In General that statement would be true, but ( and there is one ) you have to be careful with the slight variants, looking at the Ti site:
http://www.ti.com/lsds/ti/omap-applications-processors/omap-3-processors-products.page?paramCriteria=no%3f it seems they have dropped anything below 36xx, but I am sure there are still alot of 3xxx hardware below that one being produced. As far as the Linux kernel is concerned, they have really done an awesome job of building the boilerplate generic base for all Arm Cortex SoC's to which then you would add specific modules too that support your manufacturer ( Nv, Ti Omap etc etc etc )... I think to be honest the up and coming 3.9 kernel should probably be the defecto choice if you have an Arm SoC, since there have been so many changes and additions to the Arm tree. Nige On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 7:37 AM, Ottavio Caruso < [email protected]> wrote: > On 13 April 2013 09:51, Ottavio Caruso <[email protected]> > wrote: > > And incidentally, I have a Samsung 4.2'' player with CPU OMAP 3630. > > Does anybody know if it's fully supported (module and firmware-wise) > > in the vanilla kernel? > > I'll rephrase my question: does the OMAP3 cover all OMAP3**** variants? > > > > > -- > Ottavio > _______________________________________________ > ARMedslack mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.armedslack.org/mailman/listinfo/armedslack > -- “Science is a differential equation. Religion is a boundary condition.” Alan Turing
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