Ortwin Regel wrote: > Where do you draw the line? The Freerunner should be at least at the > lower end of that spectrum.
Well, yes and no. OpenGL 3D is by far not the standard in mobile devices these days and will probably not be any time soon. 2GB and more of internal storage (harddisk equivalent) is also quite uncommon. 256MB RAM could be argued for but anything more seems unlikely - for the near future. Devices like this IMHO suck too much power for being really mobile. If you can recharge them every few hours of usage, maybe. Well, this is my view on this - maybe I am a littel conservative. But as long as manufacturers are looking into single core solutions for mobile phones to save $10 for the second modem CPU core, 64MB of flash already being unusual and 128MB of RAM almost luxury, I think that those MID devices can not be considered targets for something like a general purpose mobile phone Linux platform. The GTA devices are *very* well equipped... Cheers nils > On 2/26/08, Nils Faerber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Dean Collins schrieb: >>> http://www.ubuntu.com/products/mobile >>> Any thoughts? >> Different target: >> "Leveraging the MID >> >> MIDs typically have the following features and attributes: >> >> * Small size/form factor >> * 4 to 7 inch touch screen >> * Physical and/or virtual keyboard >> * Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth, GPS, WiMAX >> * 2GB to 8GB Flash or disk storage, 256MB+ memory/512MB+ recommended >> * OpenGL 3D >> * USB, camera, head phone jack, speakers, microphone >> " >> >> Ubuntu mobile is targetting UMPC class devices, not mobile phones or PDAs. >> >>> Regards, >>> Dean Collins >> Cheers >> nils faerber >> -- kernel concepts GbR Tel: +49-271-771091-12 Sieghuetter Hauptweg 48 Fax: +49-271-771091-19 D-57072 Siegen Mob: +49-176-21024535 -- _______________________________________________ OpenMoko community mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community

