Why yes, that's it.  If it looks OK there then you should be OK.
Of course, it's a very long document.  I think I managed to read
the whole thing (usb_20.pdf) at one point, however I was asleep
through most of it.  :-)  I spent most of my time in chapter 7
since I was designing and characterizing the pads.

I also notice that there are a lot more files available.  Back
then there were about half as many.  And OTG was just a proposal.
-- 
Allen Brown
http://brown.armoredpenguin.com/~abrown

> Hi,
>
> --- On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 5:33 AM, Allen Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> | Also the host (i.e. Nokia) may not allow a device to come on
> | if it reports needing more than the host *thinks* it is capable
> | of.
> \--
>
> Section: 7.2.1.4: High-power Bus-powered Functions, pp. 174 ? [1]
>
> "If sufficient power exists, the remainder of the function may be powered
> on".
>
> ---
> | If you can your hands on a copy of the USB spec, do so.  Unfortunately
> | that may be difficult.  They want you to pay money to play in that
> | game.
> \--
>
> This one?
>
> [1] usb_20.pdf. http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/.
>
> SK
>
> --
> Shakthi Kannan
> http://www.shakthimaan.com
> _______________________________________________
> maemo-developers mailing list
> maemo-developers@maemo.org
> https://lists.maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-developers
>


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