I have a GTA02 which I acquired a few years back and until now I have not
really done anything with it. Now I want to use it as my main phone.
The automatic setting of the date/time from the providors network (in this
case it is Optus) does not work in qtmoko. The provider does support this
El día Saturday, September 22, 2012 a las 04:26:01PM +0800, Adam Ward escribió:
I have a GTA02 which I acquired a few years back and until now I have not
really done anything with it. Now I want to use it as my main phone.
The automatic setting of the date/time from the providors network
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
I have a GTA02 which I acquired a few years back and until now I have not
really done anything with it. Now I want to use it as my main phone.
The automatic setting of the date/time from the providors network (in this
case it is Optus) does not
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012 10:29:38 AM Radek Polak wrote:
On Sunday, July 22, 2012 02:08:39 PM Simon Busch wrote:
As far as I know Qtmoko can use FSO but does not as default.
Yes this is correct.
My plan was to use FSO for GTA04. But when i got my
Adam,
I do not know the details of the distribution you are using, but I could
imagine that the part of the software which controls the modem is
'eating up' the responses of the AT cmds you are sending down with
chat(1). Concerning the time update, I'm using ntpdate(1)
to get the correct
Time and time zone are two different things. In my (patchy and
non-scientific) experience, mobile networks often do tell you the time
zone, but not the time.
I know that Telstra in Australia sends both. My current phone would get the
correct details after traveling between timezones
On Sat, 22 Sep 2012 10:01:23 AM Neil Jerram wrote:
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012 10:29:38 AM Radek Polak wrote:
On Sunday, July 22, 2012 02:08:39 PM Simon Busch wrote:
As far as I know Qtmoko can use FSO but does not as default.
Yes this is correct.
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
I know that Telstra in Australia sends both.
Do you know how it sends that? I have been unable to find any kind of
specification that describes this. I only find references to timezone
information.
___
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
On Sat, 22 Sep 2012 10:01:23 AM Neil Jerram wrote:
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012 10:29:38 AM Radek Polak wrote:
On Sunday, July 22, 2012 02:08:39 PM Simon Busch wrote:
As far as I know Qtmoko can use FSO but does
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
Time and time zone are two different things. In my (patchy and
non-scientific) experience, mobile networks often do tell you the time
zone, but not the time.
I know that Telstra in Australia sends both. My current phone would get the
correct
On Sat, 22 Sep 2012 03:56:57 PM Timo Juhani Lindfors wrote:
Adam Ward cay...@internode.on.net writes:
I know that Telstra in Australia sends both.
Do you know how it sends that? I have been unable to find any kind of
specification that describes this. I only find references to timezone
On Sat, 22 Sep 2012 09:55:43 PM Neil Jerram wrote:
[snip]
FWIW, from a quick look at
devices/neo/src/plugins/phonevendors/neo/vendor_neo.cpp, I see that the
suspend code includes
// Turn off timezone notifications.
chat(AT+CTZR=0);
chat(AT%CTZU=0);
and the resume (wake)
On Saturday, September 22, 2012 10:44:54 PM Neil Jerram wrote:
Ah, thanks, I understand your question now: what version of fsogsmd does
QtMoko build with, and isn't that now rather out of date? But I'm
afraid I don't know the answers.
I was using FSO from git at the time when i was
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