Can someone explain the difference between an ARM native program and a 68K
native program?  As far as I understand, according to the "Programming for
ARM" PDF,  API Calls using the 5.0 SDK are ARM native calls. So what would
make a program NOT ARM native? Compiled using the 4.0 SDK? If this is basic
stuff, I'd appreciate it if someone could point me to some reading material.

I'm a bit upset that there is no mention of the serial manager accepting non
standard baud rates in 5.2.

TIA
-Mike





"Ben Combee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:109987@palm-dev-forum...
>
> At 21:03 2003-1-21 +0100, you wrote:
> > > It is my understanding that the HotSync application is a native arm
> > > application.  Someone correct me if I am wrong.
> >
> >most of the 'on device' apps are native :)
>
> Not most.  Just some.  All of the PIM applications are 68K based, as are
> the pref panels.  There are a few mostly ARM-native things on the Sony
> devices, like the Flash player which is an ARM shared library with a 68K
UI
> wrapper, but all the core apps, outside of HotSync (which always was
> different, even on the 68K OS), are old-style.
>
> --
> Ben Combee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> CodeWarrior for Palm OS technical lead
> Palm OS programming help @ www.palmoswerks.com
>
>
>



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