Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Thu 19th Apr 2007 18:43 UTC
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RE[2]: Sounds great but...
by Cloudy on Fri 20th Apr 2007 15:48
in reply to "RE: Sounds great but..."
I don't expect, for example, that anyone's going to run the GNOME desktop itself on a cellphone or media player.
I've done it on a Zaurus just to prove it could be done. Reminded me of the dancing bear, only a lot slower.
You haven't lived until you've brought FireFox up on a QVGA screen.






Member since:
2007-04-05
It's certainly feasible: we're doing it in the ACCESS Linux Platform, Nokia's doing it in the N770 and N800, Vernier's doing it on their data acquisition device...
I'd also mentioned to Zonker--and this point didn't come out strongly enough in an otherwise-excellent article--that the upshot of our discussion around GTK+ (and particularly, Cairo) performance was that the developers reworked the code significantly to offer another approach for systems without hardware floating-point support, a change which went in around v2.16 of GTK, I think. So GMAE has had positive, measurable impact, in the code, even before we officially announced our existence. Like I keep saying, we're all about the code.
Matt Allum of OpenedHand presented on "X (Without a Desktop)" yesterday as well, and mentioned that they've gotten a whole X stack (fonts not included) into 1 meg of RAM.
We're planning on getting more "mobile-relevant" additions, adaptations and applications, even, included in the GNOME v2.20 release, coming this September. And, as jdub correctly pointed out at the announcement, we're not talking about a "toy version of GNOME" in this context, we're talking a full-on stack, potentially--although it's noteworthy that the stack is quite modular, and it's possible to pick and choose the pieces you need.
I don't expect, for example, that anyone's going to run the GNOME desktop itself on a cellphone or media player. But the user interface on those devices can still take advantage of the goodness of GTK+, Gstreamer, etc.
(They're aren't, by the way, any "Linux-based Nokia phones" that I know of, just the web tablets. All the phones run Symbian.)