> Why are you trying this? I would recommend porting the whole OPIE to the > N770. > That would be an alternative to Maemo. I personally feel a little bit home > using Qt. > Using both Maemo & Qt would be a waste of resources.
Users care about applications, not about environments. Porting the complete Opie environment to the N770 would just add up to the fragmentation. Writing a Qt Hildon compatibility layer would make [some] Opie applications run next to the other Hildon applications while retaining their look and feel. >But Maemo is still a new, incompatible > system (ok there's some compatibility with gtk+) and writing a compatibility > layer for > Qt makes the situation even worse. Better use OPIE. And if OPIE is the > better > system, a lot of people will install it on their N770 and use it - if not, > stay with Maemo > and write the software for it. There's hardly a comparison. Maemo has a much better Linux technology integration and a much better look and feel. Opie has some great applications, but the complete environment lacks many things to come even near to being an alternative to a Maemo standard installation. -- Regards, Mickey. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Dipl.-Inf. Michael 'Mickey' Lauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ maemo-developers mailing list maemo-developers@maemo.org https://maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-developers