OpenPandora Design Files Released
New submitter janvlug (3677453) writes "[As of Saturday, May 31], the OpenPandora case and hardware design files have been released for non-commercial use. The OpenPandora is a hand held Linux computer with gaming controls, but essentially it is an all-purpose computer. The OpenPandora offers the greatest possible degree of software freedom to a vibrant community of users and developers."
Why not release it allowing commercial use, and let anyone manufacture it? Availability problems have always been a huge problem for the OpenPandora team.
Hopefully the developers of this change the name to something different. If it gets bigger they will forced to change the name and probably get a nice fat legal bill to go with it.
OpenPandora is a gaming system, no? That is its intended use?
Then who the fuck is gonna care that it offers the "greatest possible degree of software freedom," other than the people actually building it?
How about making something that offers the "greatest possible degree of gaming fun"?
THIS, in a nutshell, is exactly why so many Free / Open Source projects struggle so much to achieve widespread adoption & use: you're too busy marketing to the people who built the fucking thing to think about what the people who've never heard of it will want to use it for.
not for gaming though, but simply as a portable computer (extremely small laptop).
But not with a screen that has less pixels than typical wrist watches, and it could use 4x the RAM, too.
Based on some of the medical devices I see being built for the iPhone and Android ecosystems, I have high hopes that I won't have to wait too much longer. Perhaps a decade or so.
You can buy a sensor package for your handheld now (there are others, this is just the first one I searched up and it looks pretty nice) but it's probably going to be more than a decade before you're going to get a terahertz scanner or anything else that interesting for a tolerable, pocketable price.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Is proofreading a three line summary that difficult?
Better not make phasers - we're having enough trouble dealing with the possibility of printed handguns.
Eh? See below, you may be complaining about the wrong company.
The OMAP543x Technical Reference Manual has been available from TI's usual documentation pages for over half a year now (look for document SWPU249Y or newer). In typical TI fashion, that's 6105 pages of extreme detail, isn't it enough for you?
Here's a direct link to their highly informative block diagram for the SoC -- OMAP5432 Block Diagram.
Documentation is one thing that's never been a problem with TI, as long as the information is theirs to give. If a GPU core is licensed from a 3rd party though, for example the PowerVR SGX530 licensed for use in AM335x, then TI isn't legally allowed to document it openly --- your complaints are best directed to PowerVR.
TI has a well earned reputation for providing the most detailed reference manuals in the business for any parts which they actually own.
How does the ballpark cost of $600 arise when this device is essentially a BeagleBone Black in a box with added LCD and keyboard?
What's more, BBB is fully Open Source HardWare too, so even the user freedoms that OpenPandora wishes to provide are maintained.
What does the extra $550 give you?
When it was announced in 2008, this was a big deal for retro gamers. I just can't believe that they are still marketing it in 2014 though. This is a product that comes from another era, and was never improved. I have an old Sega Nomad that looks more modern.
Today you can choose from a number of high-quality snap-on bluetooth controllers for your smartphone and get so much more than what OpenPandora offers. There are incredible Android emulators for every system, including uncommon platforms like the Sega Saturn. Going this route, you can spend as much as you like on a controller, and utilize that super-computer (relative to OpenPandora at least) in your pocket with a beautiful, large display. And you don't have to deal with the bulk of a giant first-gen Nintendo DS clamshell.
With a bluetooth controller, you can even connect your device to a TV via HDMI and play wirelessly in HD, adding scanlines and filters to get a beautiful gaming experience. OpenPandora will never be able to do that.