Silicon_Knight
Member
Registered: Nov 1999
Location:
Posts: 40 |
Actually, it shouldn't be that difficult. All CompactFlash cards really are, are small ATA hard drives. That's why you can mount one in a PCMCIA slot on a laptop, fire up Windows and have it as Drive D.
All you have to do is to get a controller IC to do access the CF card, plus a piece of PalmOS software that will allow you to access the CF. A friend told me that the way the TRG pro guys did it is by some means to offset the initial memory block. They also might use a different file system scheme (such as grouping the memory as clusters, and remapping the clusters to memory addresses) because the largest file size that the TRG Pro can access is larger than 16Mbs. Can anyone confirm it?
(And, on an interesting note, ever tried installing Win NT on a laptop while the CF card is plugged in? It'll try to dump the swap file onto the flash card because it's the fastest "drive" in the system as far as seek time goes 8-) ).
-=- SiKnight
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