-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 W.Kenworthy wrote: > Sounds even worse than shr/2008x/FSO then - why oh why cant some of the > time spent on keyboards for any OM version be put into something that > works.
Oh, it's ass-and-a-half-of-full-cream-dairy-milk... ;) Yeah, I can't fathom how something so simple could be fucked up so completely, repeatedly... makes you wonder what the hell is going on in less-visible areas, Although given the travesty that is 2008.x, nothing would suprise me really. > > Never been able to run qt - always tried it on the SD card, which in > hindsight, needed a slow clock. Wasn't game to flash it as I needed a > phone and if it didnt work on SD ... I've never tried it on the SD card, only flashed it. Works *okay* most of the time. All the software in 2008.x is simply the QTe software hacked to run on X, basically what you get with QTe is kind of like a version of 2008.x which isn't a total abomination - it's actually somewhat responsive - pressing 'answer' actually answers the call, rather than initiating a 10 second "preparing to think about acting on your keypress" period. With QTe, at Idle, your CPU usage isn't sitting at 20%! :O Think of 2008.x as the bastard, horribly mutated and deformed offspring of QT Extended and some deranged genetic scientist. It also has it's bugs though: * you need to reboot at least once a day or it'll just stop working, period. (A call will come in, and you'll press 'answer' 300 times, and nothing will happen. Eventually you'll just pull the battery and call whoever was trying to call you). * Also, as mentioned, typing an SMS (especially a long one) is a bit of a joke, particularly if you're in a car / on a train - it takes so long to type anything that you may as well just get yourself some carrier pigeons. * Often when you receive a call, it will come in twice, resulting in a missed call from the same number at the same time. * Whenever you answer a call, it will automagically (and very helpfully) switch itself into speakerphone mode, which usually results in a wonderful burst of ear-splitting feedback. This makes for an excellent conversation point, and serves to liven up your day: *RING* *RING* *SCREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEECH* me: "Hang on a second" (Switches to handset mode) me: "Hello?" caller: "Hello? Dale?" me: "Yeah" caller: "What the hell was that?!?" me: "Oh, just my phone, it's a piece of junk." caller: "Man, your phone really really sucks ass. I can't believe you actually paid money for it. And I can't believe it *still* doesn't work! you can usually fix anything! Linux must be really shit." me: "Actually, linux is good, it's just OpenMoko that sucks ass. But with the evidence you're seeing/hearing, I can't really argue it, can I?" caller: "Nope. There's no way you'll get me using linux after seeing your phone in action." * Also, most/all messages in your inbox will be duplicated whenever you recieve a new SMS, meaning that your inbox will fill up very quickly if you don't delete your sms messages religiously. Moving these messages to trash and emptying trash may or may not delete them from the inbox, depending on the current weather conditions. This is obviously some super-duper kind of backup mechanism, intended to stop me from accidentally deleting SMS messages which I don't want anymore. > I am finding shr much more usable than the others at the moment - but > even it does have its "quirks" if you want to use it everyday. I haven't tried SHR yet, can't be bothered with the bullshit involved with backing up your phone, importing contacts, etc. Plus IIUC SHR is based on FSO, which still doesn't have any PIM except for contacts stored on the sim, and for me PIM is important. I was very impressed with the last FSO I flashed, but PIM is the dealbreaker for me there - I'm hanging out for FSO to have PIM integrated, then I might actually have a phone. (Well, actually, I'm not hanging out for it - I'm getting my money back on this godawful abortion of a thing and buying a blackberry) - -D -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.7 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Fedora - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFJvfFzFbVnQRV3OEYRAucnAJ9c6Cl3OTtQa704ePyiPhd/glLrqACfQ2eD kvYhHAQ6ikLHqH/uJP890BE= =Rrf9 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community