i flashed a meraki sparky with the script from github, and it said it
worked..
but when i try to log into the device either through serial or telnet over
ethernet, it doesn't work. Maybe i have the IP address wrong, but for the
serial port, i am not getting a full bootup... any ideas?
+Ethernet eth0: MAC address 00:18:0a:50:65:3e
IP: 192.168.84.1/255.255.255.0, Gateway: 0.0.0.0
Default server: 192.168.84.9
RedBoot(tm) bootstrap and debug environment [ROMRAM]
Non-certified release, version v1.3.0 - built 10:45:15, Aug 27 2007
Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Red Hat, Inc.
Board: ap61
RAM: 0x80000000-0x82000000, [0x8003ddd0-0x80fe1000] available
FLASH: 0xa8000000 - 0xa87e0000, 128 blocks of 0x00010000 bytes each.
== Executing boot script in 2.000 seconds - enter ^C to abort
RedBoot> fis load -d linux
Image loaded from 0x80041000-0x802fe65c
RedBoot> exec
Now booting linux kernel:
Base address 0x80030000 Entry 0x80041000
Cmdline :
[ 0.000000] Linux version 3.3.8 (blogic@Debian-60-squeeze-64-minimal) (gcc version 4.6.3 20120201 (prerelease) (Linaro GCC 4.6-2012.02) ) #1 Sat Mar 23 17:43:48 UTC 2013
[ 0.000000] gpiochip_add: registered GPIOs 0 to 21 on device: ar2315-gpio
[ 0.000000] ar2315-gpio: registered 22 GPIOs
[ 0.000000] bootconsole [early0] enabled
[ 0.000000] CPU revision is: 00019064 (MIPS 4KEc)
[ 0.000000] Determined physical RAM map:
[ 0.000000] memory: 02000000 @ 00000000 (usable)
[ 0.000000] Initrd not found or empty - disabling initrd
[ 0.000000] Zone PFN ranges:
[ 0.000000] Normal 0x00000000 -> 0x00002000
[ 0.000000] Movable zone start PFN for each node
[ 0.000000] Early memory PFN ranges
[ 0.000000] 0: 0x00000000 -> 0x00002000
[ 0.000000] Built 1 zonelists in Zone order, mobility grouping on. Total pages: 8128
[ 0.000000] Kernel command line: console=ttyS0,9600 rootfstype=squashfs,jffs2
[ 0.000000] PID hash table entries: 128 (order: -3, 512 bytes)
[ 0.000000] Dentry cache hash table entries: 4096 (order: 2, 16384 bytes)
[ 0.000000] Inode-cache hash table entries: 2048 (order: 1, 8192 bytes)
[ 0.000000] Primary instruction cache 16kB, VIPT, 4-way, linesize 16 bytes.
[ 0.0085k kernel code, 3604k reserved, 353k data, 168k init, 0k highmem)
[ 0.000000] NR_IRQS:128
A reminder was also brought up at the sudo meeting:
if you see people who look like they're just about to leave a whole bunch
of stuff here ("donation") you can (and please do!) let them know that
donations should go through donations(a)omnicommons.org (or a collective?) to
make sure that they're not costing us money and time and love and oil and
tears.
Only you can prevent Omni kruft.
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 4:06 PM, Jenny Ryan <tunabananas(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I brought the clothes that had been stashed in the bunker room to Out of
> the Closet yesterday, and they were great, took it all.
>
> I'd like to make my hands and vehicle available for future
> kruft/donation removals, dump runs etc. Ping me as necessary.
>
> Also, join this list to be on the donations vetting team:
> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/donations
>
> There are only 4 people on there right now, people who already do a ton
> of work for the omni.
>
> <3
> Jenny
> http://jennyryan.net
> http://sudomesh.org
> http://thevirtualcampfire.org
> http://technomadic.tumblr.com
>
> `~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
> "Technology is the campfire around which we tell our stories."
> -Laurie Anderson
>
> "Storytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining it."
> -Hannah Arendt
>
> "To define is to kill. To suggest is to create."
