With Jellybean being released in the SDK today, (already downloaded), do you all think that if I attempt to port it, will a ICS kernel work with it? Because I'm just working on getting a copy that BOOTS and after that, the devs can build off it.
With Jellybean being released in the SDK today, (already downloaded), do you all think that if I attempt to port it, will a ICS kernel work with it? Because I'm just working on getting a copy that BOOTS and after that, the devs can build off it.
With Jellybean being released in the SDK today, (already downloaded), do you all think that if I attempt to port it, will a ICS kernel work with it? Because I'm just working on getting a copy that BOOTS and after that, the devs can build off it.
With Jellybean being released in the SDK today, (already downloaded), do you all think that if I attempt to port it, will a ICS kernel work with it? Because I'm just working on getting a copy that BOOTS and after that, the devs can build off it.
Flash does work on the opti s. I using adobe flash 10.2If you can get flash to work I'm behind ya
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Probably. Even with all the awesome software hacks and tweaks the devs around these parts do, I doubt the opti's 600 mhz single core processor and 512 mb RAM could handle 60fps, and "Project Butter" would be a total joke, and even if it could run, the Opti's resolution isn't that great either. I don't mean to hate, but the optimus was launched with 2.2, which is something that was released back in 2010.Don't get me wrong it would be cool but could are little s handle jelly beans 60fps without explodeing?
...I don't mean to hate, but the optimus was launched with 2.2, which is something that was released back in 2010.
But, the devices are made for being pushed, that's the smart in smartphones, and also, AFAIK the OptiS is dual-core, but with one core being allocated to system resources, and one core to user applications.
But, the devices are made for being pushed, that's the smart in smartphones, and also, AFAIK the OptiS is dual-core, but with one core being allocated to system resources, and one core to user applications.
It is dual-core but not in the same way that an Athlon X2 is dual-core.
One core is dedicated to radio functions (calls, SMS, 3G data) and the main 600MHz core runs the system+apps.
Before anyone asks, no you cannot change the function of the dedicated radio core.
So doesn't that mean its a single core processor? ....I'm starting to get confused in this brave new world of system on a chip design.....its madness I tell you!
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Think of it as an old 386/486/586 with a math co-processor. It's a "helper" to the main processor, dedicated to a set function.