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Cookbook For Third-Party Apps On iPhone

a_skripko suggests this easy step-by-step procedure for adding third-party applications to an Apple iPhone. While the article claims "this procedure can be performed by the average user," it might at least have to be an average user with no fear of the command line.

2 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. Why not? The usual reasons. by mbessey · · Score: 5, Informative

    Why not buy an OpenMoko phone? Well, it's certainly poised to bring the same success to the mobile phone market as we've been seeing with Linux on the desktop.

    from http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Developer_preview
    What you can expect
    a functional bootloader with support for firmware upgrades
    a functional Linux kernel with basic drivers for the various hardware subsystems, with small bugs here and there
    a basic, simple linux distribution based on OpenEmbedded, that you have to install yourself as rootfs image using USB DFU
    all the source code that we have at this point in time, and the corresponding build system
    mailing lists

    What you CAN NOT expect yet
    reliable means of making phone calls, esp. not from the UI
    reliable means of sending/receiving SMS, esp. not from the UI
    integrated GPRS data access
    bluetooth integration (basic bluez driver works)
    proper power management (i.e. no reasonable battery life yet)
    ringtone (or other) profile management
    network preferences (call deflection, manual operator selection, ...)
    a complete application framework where third party application developers can write apps that easily integrate with the OpenMoko world

    Maybe I'm just a stupid Apple fan-boy, but I'm willing to spend a little extra for a cellular phone that can, you know, make phone calls.

  2. Re:I'll wait by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 5, Informative

    From his post, the only size-related thing is its flash vs. the hard drive of the iPhone. That would make it SMALLER.

    Kangaroos don't have dorsal fins, Chevrolets don't run on kerosene, and iPhones don't have hard drives. Other than that, yeah, I see your point.

    iPhone weight: 140 grams
    Kaiser weight: 192 grams
    iPhone volume: 94185 mm^3 (115x63x13 mm)
    Kaiser volume: 114840 mm^3 (110x58x18 mm)