Archive for the 'Software' Category

While fiddeling with OS X on the Nokia Booklet, let’s annotate the Sony Vaio VGN-P bits

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

/System/Library/Extensions:
VoodooHDA.kext <- Intel HDA audio driver override glue
GMA500BacklightDisplay.kext <- GMA500, Inter Pulsbou backlight control

/Extra/Extensions/:
AppleIntelPIIXATA.kext <- correct checksum of Inquirey reply (for SSD SATA adapter)
fakesmc.kext <- OSK0 and OSK1
NullCPUPowerManagement.kext <- prevent the AppleIntelCPUPowerManagement from matching and panic
OpenHaltRestart.kext <- generic PC system halt and restart
PlatformUUID.kext <- generic UUID injection
SNC.kext <- generic vendor WWAN, 3G, UMTS
VAIOPEnabler.kext <- GMA500 PCI BAR fixup and EHCI fiddeling, as later re-published as GMA500Enabler.kext
VoodooBattery.kext <- generic ACPI battery glue
VoodooPowerMini.kext <- generic ACPI power glue
VoodooPS2Controller.kext <- PS2 keyboard and mouse

I HOLD A NOKIA BOOKLET IN MY HANDS!

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

It has a normal (Phoenix) BIOS (with Nokia splash), boots my Linux from a USB stick just fine. Does apparently disable VT in the BIOS :-(

Comes with Windows 7 Starter, at least in Germany, at O2.

Stay tuned.

The next ExactScan release is imminent

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

ExactScan / Pro 2.8 will comes with yet more polishing all over the place, including a couple of all-new scanners driver, see the updated lists of compatible scanners.

Release seeds and press announcements after the break.

To: Palm, Inc.

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Some underclocking, undervolting, and putting less pressure on the CPU by actually making use of the PowerVR graphic hardware acceleration would certainly help the battery life, … overall user experience.

To: Palm, Inc.: you can certainly contact us if you need a hand with the open and future tasks!

Another day with the Pre

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Audio quality good, battery life not stellar.

As hobby musician  and having produced some Indie CDs once at a time I’m particularly picky about audio quality. some 3-5 years ago the Sony cellphones were particularly bad examples, such as the K750 or M600i with light noise and particularly annoying clicks between the files (re-initializing some hardware mp3 decoder?). Not so the Pre: with some regular earbuts I can not complain, low noise and no clicks :-) Just the volume level could be adjustable finer steps, … I should probably double check with a Sony studio reference headphone at home (or a scope :-).

However, the battery life is not as stellar: Full charge and no use gives 90% at the end of the day. Some light browsing at night down below 80%. Airplane mode over the night some 73%. A call and some MP3s at work later it’s at 34% right now.

Update: Apparently the built-in Pre music player lacks in-track fast-forward, rewind–read: a play position control :-(!

Windows 7 still Windows Vista

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Phil Schiller on Windows 7:

No matter how you look at it, it’s still Windows

I’d like to add:

It’s still Windows Vista

The most annoying “ding dong, do you wanna continue with xyz” dialogs removed revisited, the worst performance bottlenecks slightly tuned, and a little “s/Vista/7/g” and there we are.

Others Apple might say: Finely tuned.

OpenMoko WikiReader

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

And they really think this will sell? Oh my.

Palm Pre surprisingly good

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

The first 24h on the Pre (it just started to sell here in Europe/Germany beginning of this week) where surprisingly good (the email smtp authentication issue aside). Pretty snappy, even compared to the first iPhone and iPhone 3G I used before (ok, it’s basically the same WebKit on OpenGL|ES anyway, …).

The biggest pro for the Pre -compare to Apple’s iPhoneOS- are the over-the-air updates. The 1h update process (backup, flash, restore) always annoyed me to no avail). On the Pre it’s 10m over the air, reboot and you’re up-to-date (as I implemented this in my own Linux solutions for years). I only wish they would include the “changes” in the “an update is available” message. At least they have an online article. Though now I wonder why I’m up-to-date with 1.1.3 in Europe (O2), while the US customers run on 1.2.1 :-(

Maybe I find the time for a full review in the upcoming days.

Palm Pre no PLAIN SMTP authentication, only doing LOGIN?

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

First impression with the Palm Pre: Did not want to send email. After some excessive SMTP server debugging and logging (not that strait forward if the connection is SSL encrypted, so no easy packet sniffing to see what’s going on) it turned out the Pre did not honor the available, offered authentications. Defaulted (hard-coded?) to old-school’ish LOGIN.

Getting the SSL root certificate onto the Pre was also a little Google exercise. There is a “Certificate Manager” hiding in the Application List (in the top-left context (Preference) menu). But as the Pre did not download the file (displayed it in-line in the browser) I had to copy it form a real computer via the USB storage mode. Import it thereafter, … A “do you want to trust the cert: yes/no” dialog (like on any desktop e-mail app or the iPhone) would certainly be enough, and way easier.

Meta UI verses in your operating system

Friday, October 9th, 2009

So all of this major operating systems, such as Mac OS X and Windows now got some kind of little apps between the real apps universes. Like the OS X “Dashboard”, or this Windows Vista and up “Sidebar”. Too bad they’re just lower quality sandboxes with nothing really useful in it, just wasting your CPU cycles, memory and storage.

How’s that? I tried to use the most useful OS X Dashboard widget: the Stickies “mini app”. Not only are they not resize-able, so the content you can fill in there is limited. Today had to find out that it does not even support undo! Accidentally typed with some line selected, and whoops, off your note went. So with no undo (manager) in place, into the data nirvana your supposedly precious note went. Steve: You did notice it’s 2009? It’s even your latest, greatest Snow Leopard I’m talking about–ant the most useful app shipped by default.

Well, what do I complain. At least it supports cut’n paste. There where (phone) OSs that had to live without the later for some two major incarnations.