Firefox OS Powered Flame Available For Pre-order; Ships Globally
sfcrazy (1542989) writes "Developers need access to device running the platform for which they develop. Nexus was Google's reference device and now Mozilla is coming out with its own device. Mozilla has opened pre-order for Flame, its Firefox OS reference devices for $170 including free shipping."
Specs are, of course, modest: a dual core 1.2GHz snapdragon, 1G of RAM, 8G of flash, an 854×480 4.5" screen, and a 5MP camera. Now, if only they would release a device with a keyboard.
Now, if only they would release a device with a keyboard
And maybe Ford can start making faster horse-drawn carriages.
I can get a moto g for 179 $ that has more software, a quad core processor and a better screen. This won't cut it.
I'm a small developer ad there's no way in hel I'm paying $170 for a reference device for a platform nobody uses.
I'd rather wait and see how it farees against Android nd iOS (haha!!) and ONLY THEN buy a retail device that people actually use so I can test my software on.
You can get a JIAYU G4S for around $180
It has 1.7Ghz 8 Core CPU
2GB of RAM
1280x720 Display
13 MP Camera
So $170 for something with the specs of a under $100 phone seems lame.
Is this legacy of a design taking too long to come to market?
Still no support for AWS networks. Lame.
Sure it may be a comparative alternative to Android; but still, designed to help Adobe hurt the user, even if this hurt is minimized, rather than designed to let the user do what they need. I hear the Jolla is nice, any word on how it compares?
GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
Does Firefox OS support the MP3 format yet?
Why is anyone still making devices with sub-300-dpi screens? Especially when you're trying to launch a new OS -- this is the best way to make your OS look like crap, even if it's otherwise great. Price is definitely not a show-stopper here; the ASUS ZenFone has a high-end screen in the ~$200 range, and cheap Chinese phones like Zopo have had them for a long time at much lower prices. If they're really worried about cost, scrap the 5 MP camera which is a complete joke when your screen is 0.4 MP...
1 year? 2 years? I really want manufacturer's to start having a public EOL date at launch. I'm tired of buying phones and having them go into no-update land...
Just FYI, the DRM is only being added to desktop Firefox. Not Firefox OS at this time (they did somewhat leave this open, but have no plans).
Could they be teasing us by giving us a hint of the future in the name? Kind of scary that all the names remind one of the book Fahrenheit 451.
is the word you wanted, no?
If only Brendan was at the helm I'd consider but this is just too fabulous to be taken seriously.
I assume I'm not alone in thinking if you order a communications device on-line, there is a slight non-zero chance of it being intercepted during shipment and tampered with by various TLAs.
Of course, I think the odds of this happening is still dependent on who you are. Say, for example, a Guardian journalist with a company-issued laptop.
I firmly believe this is why the GCHQ methodically destroyed certain specific areas within their laptops (not just the hard drives): they were obliterating the components they had tampered with during the initial shipment from the factory.
Modest?
More like garbage unless they're planning on selling these things as children's toys or in developing nations.
As long as it interoperates correctly (cellular/network communications, app/application support, etc.) I'm all for it - but I'll be waiting to hear more than a few firsthand accounts regarding usability before I plunk down my hard earned cash for one.
Then again, my Android isn't exactly perfect. Neither is my daughter's iPhone. I don't know any Window phone users and I haven't heard a whole lot about Windows phone user experiences, but I don't get the impression that they're perfect either. Maybe with more competing options, somebody will move beyond "good enough" and at least try for "better".
Unless you're Japanese:
Mozilla has ensured that unlike Google devices, non-US developers won’t be deprived of the devices. The phone will be shipped free of cost anywhere in the world except for Japan
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
I've really been wanting to get a Firefox OS device, but sadly none of them support the frequencies for T-Mobile's network (which requires 1700) :(
Dang. Why is it that none of these devices are ever available on Verizon? Its the 2nd most popular carrier in the US, and yet we never get these straight-pay phones for it. Their "full price" phones you actually buy from them are prices basically at a premium/penalized rate to get you to renew the contract, while the $200-300 phones from Google and this are unavailable :(.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
Why should the minority's needs not be met? See Tyranny of the majority.
if your are targeting the 'average phone' this is a reasonable spec. Developing for the S5 only is a small market.
