On 8/19/06, Dinesh Nair <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
why would you want to run asterisk on the phone ? ideally, it should be
running a softphone and connecting back over WiFi or 3G (HSPDA ??) to an
asterisk installation.
You're thinking too logically! Open source programmers just wanna have fun
Forget about running Asterisk on it. It looks like it will be a good phone to use.I would buy one, especially in hopes that if we support a company like this then maybe they will produce phones like the Treo 650 or Motorola Q but in full open source fashion.
On 8/19/06, Dinesh Nair <[EMAIL PROTECTE
On 08/16/06 23:35 Robert Michel said the following:
I think the BCM chip is for the GSM stuff, for GUI and applications
the XScale chip - so for running asterisk, the XScale will be the
processor.
why would you want to run asterisk on the phone ? ideally, it should be
running a softphone an
Salve *!
see:
http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS8030785497.html
"It is based on a dual-core Marvell (formerly Intel) XScale processor
clocked at 312MHz[and] The Greenphone's baseband processor/modem
is a Broadcom BCM2121."
I think the BCM chip is for the GSM stuff, for GUI and applications
th