I finally used my new alarm clock for it's intended purpose, to wake up far earlier than I would normally be inclined. I set the alarm with the "at" command, playing an ogg file previously downloaded off of libre.fm... and groggily awoke to music of my choosing.

Admittedly, my search began looking for a replacement for an aging music player, which had no built-in speakers, so didn't work as an alarm clock. Some time ago, the headphone jack broke, so it had kind of functioned as a glorified clock with 6GB of storage and a very little screen...

I wanted something more capable; one of my requirements was that it would be feasible to run Debian a well as being relatively portable. I ended with something a little overpowered for an alarm clock...

Hello, openpandora!

Sporting a 1GHz ARMv7, 512MB of ram, 512MB built-in storage, two SD card slots, wifi, nearly full keyboard, 800x480 touchscreen, useable mouse nubs, 10 hours of battery life under active use... so it's nearly a netbook replacement. Yay, feature creep!

It's far lighter than my netbook and fits in the palm of my hand. It fits in my pocket, but barely.

Didn't spend much time using the OS it came with, Ångström. There was already a wiki page about running Debian squeeze using the armel port, but the hardware looked like it could run armhf.

Used qemu-debootstrap to build a Debian Wheezy armhf image on an SD card, and figured out the relatively simple process of booting the kernel shipped with it with an alternate root device. And it worked!

But the kernel was a litle bit older than what's was in Wheezy, at the time, so I spent a couple days getting the kernel to build from the latest linux sorce package in Debian. There was a pandora git reposiory for linux 3.2.39, and most of the patches applied cleanly(those that didn't seemed already applied with the newer version). After a few build cycles, managed to get a working kernel, though haven't yet trimmed down the kernel config to my liking. Ideally, it'll get sufficiently upstreamed to be able to use the omap kernel variant.

Also put together a package that configures the keyboard map, touchscreen and some cpu frequency scaling settings. Still need to document all that.

Spent a week without a laptop or other computer while traveling... and the openpandora running Debian Wheezy held up pretty well.