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Re: The new QWERTY device project
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Re: The new QWERTY device project
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Re: The new QWERTY device project
Chen, could you show in the FP the renders you published so far? I know you are planning on re-working on the FP at a later point, but in the mean time there are people clicking on your signature and seeing just text for a remote project, or ending up here in 60 pages of 5.5"/Qwertz discussion but missing the images.
Pictures are worth a thousand words, and they also look very professional in this particular case, which would foster confidence. Show them directly in the FP and you'll gather more "Shut up and take my money!" and overall visibility, the word will be more likely to be spread, even before the real advertising starts. |
Re: The new QWERTY device project
You mentioned a couple of SoC manufacturers in the OP. Was TI OMAP (from N900/N9) not taken into account?
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Why would you even want a 2017 phone to use an old chip from the 2009 era? |
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Assuming it was available, the price should also be pretty low, and since the chip architecture would be have been well tested and familiar then further silicon editions would surely be more optimized and be less-power hungry. Also there'd be good time to hone and fix open source drivers. Actually now as I come to think about it, there are nothing but good reasons to use an old SoC. |
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The disadvantage of such an approach however is that the old hardware has very low performance by today's standard so you can't really have a very responsive GUI or anything. So if that chip were used, the device would have no market appeal to the average consumers. |
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