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- Q7335312 subject Q3281041.
- Q7335312 abstract "The Rio Receiver was a home stereo device for playing MP3 files stored on your computer's hard drive over an Ethernet or HomePNA network. It was later rebranded and sold as the Dell Digital Audio Receiver.With a design derived from the existing Linux-based Empeg Car, it became popular among the Linux hacking community.The hardware consisted of a Cirrus Logic 7212 CPU (ARM720T at 74 MHz), 1Mx32 (4 MB) of EDO RAM, and either 512k×16 or 256k×16 (1 MB or 0.5 MB) of NOR flash used to boot. Audio output used a Burr-Brown PCM1716 DAC that drove line outputs, the headphone jack, and a Tripath class-D digital audio amplifier for speakers. Network connections were via either a Cirrus logic 8900A (10MBit Ethernet) or a Broadcom HomePNA 10 Mbit/s chipset; if no Ethernet link was seen at boot time, the unit tried HomePNA. The user interface was a 128x64 pixel monochrome LCD with an EL backlight, a rotary control with a push button, several buttons and IR remote control.The unit booted via a 2.2 linux kernel in flash which used DHCP and SSDP to discover an NFS server from which it loaded a new kernel. The second kernel then mounted a root filesystem over NFS containing a small set of standard POSIX tools and an application for selecting and playing music over the network, which was served using HTTP by the Audio Receiver Manager software running on a Windows PC. Although the music player and the Audio Receiver Manager and Broadcom HomePNA kernel driver module were proprietary software, the kernel and other tools were open source. The two-step kernel boot process allowed rapid development of changes to the kernel allowing units to run new kernels by simply power cycling them; the use of standard protocols meant a variety of replacement software components could be developed independently.".
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink slimrio.
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink yarrs.
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink jreceiver.sourceforge.net.
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink rioplay.
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink medianet.htm.
- Q7335312 wikiPageExternalLink rio.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q1089572.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q11166.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q1224965.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q14658.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q1476949.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q1625904.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q16980.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q174077.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q185091.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q189396.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q210863.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q215803.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q3281041.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q3332814.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q388.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q42591.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q5000308.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q5373847.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q574291.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q623494.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q79735.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q79984.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q83341.
- Q7335312 wikiPageWikiLink Q8777.
- Q7335312 comment "The Rio Receiver was a home stereo device for playing MP3 files stored on your computer's hard drive over an Ethernet or HomePNA network. It was later rebranded and sold as the Dell Digital Audio Receiver.With a design derived from the existing Linux-based Empeg Car, it became popular among the Linux hacking community.The hardware consisted of a Cirrus Logic 7212 CPU (ARM720T at 74 MHz), 1Mx32 (4 MB) of EDO RAM, and either 512k×16 or 256k×16 (1 MB or 0.5 MB) of NOR flash used to boot.".
- Q7335312 label "Rio Receiver".