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The Motorola used Mobilinux in their MotoMagx OS, for example Motorola ROKR. [6] Hardware support. It had support for the Freescale's i.MX31 chipset. [7] See also
Debian 4.0 (Etch), released 8 April 2007, contained around 18,000 packages maintained by more than 1,030 developers. Debian was ported to x86-64 (amd64) and support for the Motorola 68000 series (m68k) architecture was dropped. [140] [30] This version introduced utf-8 and udev device management by default. Point releases:
DG/UX is a discontinued Unix operating system developed by Data General for its Eclipse MV minicomputer line, and later the AViiON workstation and server line (both Motorola 88000 and Intel IA-32-based variants).
The Motorola A780 is the second cellular PDA running the Linux operating system. It was introduced in 2003 and sold in Europe and Asia. [ 1 ] Some models include GPS and navigation software.
Motorola became the first company to use Linux on a mobile phone when it released the Motorola A760 to the Chinese market on February 16, 2003. Motorola chose to use MontaVista Linux in the Motorola A760 and future Linux-based phones, despite the fact that Motorola was a founding member of the competing Symbian OS. [ 23 ]
Debian 4.0 was released in April 2007, featuring the x86-64 port and a graphical installer. [22] Debian 5.0 was released in February 2009, supporting Marvell's Orion platform and netbooks such as the Asus Eee PC. [63] The release was dedicated to Thiemo Seufer, a developer who died in a car crash. [64] Debian 6 (Squeeze), 2011
Linux can be dual-booted on Macs that use Motorola 680x0 processors [5] (only 68020 and higher, [5] and only non-"EC" processor variants since an MMU is required [6]).The Linux/mac68k community project provides resources to do so, [7] [8] and an m68k community port of the Debian Linux distribution is also available.
In 1983, OS-9/6809 was ported to Motorola 68000 assembly language and extended (called OS-9/68K); and a still later (1989) version was rewritten mostly in C for further portability. The portable version was initially called OS-9000 and was released for 80386 PC systems around 1989, then ported to PowerPC around 1995.