This sounds a lot like my samsung galaxy s2x (aka hercules). Bought it xmas 2012 for $150. It has 16G and 8M camera. The screen is 4.5 x 850ishx480ish Super Amoled+ and it looks fantastic. Seriously. It compares well the the wifes N5. Si far no lag.
Seems reasonable for a low cost entry to development to me.
Users demanded design around a finger because they would often lose the pen. Users demanded design around multitouch because they wanted zoom and rotate gestures. And making a touch screen that reacts well to both a pen and a finger appears to be expensive, whether in parts or in patent royalties.
Without digital restrictions management, how do you expect to be able to rent movies and television programs produced by major studios?
scrap the 5 MP camera which is a complete joke when your screen is 0.4 MP
For one thing, the color filter eats at least half your image sensor's megapixels. Digital zoom (essentially, cropping a photo after shooting it) eats another three-fourths of what's left. Now you're down to 0.6 usable MP.
I'm not found of my ZTE Open. The touchscreen sucks, Reception is abysmal and so on. Oh, and there is only one thing i hate more than the ZTE Open: FirefoxOS itself. I dont mind the feature set, i bought this for development and stuff, but FFOS (1.2, or 1.3 or 1.4) is just too unstable. I'm stuck at the lockscreen way too often, and given the current state of the development tools it's very hard to debug the source. My opinion regarding getting a FFOS phone is: Wait.
They routinely shit all over my webbrowser-based productivity, and now they want people to use a system with a whole operating system by them?
Fuuuuuuuuuuuck that!
It's not a functional "non-command economy" so long as manufacturers abuse patents and carriers abuse their spectrum monopolies. Otherwise a new firm could enter the market and serve the minority.
Drawback is having to code for each corporate silo - Objective-C and iOS for Apple, Java and Android and Google Play for Android, now HTML5 for FireFoxOS. Eventually the geometric explosion of languages, platforms, tools, devices, etc becomes impossible. People develop for Apple because it's significantly easier - one app works on all devices. Android is next to impossible both because it's a steaming pile of poorly designed beta APIs and device fragmentation. Throw in Windows Metro and Windows Phone, and HTML5 and FireFoxOS, and a few others, you get a situation that does not work. What would be better is a single, industry-standard API for smartphones.
Sure, "one API to rule them all", eh? I suppose that'd be fine. Only . . . Which API/OS is best for all phones? What gatekeeper shall we all entrust with our devices? Opensource or proprietary?
Then again, with only one OS to worry about, hackers and the NSA should find their task immensely simpler than in the current environment. If there were only one software stack to consider, there'd only be a need for one walled garden for all of our apps - but who needs a choice?
So any app written for Firefox OS is *theoretically* instantly portable to any other smartphone. I say theoretically because each gecko alternative (webkit etc) needs to implement the Javascript APIs that Mozilla are standardising through the W3C.
(In the meantime, target a common api like Cordova)
HTML5 apps might never achieve the 'shiny' of an objective-c native app but for many scenarios it would suffice.
So Firefox OS may lose the battle of market penetration. But Mozilla the web company will win the war if they've shown it's feasible to implement any smartphone app using the building blocks of the web.
how do you expect to be able to rent movies and television programs produced by major studios?
I don't intend to rent these things, or buy these things. If it's produced by a studio which uses DRM I don't want it to be in my life.
GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
i want to try this OS, but dont know where to get it? somebody help me? mysite: http://phukhanghung.com.vn/
Unfortunately, you've been outvoted. I'm under the impression that the vast majority of potential users of Firefox OS prefer feature films distributed by a major studio to feature films distributed under a license for free cultural works, despite the DRM of the former.