TheoX
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2013-08-12
, 04:06
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Banned |
Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 295 times |
Joined on Apr 2013
@ Romania
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#11
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2013-08-12
, 04:23
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Posts: 896 |
Thanked: 978 times |
Joined on Feb 2011
@ Greece, Athens
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#12
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2013-08-12
, 04:23
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Banned |
Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 295 times |
Joined on Apr 2013
@ Romania
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#13
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I do believe this thread does not belong to this part of the area on the forum. First off, it has nothing to do with nokia and its own ranges of devices let alone it is an accessory that can be attached/connected to maemo in some way.
Just because it can run debian and/or android does not necessarily mean that it is a maemo device but rather an old maemo competitor.
If you look at the specs of the HTC Universal on the wikipedia you would have noticed that by comparing with N900. There still are far more lacking features that N900 has which your HTC Universal does not have.read here. Note: gsmarena website does not keep an up-to-date information about what N900 could still be capable of, e.g. no FM transmitter when N900 does have one and that N900 can support SDXC 64GB memory (with latest updates).
Besides, I'm sure your HTC Universal does not even offer more direct access to some of its underlying hardware components when compared to N900. Most of which may still be proprietary (not even using debian for example can unlock it). For instance:
- Is the wireless chipset natively supported under linux and that you can use latest mac80211 framework on it?
- What about direct access to DSP components so that you can for example tune the onboard camera to get the best effects? or even say for example overclocking it so that you can watch 720P?
Oh wait, I hear its 2005, specifically Q3 2005. The only comparable device from maemo range would have been nokia 770 internet tablet. Even at that the 770 supports 802.11 b/g mode (as opposed to strictly 802.11b), it has USB hostmode (non-powered, and as opposed to only user mode), it has the same amount of internal RAM and flash memory sized restrictions (not talking about extended storage such as SD/MMC). Sure the 770 lacks phone capabilities, it still is superior in other ways compared to HTC Universal which were released months later and most of all the entire maemo series never ran on android nor windows mobile by default.
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2013-08-12
, 04:25
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Banned |
Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 295 times |
Joined on Apr 2013
@ Romania
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#14
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whatever floats your boat duder.
no way I'm gonna analyse the virtues of the N900 here. just read a review watch a video or buy the damn thing to see for yourself.
stop living in 2005
2009 is the year to be, man!
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2013-08-12
, 04:52
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Posts: 502 |
Thanked: 366 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ /dev/null
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#15
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To begin:
Here is the description of this board: Relevant topics not tied to a specific program, OS or device. Post here if you can't find a better place. So here you are completely wrong.
You just gave 2 useless functions that are not important on a hackers device (did you read the title, if not read it again, those functions are pure multimedia, not related to a hackers device, or developer's device)
You are sure about the hardware, well let me prove you wrong. At that period of time, HTC was not locking the devices and did not have ANY locked hardware. Debian can run freely as on any pc. I never had any issues to play 720p HD videos on Windows Mobile 6.5 (when I had this device) but the 1080 were a little choppy. When running an OPEN SOURCE OS like Android or Debian, you can fine tune everything you want.
HTC Universal also have the USB OTG host-mode. With the latest drivers HTC Universal can read 32GB SDHC Class10 without any problems.
Connection interface: Client only Mini-USB connector, USB charging, USB 2.0 protocol
Please do some more research on the device and the development before posting a reply. Here is a demo of the USB OTG on the HTC Universal: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfhbEu2WDnk
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2013-08-12
, 05:10
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Posts: 95 |
Thanked: 131 times |
Joined on Jun 2011
@ London, UK
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#16
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2013-08-12
, 05:30
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Banned |
Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 295 times |
Joined on Apr 2013
@ Romania
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#17
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What is your definition of a hackers device? My definition of a hacker's device is where the device freely allows one to do whatever the hell they want with the device regardless if its software and/or hardware based hack.
If you want hardware hacks, what about battery mod? what about IR camera hack? what about the myriads of other hardware hacks one could do to their N900?
Since when did I refer that your hardware was locked down? I was stating proprietary components that manufacturers do to prevent any regular Joe from tampering with it. Have a look at N900's ofono which was based around nokia's proprietary dialer.
N900 isn't without any proprietary components, this was why in cases of nitdroid for instance one cannot have full featured access as they did when they were running maemo natively on N900.
Not according to wikipedia, . Alas we all know that wikipedia isn't as always updated as what one would expect.
Yet on wikipedia (for SDXC) that states one can use 64GB. These again are besides the point. The discussion of SDHC/SDXC and memory expansion options are not what I was on about but rather the internal RAM and NAND (or NOR) memory.
Please also do some more research on where to appropriately place the threads to avoid being targeted.
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2013-08-12
, 05:31
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Banned |
Posts: 280 |
Thanked: 295 times |
Joined on Apr 2013
@ Romania
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#18
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2013-08-12
, 06:05
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Posts: 6,447 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#19
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This thread is about a device that can REPLACE the N900, not a "worship the N900" thread.
I just presented a device that can do whatever the N900 does with a few useless functions missing.
Next time I see a reply like this I will report the person for trolling.
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2013-08-12
, 06:06
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Posts: 1,348 |
Thanked: 1,863 times |
Joined on Jan 2009
@ fr/35/rennes
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#20
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Tags |
best device, device, hacker, htc universal, ultimate |
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