Hi guys!

When I saw this tiny little guy, I had to go in and get it. And so I received it today. My first experience is…the software is a bit rough at the moment. And now I’m having trouble with the keyboard detection. It’s no longer working, and I"m not sure what’s wrong. Basically, it worked initially, but after I unplugged it to dump some isos onto it*, the USB keyboard emulation seems to no longer work.

And since I’m one of the very first users…I think have no documentation (yay). I see there’s a Chinese forum where more people mention a USB keyboard issue, but I don’t think this is sorted.

Anyone else tried it? How’s your experiences so far? Any ideas how to fix the keyboard issues? Still, for all its initial wonkiness, I clearly see this as the future for a KVM device, instead of a full blown Raspberry Pi board, which I think is a bit overkill.

*: The ‘full’ version comes with an embedded 32GB microSD, of which 8GB is for the OS, but the remainder is a separate partition for ISOs…you connect it as a USB storage to a PC and drop your ISOs there. At the moment you don’t seem to be able to mount a random file from your PC via the browser UI. Only ISO files it already has in its own storage.

  • peregus@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    4 months ago

    Wow, nice! At that price it’s way better than the PiKVM! Keep me posted on the resolution of your problem. Have you written to the support?

    • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      Posted on their github. All they have is a Chinese forum. And the wiki is…rough at the moment. Chinese only (not a problem with a translation extension) and a lot of “Todo” sections there. Basically the UI right now has no configuration options, besides “checking for updates” which didn’t tell you which version you’re in anyway. While I was testing I saw the check for updates had a blue dot, so I guess it did manage to reach their servers, and after checking and installing an update…seems that menu had a slight improvement, and now it does say current running version. But that’s it.

      But there’s no denying the huge potential for this tiny device. It’s way cheaper and smaller, and consumes way less power. The physical limitations I can see is the NIC is only 10/100 (no gigabit connection), and no wifi. Everything else is software, which I reckon they’ll be working on.

      • peregus@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        4 months ago

        Chinese…I don’t know how, but they manage to always create the worst UI. Also, chinese…I will definitely block Internet access except sometimes just to check for updates. The 10/100 NIC is enough for KVM, not for transferring ISOs 🫤 By the way, keep me posted.

        • iturnedintoanewt@lemm.eeOP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          4 months ago

          Sometimes…and sometimes they have rather good UI. But usually it gets pretty messed up when translated. I’ve found the network speed to be pretty decent for image transfer, even at the inefficient MJPEG format they’re currently using right now. They said they’re working on better encoding. Today I found that the remote keyboard/mouse work on certain desktops, but sometimes stops on text mode or when on BIOS. And then you continue booting, and it works again. Not sure what’s going on with the hardware identifier they’re using…

          So…yeah, once they fix the keyboard/mouse issue, and add the function to remotely load ISOs (not only the ones on its own storage), it’s going to be golden. Since it has SSH, I think in theory you should be able to upload the ISOs remotely using SFTP or similar, but I haven´t tested just yet.