> -Stéphane Mallarmé
> ~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> discuss mailing list
> discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>
>
Yea, that's one reason why owncloud would be good.
Or simply a docs partition on the digital media library.
Marc and I have recently discussed setting one up (ebooks, video, software,
etc) - it seems logical to have *all* of Omni's digital files in one place.
~ Korl
500px.com/eske
510.689.4484
On Jan 15, 2015 12:42 PM, <hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
> would be good to have a directory on a server in the building that we
> can just upload docs to and browse via ftp - should be easy to set up but
> wouldn't have that many features. the only real feature i think would be
> important is really a non-feature - not being able to modify docs that are
> uploaded already, without some sort of admin login.
>
> marc and other meshninoms - is there a server running that has extra space
> for this?
>
> On 2015-01-15 12:25, Eske Silver wrote:
>
> I'm the best temp in Chiswick ;)
>
> ~ Korl
>
> 500px.com/eske
> 510.689.4484
> On Jan 15, 2015 12:24 PM, "Amgo Go" <littlebitagive(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> hallelujah thank you korl!
>
> On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 11:40 AM, Eske Silver <eske.silver(a)gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Ahah! That must be incredibly frustrating, with all the info everyones
>> brain rams through each week.
>>
>> I'll get on this today, if no one else has time ;)
>> Do you want to pm me with links to all the clouds, and info on
>> permissioning, so I know what I'm looking for? (I.e. size, file types,
>> security options, sharing, etc).
>>
>> File organizing is my jam!
>>
>> ~ Korl
>>
>> 500px.com/eske
>> 510.689.4484
>> On Jan 15, 2015 11:30 AM, "niki" <niki.shelley(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> We have not! :)
>>>
>>> On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 11:27 AM, Eske Silver <eske.silver(a)gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Dunno if you guys are still working on this, but I just found it
>>>> burried in my inbox, and have been researching clouds all week. There a
>>>> number of cloud services specifically for docs, which also have security
>>>> and ease-of-use in mind.
>>>> Let me know if you found a solution to this already, or not!
>>>>
>>>> ~ Korl
>>>>
>>>> 500px.com/eske
>>>> 510.689.4484
>>>> On Dec 26, 2014 2:09 PM, "Amgo Go" <littlebitagive(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hallelujah thanks niki for starting this!
>>>>> Yep let's sit down in Jan and get organzized!
>>>>>
>>>>> On Fri, Dec 26, 2014 at 1:03 PM, Jenny Ryan <tunabananas(a)gmail.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I was just looking into setting up OwnCloud for this very purpose!
>>>>>> I'm off to mushroom - hunt in the forest today but I'd like to follow up on
>>>>>> this thread tomorrow <3
>>>>>> On Dec 26, 2014 1:06 AM, "niki" <niki.shelley(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hey all!
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I started going through the myriad drive folders that various
>>>>>>> documents are stored in to see if I could do some organizing.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I am wondering if we can designate a central location for everything
>>>>>>> that is shareable.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Certainly, there are some things that are more sensitive than others
>>>>>>> but it would be helpful to be able to point people to one place rather than
>>>>>>> to search through emails to find stuff. Perhaps we can designate different
>>>>>>> permissions for certain info (ie: financial stuffs)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> It's starting to get difficult for me to find the most recent
>>>>>>> versions of things and I am sometimes not sure if I'm using the same docs
>>>>>>> as everyone else (For instance, is everyone using the same sheet when
>>>>>>> recording / tracking rentals? I have several versions!)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I don't care who the owner of this folder is or where it lives,
>>>>>>> personally. I just think that having everyone create and store shared docs
>>>>>>> on their own personal drives rather than in some central location creates
>>>>>>> serious confusion.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> (I know that we used to have a central drive folder back in the day
>>>>>>> and at some point, a bunch of folders were moved / deleted and this caused
>>>>>>> some concern - maybe we keep an alias somewhere that gets backed up semi
>>>>>>> regularly?)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Do people have thoughts on this? Preferences for how / where things
>>>>>>> should be stored?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I am more than willing to take on the task of organizing everything,
>>>>>>> I just want us all to be on the same page re: where that should be.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> xo
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> N
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> discuss mailing list
>>>>>>> discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
>>>>>>> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> discuss mailing list
>>>>>> discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
>>>>>> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> •amgo•
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> discuss mailing list
>>>>> discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
>>>>> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> discuss mailing list
>>>> discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
>>>> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>>>>
>>>>
>
>
> --
> •amgo•
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> discuss mailing listdiscuss@lists.omnicommons.orghttps://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
>
>
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 4:49 PM, joseph liesner <blue393(a)lmi.net> wrote:
> What is most problematic for me is that there is so little
> daylight here. Elliot's name is used but all the references to
> repeated violence are a mystery to me. Will the Mediator
> and Steward process make important information available?
