Recovery Tool Includes Leak of Palm's WebOS 1.2 43
El Royo writes "Today, Palm leaked version 1.2 of the webOS operating system that powers the Palm Pre. According to PreCentral, the new version was inadvertently included in a recovery tool Palm makes available. New features include support for the forthcoming App Catalog changes, copy and paste from Web sites, improved e-mail search and faster boot times."
Simple (Score:4, Insightful)
I have a Palm Pre because:
.
It's simple.
Re:Simple (Score:4, Interesting)
I hate to be the one to break this to you, but the Palm Pre is about as open as Apple. They have a website where they claim to distribute the source code to their platform, but it is only what they are legally required to distribute. In fact, even that they fall short on: many of the packages aren't compilable as they are holding back on critical header files.
The libpurple-adapter, in particular, must be licensed under GPL (as libpurple itself is), but Palm has been telling representatives of the open source community that they would have to sign an NDA to get access to the full set of files required to make it work, which only be distributed only under a very restrictive temporary license. As someone who has spent a lot of time fighting similar causes with Apple (I'm the developer behind Cydia) I can say that they would /never/ pull shit like this: when I've sent GPL complaints Apple has always fixed the issue rapidly, and I would even receive e-mails from all related departments apologizing for the mixup.
Seriously: if Palm can't even compete to Apple's standards for openness, then you know something horribly evil is going on over there.
Oh please (Score:1, Troll)
How, exactly, do you run Cydia (or any non-Apple approved software) on an iPhone without violating the DMCA?
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It does (Score:1, Troll)
Want to make it illegal to circumvent something in the US? Just throw something, anything, copyrighted behind it.
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I can't argue details of the GPL compliance. GPL non-compliance is not cool and I'll be surprised if Palm fails to fix that.
In terms of code openness, Palm goes way further than apple in in some interesting ways.
for example - can you see the source to MobileSafari, or Apple's contacts or camera app?
They're written in the same javascript that I use to write my own apps - and they provide a great way for me to see how Palm are going about things.
I have those for the pre in my development folder (and the sourc
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes...I think there's a good chance that in two years I could be hooking mine up to a USB hard drive and making it a great low power FTP/torrent/media server. If I'm lucky, there'll "be an app for that."
No USB Host (Score:1, Redundant)
So you won't be plugging storage into it.
But I'm sure there will be lots of uses for something with 3g, bluetooth and 802.11b/g when they're $50 on ebay.
Oops (Score:1, Funny)
New job opening: Release manager. Send your resumes.
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Introducing WebOS 1.2 by Amiga Inc. (Score:1, Funny)
It's a modern day Amiga. Hopefully whoever buys them (HTC?) will not blow it Commodore-style.
Looks like the Pre still can't make my bed for me (Score:1)
accidental (Score:4, Insightful)
I am sorry but how do you "accidentally" leak a copy of the new Palm OS? Even the most basic testing of the tool before release should have caught this.
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It sounds to me that these moderately large software projects should invest in the occasional manual check of their Final/RC builds.
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So yes, it can happen accidentally. Nevertheless, the question still stands: was it an accident?
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Torretz? (Score:2)
Is there a torrent yet, or should I wait til morning to search for one?
website copy/paste (Score:1)
In what, 2 months? (Score:5, Insightful)
I didn't know Blackberry had a standards compliant web browser. Does it pull contacts from Facebook too?
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I like the Blackberry Tour, it is a really nice piece of hardware, very well built and with a great keyboard and great battery life, but the OS is just plain ancient compared to the Pre.
The Pre is missing some of the more advanced features that are present in the the blackberry, but missing a button or an option in the email client is different than missing the entire browser. From the hardware point of view, having a slightly superior keyboard does not make up for the complete lack of touch screen on the B
iPhony (Score:1, Troll)
Re:iPhony (Score:4, Informative)
The iPhone wins at:
The Pre Wins at:
The Conclusion: Different strokes for different folks. They're both great devices - but I think for the Slashdot crowd, there's plenty to love about the Pre.
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># Apps - it's got a gajillion, the Pre has like 40 in the App store, and like 50 homebrew.
50 homebrew apps?? Try *200* apps, and homebrew has really been only active for a month! Where have YOU been?? At this moment there are 50 in the app store. That means in only a few months after release, there are already 250 apps.
How many did the iPhone have after a few months? Oh that's right! They had NONE! There was no app store and no homebrew for a looooooong time.
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The iphone was released on Jan 2007. The app store opened on July 2008.
Do the math. That means iphone users had to wait ONE AND A HALF YEARS before getting any apps.
The Pre was released on June 2009 and the app catalog was available IMMEDIATELY, and two months later there were 250 apps between the two catalogs.
Now who is the "F***ing reject", you anonymous iphone fanboi
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Wait, the pre comes rooted?
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Wait, the pre comes rooted?
So close to as to not matter.
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