Open mobile software: Difference between revisions

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taolono
There has been some talk about various Linux based standards and
There has been some talk about various Linux based standards and
frameworks, and there are a few open software based phones that
frameworks, and there are a few open software based phones that

Revision as of 16:42, 7 January 2008

taolono There has been some talk about various Linux based standards and frameworks, and there are a few open software based phones that include applications and frameworks. Here we collect an overall summary of these, so we can figure out what we can leverage from elsewhere, what we need to build from scratch, and any dependencies. Please correct and extend the info on this wiki page.

For information on how to compile/build software for phones, see Building Software.


Base OS
Linux sourced from Gumstix, includes cross compiler and has Java support Gumstix Software. (I went through some hassle getting my G4 Mac talking to a GumStix device. But it seems to be pretty straightforward now. I documented my issues on this page: GumStix Software Development with MacOS - User:Msh).
GSM device driver and libraries
libgsmc A fully GPL'd library supporting the ETSI GSM 07.07 Standard (E.g. Telit, and other GSM modem interfaces).A sample GUI interface for a CLI is being finalized; and GUI support for Qtopia and GTK+ will follow and will include sample applications. libgsmc is hosted at sourceforge.net
EDGE device driver
basic slow IP over GSM
Wifi/Bluetooth/LCD/Touchscreen etc. device drivers
hopefully basic Linux support exists
Accelerometer, power management
More advanced things we may need to develop ourselves
Application frameworks
(see GUI Frameworks for details) GTK+ or Qtopia open source release which does not include all the phone apps provided with the greenphone.
OpenMoko homepage
Since Feb 14th 2007, the OpenMoko project opened up all its info, design data, source code, Wiki etc. They seem to be building an active community, but their software is a long way from being finished, and their initial hardware is planned for late March.
Phone calling application
Basic call management stuff, GUI to dial a number
Web browser
Qt has Opera support, Not sure how viable Firefox might be on Gumstix, however there is the Minimo project, which uses the mozilla code base. Opera-mini requires java. Links is a simple graphical/text browser, requires keyboard input.
Flash for Linux
Adobe has x86 version only, not sure about others. Gnash GNU flash in development.
Address book application
Calendar application
Notes taking

HNB - simple text-mode app.

Mobile oriented email client
MP3 player
Gumstix includes some audio player support.
GPS mapping
perhaps google maps mobile java version? Not sure how to feed it GPS coordinates, the Windows Mobile version of gmm does interface to GPS, but the generic Java version doesn't. There is some discussion of GPS on the OpenMoko Software page
Jowles
Jowles is a very simple web app that emulates a mobile phone interface. More of an experiment than a real mobile app, it uses a JPEG image, a HTML imagemap and javascript to provide base level functionality.