Yeah, I was too ambiguous. Everything they write will be public and
brought to a meeting, but things shouldn't be "hashed out", meaning
the long fact-finding conversations don't happen at meetings. The
point is to still be accountable but not waste everyone's time.
Full policy is here:
https://sudoroom.org/wiki/Articles_of_Association#Section_3.2_Conflict_Reso…
> I fully support Sudo and all members right to be safe in our space
> yet without more daylight in this matter than I have experienced in
> others at the Omni it feels like a comrade will just disappear.
If we can't prioritize safe space, most comrades will just never
appear in the first place.
Are you a health worker with tons of great knowledge to share? Are you in
need of connecting with good resources?
Folks from the Berkeley Free Clinic Information Resource Collective are
going to start using Oakland Wiki to publish a people's health guide. Want
to add something, or need to figure something out? Come work with us at
Sudo Room at 7pm!
Cya,
Vicky
Filling in on this panel by last-minute request. Promoting the Omni Commons
fund-raising campaign and seeking connections to others who can contribute.
The Grange represents a very intriguing parallel organizing history to our
initiative with Omni Commons, I would enjoy engaging others in comparisons,
etc. What does the struggle over the commons look like in rural vs urban
contexts?
// Matt
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Severine von Tscharner Fleming <smithereen(a)me.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 2:48 PM
Subject: Pleas send out over your networks TODAY? ???!!
To: Matthew Senate <mattsenate(a)gmail.com>
*Tonight from 7-9 PM Grange Future will be inhabiting the community space
that is Shaping SF <http://www.shapingsf.org/>. We will have presentations
by Matt Senate, Brewster Kahle and Severine Fleming along with our
traveling Grange Future pop-up exhibit on display. The event is free and
open to the public. *
Mutual aid societies proliferated during the gilded age, as workers,
miners, loggers, and farmers joined together in fraternal orders. The
Grange, or patrons of husbandry" was such an order, founded in 1867 by
forward thinking farmer Oliver Kelley, assisted by his niece Caroline
Hall. Grange
Future <http://www.grangefuture.org/> is a celebratory tour organized by
Greenhorns <http://www.thegreenhorns.net/>, a young farmers cultural
organization. This will be our 9th stop on the tour-- investigating the
revival and preservation of the grange as a commons. It's an
inter-generational event to help interpret the radical history, and
potential of the grange for both greenhorns and the grey-hairs who've
loyally tended this community-owned institution, its lovely halls and
ritual practices.
As victorian as it is Occupy, the grange holds a powerful critique of
monopoly capitalism. The grange was the first order to give equal votes to
women, and operated as a social hall, economic reform organ, and
legislative training facility for the populist movement. Grangers believed
mightily in yeoman agriculture, in direct democracy, and in equal access to
information and science. Grangers successfully organized thousands of
co-operatives across the country as well as the 8 "Granger laws" regulating
railroad monopolies, and lobbied successfully for Rural Free Mail Delivery
-- the equivalent in its day to rural broadband or electrification.
