Everywhere I search, I am faced with the ultimate solution to debricking bricked plug computers: get a serial cable.
Let’s assume I have one (I have – two bits of wire, soldered to the serial terminals, solder-side, and poking out of the reassembled Pogoplug case, and these connect to a Sparkfun FTDI basic breakout with the addition of hooking the earths together by crocodile clip). Surely the mere ownership of a serial cable isn’t alone going to do the trick? I’ve had this serial cable arrangement for over a month or so now, and no progress has been observed. Am I supposed to do something with the serial cable? This is never ever mentioned. All references to debricking stop at the ultimate step of obtaining a serial cable as if that solves everything and I can lean back and allow the mere possession of a serial connecting method put everything back to normal again. Apparently the final step is to simply furnish oneself with a serial connection and go no further. This is exactly the situation I am in — going no further. One would almost imagine there might be some occluded further step beyond mere ownership of wires.
Technical stuff: My computer is a MacBook running Snow Leopard, my older computer is an iBook running Leopard. My Pogoplug is the magenta sort. I’ve used the FTDI basic breakout to do things with a breadboard arduino before giving up on the incomprehensible programming language, but at least the connection works: with the correct mumbo-jumbo in the “code”, data can be viewed on the Mac, in Terminal.
