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2009-02-03
, 22:20
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Posts: 4 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Feb 2009
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#32
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The Following User Says Thank You to sixaxis For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-02-03
, 22:57
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Posts: 109 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Sep 2008
@ Guatemala
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#33
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1. Why Android is different in the ADP1 than in N810? I can't find a newer release for ADP1 so this means that NITDroid is not the released 1.0 Android?
The Following User Says Thank You to solca For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-02-03
, 23:12
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Posts: 39 |
Thanked: 12 times |
Joined on Jan 2009
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#34
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1. Why Android is different in the ADP1 than in N810? I can't find a newer release for ADP1 so this means that NITDroid is not the released 1.0 Android?
2. Maps API doesn't work, any ideas why?
3. Does Bluetooth and GPS support is planned?
The Following User Says Thank You to EasternPA For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-02-04
, 03:05
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Posts: 4 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Feb 2009
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#35
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2009-02-04
, 05:08
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Posts: 8 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Jan 2009
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#36
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2009-02-05
, 01:39
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Posts: 109 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Sep 2008
@ Guatemala
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#37
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The Following User Says Thank You to solca For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-02-06
, 06:30
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Posts: 8 |
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Joined on Jan 2009
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#38
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2009-02-06
, 06:31
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Posts: 8 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Jan 2009
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#39
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2009-02-06
, 07:11
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Posts: 8 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Jan 2009
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#40
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Tags |
android, nitdroid |
Thread Tools | |
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As for me, I can go through long periods of time where I travel a lot for work. I carry a Blackberry Bold for work. I'm at home for now, but if I start traveling again (and we end up with working Bluetooth) I will most likely swap out the cellular video on my Bold for tethering, and see what value I can get out of carrying the NIT. The Bold gives me free access to AT&T hotspots worldwide (including tethering), so I could send 3G or WiFI connectivity to my NIT anywhere I have 3G service or hotspot access.
First and foremost, I want my Google apps! I want Maps and GMail badly. With 0.4.2, the error message for installing Maps changed from a generic "-11" to actually stating that a shared library was missing. The other apps still show "-11". I would also like to play YouTube videos, but they currently play fine on my Bold, so I'm in no hurry.
What I would really like to do in the long run, however, is to make my NIT a key part of my ham radio setup. Some of the biggest developments in recent years amateur radio came in the form of data transmission methods created using soundcards and DSPs. There are data transmission modes for short distance communications as well as longer distances. The most popular use of short-range digital transmissions has to do with mapping. We can put ourselves on a map, see where other people are located, and exchange short messages with them. The range can be extended worldwide with Internet-connected helpers along the way. And when nothing is blocking our view of the sky, we can even send our signals through satellites in orbit, including the ISS! Pretty good for "short distance" signals.
The long distance digital modes are typically just for live keyboard-to-keyboard chats, similar to IM. We can also send digital pictures over shortwave -- takes about 2 minutes per image. There is also a global network that exchanges emails between the Internet and shortwave radio. Its mainly used by volunteers working in large scale disaster areas (think Katrina) and people at sea who don't have satellite email. Finally, separate from digital data, we hams have had digital audio technology for years similar to "HD Radio" gaining in popularity in the US. Hearing digital FM quality sound on shortwave radio without any static or interference is quite amazing.
All of these functions can be enabled just by linking a laptop or PC with a soundcard to a radio through custom audio wiring. Even that has been made easier than ever with the development of USB soundcards. I can add all of that functionality to any reasonable PC or laptop with a USB port and OS support for the basic soundcard built into the external device. Out of the box, the interface I use is recognized as /dev/dsp1 by Ubuntu so who knows, it may not take much to get Android to recognize it. It may even be less complex than the DSP in our NITs! The question is if Android will recognize USB devices connected through a USB hub.
Next step, of course, is to start poking around for ham radio software for Android.
To see some examples of how ham radio has become so much more than just Morse Code, search YouTube for sstv, psk31, rtty, aprs, and search Google for Winlink 2000. All of that can be done with just a little CPU horsepower, DSP audio, and of course good radios and antennas. And yes, there's still plenty of Morse Code to go around (and software for sending and receiving it)