I have used an iPhone, my wife's. The animations are pretty at first.
After a while, they're just annoying. My wife gets impatient waiting for
windows to get out of the way so she can get on with what she's trying to
do. What's really funny is that some times the phone will do all that neat
anim
On Mon, Jun 9, 2008 at 1:00 PM, Chris Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ...The keyboard itself has very minimal needs in terms of resolution, but
> it
> steals about a third of the screen in portrait mode, more in landscape
> -- 640x480 is probably a bare minimum.
Chris's comment about the
This question is probably just because I misunderstood something you said
before, but I'll ask anyway :)
If it is acceptable to use QVGA, couldn't that basically be done without any
hardware changes? I believe I remember you saying the glamo does scaling,
so couldn't you let SW treat the display
You could save quite a bit of room there by getting rid of a SHIFT and the
CAPS keys. you might consider something like a double-tap on shift locks
it, and a single tap only affects the next character.
--Steve
On Fri, May 30, 2008 at 12:30 PM, christooss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> http://sudh
Hmmm, the two would seem to counteract each other. (not displaying, but
remembering it for you)
I would be happy if it acted like my office phone does. It only displays,
and re-dials, the actual phone number, and nothing after that. This is easy
to do on a cell phone. Display the number typed i
>
> PS:
> I have searched the list ;-)
Not well enough ;)
The 10-packs are modulo-10, not 10+. You can get 10, 20, 30
not 11, 12, 13
--Steve
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 11:53 AM, Alexander Frøyseth <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey folks.
> Okey
>
> I just wondering about one little thi
Just had a crazy thought while reading this thread
Someone (read: not me. I AM a EE :) ) could make a stylus with a usb
connector sticking out along the side. Then, the stylus could plug into the
usb port and be held tight against the side of the phone.
On Sun, May 4, 2008 at 8:33 PM, Jere
well, if you encrypt the data and store everything as binary, I don't think
the version control system would be able to minimize the network traffic.
However, I like the concept. If you access the svn server through an ssh
tunnel, you'd get the encryption on the link and the reduced traffic. I
th
Good news, you're likely wrong :)
Don't project the current draw when on the charger to when on the battery.
It's very normal for the charger portion of a PMIC to be extremely
in-efficient. I typically see less than 50% efficiency on chargers. The
power system will be optimized for running off
Just a thought...
Perhaps it would make sense for the wiki pages to fit the horizontal
resolution of the Freerunner. I would image that it may be an often visited
site by the phones when people are getting started.
On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 8:51 AM, Brenda Wang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> He
a mini-USB to min-USB cable will only have 4 wires. The ID pin is tied to
ground at one end of the cable, and left floating at the other. The ID pins
at the two ends of the cables to not connect.
--Steve
On Wed, Apr 2, 2008 at 6:48 AM, Andy Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SI
this link. This will outline the American procedure for
> patenting.
> http://www.inventionpatent.net/patent/process.cfm
>
> >>> "Steven Milburn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 02/07/08 5:35 PM >>>
> As a first step, get anything you think is patent worthy documen
As a first step, get anything you think is patent worthy documented and
dated. In the US, a common practice is to write up your concept and mail it
to yourself in a sealed envelope. You don't open the envelope until you
need to and you do it with a lawyer present. The postmark on the envelope
ho
This one-button-at-a-time is not an uncommon to existing phones. Many phone
keypads are implemented in such a way that they do not register multiple key
presses at the same time. For instance, when playing the "Asphalt Urban GT
3D", a Java game, on my A707, I cannot both accelerate and turn at th
I think this could be one of the apps that really turns on
the mass market
On 7/24/07, Steven Milburn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Cingular/AT&T doesn't seem to have any problem with letting users make
> their own ring tones. On my Samsung SGH-A707, I can select any MP3
Kyle,
This is probably a crazy idea that if I think long enough about I'd realize
won't work. But, instead, I'll just put it out there :)
It seems easy enough for the forum and list to connect in one direction, on
a user-by-user basis. I assume your forum will have the ability to email
registe
Cingular/AT&T doesn't seem to have any problem with letting users make their
own ring tones. On my Samsung SGH-A707, I can select any MP3 file under 1MB
as a ring tone. I have a couple on my phone that I edited with GarageBand
to select a small enough clip and then downloaded to my phone.