Aren't today's cooperatives
<http://www.thegreenhorns.net/guidebooks/cooperativefarming/>, open source
licenses, hacker-spaces and mutual-aid associations an analog response to
Gilded-age type concentration of capital? Is the grange a venue for the sharing
economy
<http://communityenterpriselaw.org/forming-community-enterprise/nonprofit-or…>,
today's populists and common-wealth advocates working on a public-banking
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/13/post-office-banking-_n_4776767.html>
to
rescue a failing Post Office (threatened with privatization), the community
seed banks (threatened with USDA regulation), to host buying clubs,
co-packing facilities, affordable rural day-care and fix-it potlucks? As a
generation with 1.3 trillion dollars in student loans, don't we need a
club-house for community action, democracy schools, and doesn't it not
matter if we aren't all farmers?
This tour brings a multi-format exhibit showcasing the radical themes of
Grange history to more than a dozen Grange halls in the state of
California. It’s a chance to interact with next-generation grangers working
on inter-generational truce-making. It's a chance to learn how to operate
the microphones, the power breakers, the correct arrangement of pots. In
short, it's a place to meet the keepers of the Commons. Severine has
created a slide show presentation with contemporary echoes of Grange
Spirit. We continue to sniff out and study, and perform oral histories on
emergent cultural forms and trends. So far we’ve documented: Pancake
breakfasts, benevolent societies, community orchards, seed libraries, and
community canneries. Our exploration of past and present populism
continues. Listenhere
<http://thegreenhorns.us2.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=df3f36b607325b38808…>
for
the podcasts of the Grange Future Oral history project.
Matt Senate collaborates with many others on the Omni Commons, a
grass-roots initiative to forge a commons in the east bay within a 20,000
square foot former Italian social club (and former music venue). Using a
spokes-council model and horizontalist organizing practices, the Omni
Oakland Collective is constituted by member collectives and operates on a
consensus-based process, as well as with do-ocratic values. He is a
co-founder of the Sudo Room, an Omni Commons member collective, and home of
the Sudo Mesh project launching the People's Open Network, a
community-owned and -operated wireless mesh network.
Brewster Kahle <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster_Kahle> has been
working to provide Universal Access to All Knowledge for more than
twenty-five years. Since the mid-1980s, Kahle has focused on developing
technologies for information discovery and digital libraries. In 1989 Kahle
invented the Internet's first publishing system, WAIS (Wide Area
Information Server) system and in 1989, founded WAIS Inc., a pioneering
electronic publishing company that was sold to America Online in 1995. In
1996, Kahle founded the Internet Archive which may be the largest digital
library. At the same time, he co-founded Alexa Internet which helps catalog
the Web in April 1996, which was sold to Amazon.com <http://amazon.com/> in
1999. Kahle earned a B.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) in 1982. As a student, he studied artificial intelligence with W.
Daniel Hillis and Marvin Minsky. In 1983, Kahle helped start Thinking
Machines, a parallel supercomputer maker, serving there as a lead engineer
for six years. He serves on the boards of the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, Public Knowledge, the European Archive, the Television Archive,
and the Internet Archive.
Severine Fleming is a farmer, activist, and organizer based in the
Champlain Valley of New York. She is director of Greenhorns
<http://www.thegreenhorns.net/>, a grassroots organization with the mission
to recruit, promote and support the rising generation of new farmers in
America. Severine has spent the last seven years gathering, bundling and
broadcasting the voices and vision of young agrarians. Greenhorns runs a
weekly radio show on Heritage Radio Network
<http://www.heritageradionetwork.org/> and a popular blog. They produce
many kinds of media, from documentary films to almanacs, anthologies,
mix-tapes, posters, guidebooks and digital maps. They are best known the
documentary film, “The Greenhorns”
<http://www.thegreenhorns.net/category/media/documentary/> and the raucous
young farmer mixers they’ve thrown in 37 states and 14 grange halls.
Severine is co-founder and board secretary of Farm Hack
<http://farmhack.net/home/>, an online, open-source platform for
appropriate and affordable farm tools and technologies, as well asNational
Young Farmers Coalition <http://www.youngfarmers.org/> which now boasts 23
state and regional coalitions. She serves on the board of the Schumacher
Center for New Economics, which hosts Agrarian Trust,
<http://agrariantrust.org/> her latest startup, focused on land access for
beginning farmers, and permanent protection of affordable organic farmland.
