much easier method is doing it across the network using TFTP or SCP to transfer and load the software onto the appliance. To actually write software to flash you use warploader. warploader is a PIKA’s tool that allows you to write software into flash memory while the appliance is running. The tool provides a single step to replace software eliminating the need to enter the special U-Boot prompt and a serial connection to load new software.

After transferring the image to the appliance, you just type this command to load the software into Flash:
#warploader -p <partition name> filename

For instance:

#warploader -p kernel /root/cuImage.warp (kernel)
#warploader -p root /root/uRamdisk (RAM Disk)

Flash memory has a limited number of write-erase cycles. A utility is provided to track the writes to the NAND flash and can be used to monitor excessive or rapidly increasing amounts of data written to flash which may indicate a problem with an application.

To view the amount of data written, enter the following at the Linux prompt on the appliance:

cat /proc/driver/ndfc
or on my version:
cat /proc/driver/pikasd

Unfortunately, the number of writes is reset to zero after a reboot, but still a useful utility.

Two additional partitions called persisent1 and persistent2 are provided in flash memory for user-defined purposes. This space can be used for additional persistent data or for files that will not fit into the ramdisk image. I should point out that when the system is booted, the ramdisk is read from flash or NFS into memory and therefore, the size of the ramdisk is an important consideration for system performance. The maximum size of the ramdisk, using the current settings is 64 Megabytes, out of the total 256M of RAM. PIKA claims that this size is sufficient for a load that includes all of the packages currently made available by PIKA in PADS, with the exception of GDB (GNU Project Debugger).

I hooked up some analog trunk lines using a Teltone analog simulator as well as a few analog phones. I also registered a Polycom IP650 and an Aastra 57i IP phone. I was able to make extension-to-extension calls, outbound calls through the Teltone simulator, and inbound calls to the auto-attendant. In my testing of the PIKA WARP Appliance, it handles fax just fine. It doesn’t currently support T.38 real-time fax over IP because T.38 is very processor intensive, but PIKA told me T.38 support is in the works. PIKA includes some special built-in extensions to speed development and testing. For instance, I was able to dial 500 and make an IAX VoIP call to Digium’s corporate auto-attendant (misery.digium.com) with no firewall configuration. I′m always impressed how IAX is able to traverse NAT firewalls without messing with the firewall.

Here’s a list of the built-in testing extensions:

Extension Purpose/Destination
2222 - Connects to the audio in port to listen to the audio sent from an external device such as an MP3 player.
2233 - Connects the handset microphone to the audio out port on the appliance, used for paging.
2244 - Begins playing pre-recorded prompts to the audio out port on the appliance. After dialing, if you hang up, the prompts will continue to play.
2255 - Stops the pre-recorded prompts started by dialing extension 2244.
4001 to 4005 - These extensions call FXS lines 1 to 5, respectively. If the FXS module is not present, the call will be routed to voice mail.
4006 to 4010 - These extensions call the sample SIP Agents defined in sip.conf. If the SIP agent associated with the extension is not registered, the call will be routed to voice mail.
4060 - PIKA FAX receive test. Connect a FAX machine to one of the FXS ports, dial this extension and the
appliance will receive the FAX. A tiff file will be stored in /tmp/warpfax.
4061 - PIKA FAX transmit test. Connect a FAX machine to one of the FXS ports, dial this extension and the appliance will send a test FAX (the PIKA logo) to your FAX machine.
9<number> - Calls out on an available FXO extension. If no FXO extensions are available, congestion will be received.
500 - IAX test call to Digium’s auto-attendant.

Features/Specs:

  • Operating system — Denx ELDK, with a 2.6.19.2 Linux kernel
  • AMCC Power PC 440EP Embedded 533 MHz Processor 1200 mips
  • Supports floating point and MMU (memory management unit)
  • Internal flash 256 MB NAND(OS + apps) plus 4 MB NOR memory (uboot)
  • 256MB RAM
  • External removable 1 GB SD flash memory (no hard drive improves reliability) for additional voice mail prompts / storage
  • back -up of configuration files and custom settings (facilitates unit replacement)
  • Reset function remotely controlled
  • Maximum IP ports 75
  • Maximum FXS ports 9
  • Built-in FXS ports 1
  • Maximum FXO ports 8
  • Maximum BRI ports 4 / channels 8 (future)
  • Simultaneous calls 32
  • Dynamic thermal management (fan)
  • Power failure transfer
  • Music on Hold input
  • Paging system output
  • Echo cancellation

Connectivity

  • WAN/LAN ports 1
  • RS-232 interface
  • USB ports 1

Display

  • Size 2⻴ character
  • Backlight
  • ScrollButton
  • API

Physical

  • Brandable
  • Desk mountable
  • Wall mountable
  • 9.25″ W x 6.65″ D x 2.18″H


Ratings Score
Installation
Documentation
Features
Usability
Performance
Overall

Conclusion
Comparisons will no doubt be made with Digium’s Asterisk Appliance 50 (AA50), so I thought it might be useful to offer my own comparative analysis. I haven’t tested the Digium Asterisk Appliance, so I can’t compare the development environments between the two. Though, I am under the impression that Digium not longer supports an open development environment. Looking strictly at feature-specs, I see that the PIKA WARP Appliance does have some key advantages, including built-in Music-on-Hold, paging, LCD display, 5 more FXS ports, and higher scalability (75 vs. 50). The Digium Asterisk Appliance does however have 4 LAN ports to the WARP’s single WAN/LAN port and the Digium Asterisk Appliance has an additional WAN port which currently the PIKA WARP Appliance does not have. The PIKA WARP Appliance offers 256MB of RAM to Digium’s 64MB of RAM and WARP offers 256MB of Flash memory to Digium’s 8MB of Flash.

Feature-specs aside, perhaps the WARP’s greatest advantage is that is flexible and customizable while the Aᦖ supports Asterisk only. I asked PIKA why the Aᦖ isn’t conducive to 3rd party applications and development and PIKA told me, “With such a small amount of memory and a more complex development environment, allowing 3rd party apps is not realistic to the typical Asterisk developer and Digium likely found it too difficult to support. PIKA has made the development process easy with PADS so it is a more viable option for Asterisk developers.”

The PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk is a compelling platform for developers, resellers, and VARs looking for a low cost, reliable, feature-rich Asterisk appliance to offer to the SMB market. The complete customizability and its ability to support analog trunks, analog phones, as well as IP phones and IP trunks makes it a great solution for small businesses that don′t have voice ͉/PRI lines. Further, unlike Asterisk on a traditional PC, the WARP Appliance comes pre-installed with Music on Hold (MOH) and Paging built-in, as well as power failure transfer (PFT). Another key advantage is that it is modular allowing you’re the choice of up to 9 ports of a combination of FXO/FXS/BRI ports. Further, the WARP Appliance can handle up to 75 IP phones and 32 simultaneous calls, which is quite impressive for this very small and surprisingly light device. I should point out that many new small businesses are started each day and these “green fields” are looking for a cost-effective and feature-rich phone system. The PIKA Warp Appliance fits the small business market segment quite nicely both from a price and feature perspective.

Further, medium-sized businesses that have outgrown their current key system or PBX could be enticed to switch to the PIKA WARP Appliance even if their current phone system lease isn’t up yet. The reason is super low-cost of the WARP Appliance. Of course, resellers, VARs, and developers will no doubt package together their own applications and offer a profit premium over the $725 list price. Still, I’d expect the PIKA Appliance to allow developers to offer a full-fledged Asterisk IP-PBX with strong analog support for around $1000, which is a very competitive price. All-in-all, I really liked the PIKA WARP Appliance and I think developers will too.

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