--Ste
I wouldn't bother cutting your cable. Right now, the neo will only switch
to 500mA charging when it is successfully enumerated as a high-power
device. The only way you'll get it to fast charge from a power-only source,
will be to change the software to something like you mentioned. It
shouldn'
It's been discussed here before (by me ;) ), but I think it's fitting to
bring it up in this thread.
Mounting a swipe fingerprint sensor on the side would provide the following:
* A low-power way to unlock the phone while verifying the user should be
unlocking the phone.
* Enhanced, or at le
As of yet, AT&T hasn't disabled bluetooth like you mention. I bought a
phone from Cingular/AT&T only a couple months ago. (I chose them because I
wanted a GSM phone so I could play with the Neo when it's available). I'm
able to transfer music, pics, and other files from my computer to the phone
Well, Bradely's suggestion included making the flip transparent. If it's
transparent, the button definitions can still be on the screen, instead of
written on the buttons themselves. Now the only thing that is fixed is the
shape of the button matrix.
Personally, I'd like to see a touchscreen wi
Many fingerprint sensors that would fit where the button is have a
navigation function. They operate much like the touchstick, or a mini
touchpad, when not capturing a fingerprint. They are gaining traction in
the tablet and ultra-mobile PC market for doing scrolling and simple
navigation when
i2c is the interface used to program a camera. The "camera pins" you speak
of is the Digital Video Port (DVP). That's the interface the image data
goes across. You need both i2c and dvp to use the camera.
--Steve
On 5/26/07, Erik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I can't tell you specifics abou
btw: That's only works if the port you connect to allows high power
devices. Most laptops have only one physical port which will let you
enumerate as a high power device, and sometimes even that port only allows
it when you're plugged in. So, hopefully the phone will be able to attempt
enumerati
If you want smooth scrolling, how about this mod to what I said earlier:
On the double-tap to center-and-zoom, hold the the second tap. The pic
slowly (human speed) zooms and centers to where you're touching. When
you've zoomed in enough, lift the finger. This would be similar to the way
CTRL
Sound pretty good, but I change a couple things from what you describe. For
zooming and panning, don't do just the center tap thing. (For one thing,
panning doesn't make sense until you're zoomed in). I'd like to be able to
do most things without menus or buttons, just learned interaction.
To
Might it be much simpler?
On my current cell phone, I can initiate a 3-way call after already talking
to somebody for any amount of time. So, when you get home, have a script
on the neo start a 3-way call to your home number, which will be answered by
your neo's call waiting via wifi, then hang
t;[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, 18 Mar 2007, Steven Milburn wrote:
> First, if one concedes that the typical sensor can be easily fooled, I
still
> think fingerprint sensors tend to add security to most phones. That's
> because I think most users cannot be bothered to hide
Oh the fingerprint sensor FUD, what fun.
First, if one concedes that the typical sensor can be easily fooled, I still
think fingerprint sensors tend to add security to most phones. That's
because I think most users cannot be bothered to hide data behind a decent
pass phrase they would have t
Malicious people will cut off your finger. Don't laugh, it has happened
before. There are proven cases,
e.g. where a carjacker cut off the finger of his victim in order to be able
to steal the car.
Newer fingerprint reader technologies actually account for this pretty
well. A detached fin
I tend to be of the mentality that the phone is for my convenience, not
others. Therefore, I like the ideas being suggested that incoming
calls/text messages/emails/etc are indicated by a simple, polite icon on a
status bar somewhere flashing for my attention.
If the application I'm running is s
- Forwarded message --
From: Gabriel Ambuehl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: community@lists.openmoko.org
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2007 19:13:49 +0100
Subject: Re: idea for Neo 2nd generation: Accelerometer
On Friday 26 January 2007 18:41:50 Tim Newsom wrote:
> > yes, accelerometers measure acce
-- Forwarded message --
From: Sean Moss-Pultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Marcus Bauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Michael 'Mickey' Lauer <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 27 Jan 2007 01:37:39 +0800
Subject: Re: Developers phone also fit for early adopters?
On 1/26/07 9:40 AM, "Marcus Bauer" <[
We also need to take into account that accelerometers measure
acceleration. If you accelerating or decelerating it will be able to
tell you the magnitude of the force and you can time the duration to
find the distance traveled. However, suppose that you are moving at a
constant velocity, the a
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