Rockbox Ports are now being developed for various digital audio players!
You can't brick the sansa just from putting bad code on it. Doing that will always leave you with a working recovery mode. Once in recovery mode, you can put any software back on,HOWEVERIf you put bad software on in recovery mode, yes you can brick your sansa, or at least damage it to the point where it's extremely difficult to repair. Take a look at the unbrick instructions linked from the Sansa page on the Wiki to get an idea. As long as you follow those and don't do anything silly in recovery mode, you should be completely safe.
when you configure select bootloader instead of normal. after you run make, you are done. there is no need for make zip or make install.Be careful because I know there were some recent modifications to the bootloader code in SVN and I'm not sure if it is stable yet.
Quote from: digerati1338 on May 29, 2007, 10:28:53 AMwhen you configure select bootloader instead of normal. after you run make, you are done. there is no need for make zip or make install.Be careful because I know there were some recent modifications to the bootloader code in SVN and I'm not sure if it is stable yet. I have written and compiled the bootloader now, how do i install it?
Quote from: d3nn1as on May 29, 2007, 01:20:36 PMQuote from: digerati1338 on May 29, 2007, 10:28:53 AMwhen you configure select bootloader instead of normal. after you run make, you are done. there is no need for make zip or make install.Be careful because I know there were some recent modifications to the bootloader code in SVN and I'm not sure if it is stable yet. I have written and compiled the bootloader now, how do i install it?The normal bootloader install tool has an option to install custom bootloaders. However, you mentioned a plugin, which shoulnd't require updating the bootloader. Did you actually write a plugin or just modify the bootloader?
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