Technology news and Jobs arrow Information Technology News arrow Hacking the TomTom ONE through Open Source
Hacking the TomTom ONE through Open Source E-mail
by David M Williams   
Monday, 16 July 2007
Gadget geeks worldwide are collaborating to make the ubiquitous TomTom GO portable satellite navigation system more useful. In contrast to other models of SatNav devices, particularly those bundled with PDAs, the GO is especially known for its simplicity: turn it on, set routes via touchscreen, and away you go (and go you do, quite literally!)

This protective layer is deliberately restrictive, which is good for consumers. After all, who wants to buy a device, with a dedicated purpose in mind, but have it crash or be cumbersome to use? Yet, for hardware hackers, eking out versatility is an extra sweet result due to the effort needed to circumvent the layer protecting its hardware.

Many may ask why would you want to do something like this anyway. For most the question is moot; simply being able to prove you can is sufficient motivation. Others put forth practical applications - for instance, outputting GPS locations via Bluetooth to a WiFi-enabled laptop, thus pinpointing precisely where open WiFi networks are located. And others imagined how nifty a tiny touchscreen media player could be, particularly with its built-in SD slot and loudspeaker.

The key to it all is Linux. The TomTom GO runs Linux, specifically a custom distro called TomTomLinux or TTL, with an ARM processor. So, logic dictates, if you can compile a program for Linux on the ARM then you can run it on the TomTom.



 
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