Grange Future is a community history project undertaken by The Greenhorns
to investigate the the Patrons of Husbandry as a 125 year old populist
movement, and to showcase the Granges and Grange-like organizations
continuing to work, and organize in this spirit. We see the Granges as an
appropriate vessel for futurist, family-farm oriented community action,
with a strong basis in economic theory, resistance and cooperation. We hope
to embolden greenhorns in our network with an entry-point into the grange
movement, to unlock and revive the many grange halls currently hibernating:
to use the syllabus of past actions to inform contemporary ones, and to
reclaim the radical politics of the grange at the local and national
levels. With this project we’ve captured the history and current activities
in audio, visual, and written form, we’re gleaning the institutional wisdom
from decades of agrarian organizing, and connecting with the broad
community tackling similar themes throughout the nation. Community is the
pre-condition for action, if you too feel inspired by the grange, we hope
you will join in the convening, the kinship and the future-making.
Hi all,
I've started a wiki page to document crisis resources, namely homeless
shelters, hotlines, domestic violence programs and drug and alcohol rehab
programs: https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Crisis_Resources
This is the beginning of a research project that I'd love to have others
collaborate on. It involves:
* Documenting known resources on the wiki page,
* Cross-checking to ensure each resource still exists and has a good
reputation,
* Creating a paper-based handout we can give to folks in need (frontdesk =
helpdesk!),
* Circulating knowledge of available resources among our community so we
can tailor recommendations to individual needs.
Please help by contributing a few resources to the wiki and documenting the
address, URL and phone number of each addition:
https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Crisis_Resources
Many thanks,
Jenny
Help open a people-powered common space in Oakland, California!
https://omnicommons.org/donate
`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
"Technology is the campfire around which we tell our stories."
-Laurie Anderson
"Storytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining it."
-Hannah Arendt
"To define is to kill. To suggest is to create."
-Stéphane Mallarmé
~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
not sure if anyone forwarded this to sudodiscuss or not but figured
there might be some folks interested.
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [spaghettinight] Enviro justice nonprofit seeking website help
Date: 2015-01-12 14:00
From: Rachel Gottfried-Clancy <rgottfried00(a)gmail.com>
To: The Spaghetti Night mailing list <spaghettinight(a)tentacle.net>
Reply-To: The Spaghetti Night mailing list <spaghettinight(a)tentacle.net>
Hey All,
Environmental Justice Coalition for water is a pretty bad-ass coalition
of 70 grassroots water/racial justice organizations that does advocacy
and organizing.
They are still using a website from 2004. and want to create a new
(probably wordpress) site. They are looking to contract someone to build
it pretty immediately.
If you are interested please contact the ED Colin at colin@ejcw as soon
as possible.
Best,
Rachel
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This list is dolphin safe
Hi all,
The full spectrum laser cutter I brought to the hacker pace has been
out of service for some time, after Brendon's attempt to fix its loose
keyswitch ended in board-popping disaster. (Shit happens, **but
ermehgawd always remove power before fixing circuits guize**)
Anyway, I bought some new stepper motor drivers to replace the burnt
ones on the controller, but unfortunately there seems to be more
wrecked with it than just that simple fix. I'd love to get this thing
working for the community, though, that's a bit hard with no brains
for the machine.
A new board from full spectrum is $1500, but I contacted them with a
"we're a poor hackerspace" card and they'd be willing to replace it
for $250 if I mail in the old controller, which I feel is within
raise-able reach. This would give us full access to their software
suite / print driver, and a reliable machine.
The other option, suggested by rayc is to use an arduino, stepper
controllers and a g-code generating toolchain to run the machine.
While I don't see any reason why that couldn't work, I feel like that
might be a bit awkward for people who wish to use the cutter, and
further makes the guide I wrote kind of useless.
http://hack.rit.edu/tools/full-spectrum-laser-cutter/
As a community, what do y'all believe is best?
Cheers,
-Adam
---
Aperture Systems: Redefining Radiography - http://aperture.systems/http://adammunich.com/ - Cell: +1-650-452-0554
Be • knowledgeable • social • patient • fearless • compassionate •
fun • humble • forgiving.
Be a leader