![]() Anthro was created by cartoonist Howard Post he first appeared in Showcase #74 (March 1968). Compiling one on the Pi would likely take hours, and may require a bit of know how to make it through that successfully (meaning there is a good chance it would just fail in puzzling ways).Anthro on the cover of Showcase #74, art by Howard Post.Īnthro is a fictional superhero character published by DC Comics, presented as the "first boy", a Cro-Magnon born to Neanderthal parents. However, I recommend against this: Web browsers are big, complex things. If you cannot find a pre-compiled icecat for the Pi, it might be possible to compile it yourself on the Pi from source code. They require code that is compiled for a range of ARM processors. No model of Raspberry Pi is compatible with x86-64 executables. This means it was compiled for the most commonly used ISA on desktops and laptops. For example, there is x86-64, which that tar.gz file was labelled as. Executable code is compiled for specific instruction set architectures (ISAs). ![]() It's not the difference between Ubuntu and Debian and Raspbian you can install Ubuntu or Debian on a Pi if you want, but those instructions will than not work any better then they did on Raspbian. Neither a 64-bit program can run on a 32 bit operating system like Raspbian nor can an X86 program run on an ARM processor.Īm I wrong to assume that these Ubuntu instructions would work for other Debian like systems such as Raspbian? But the most imporant information is that it is a 64-bit executable compiled for X86 (intel proccesor). usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.32, BuildID=d043e81b32b71a57818b9aa510aced22459e40d7, strippedĪs you can see icecat is an executable ELF file so you cannot start it as shell script with sh /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat as you did. Now if I look at icecat with file I find: rpi ~$ file /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat Rpi ~$ sudo tar -xvf icecat* -C /usr/bin/icecat/installed First I had to create it with before unpacking the archive: rpi ~$ sudo mkdir -p /usr/bin/icecat/installed If I follow your commands, first I get an error massage tar: /usr/bin/icecat/installed: Cannot open: No such file or directory. usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 2: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: Syntax error: Unterminated quoted stringĪm I doing something wrong? Am I wrong to assume that these Ubuntu instructions would work for other Debian like systems such as Raspbian? usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 10: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: ��A�� usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 1: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: not found usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 1: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: cannot open �0�A3: No such file usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 2: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: not found usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 1: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/ice: not found usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: 1: /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat: ELF: not found ![]() sudo tar -xvf icecat* -C /usr/bin/icecat/installedĬorrectly extracts it, but $ sh /usr/bin/icecat/installed/icecat/icecat ![]() Following the instructions on the Ubuntu wiki failed to produce an executable binary.Ĭorrectly saved the file.I'm running raspbian buster on a raspberry pi 3B+. So instead I would like to install GNU Icecat with the cute logo. I'm looking for a version of Mozilla Firefox for the raspberry pi that isn't so restrictive on it's use of the logo. ![]()
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