So Raspberry Pi 3 has a MIPI port on it that is locked to only enable Raspberry Pi's official display. We're not sure how exactly it's locked, whether it's just reading a vendor ID off the Focaltech chip on the touch panel FPC or if there's a handshaking sequence coded into the ATTiny88 on the converter board for their official display. If anyone has experience with Raspberry Pi or with cracking proprietary hardware authentication, we'd appreciate help.
Not sure if this is allowed on /wsr/, but if anyone taking this on wants to post a burner email, we'd be willing to pay for the solution to this. We've tried the typical bounty sites with no luck, and we'd rather not use an HDMI converter because of the cost.
>>327804
I thought that shit was open source!?
>>327814
maybe the board itself is open hardware, but SBC in general are little more that "complex breakout boards" for some ARM SoC. And those, like in this case the Broadcom 2837, are definitely not open.