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First North American OpenMoko/FreeRunners Arrive

Posted by timothy on Tue Jul 15, 2008 01:44 PM
from the reminds-one-of-sony-mylo dept.
holdenkarau writes "The North American OpenMoko FreeRunners are starting to arrive. It would appear that the OpenMoko still has problems with some 3G networks, including AT&T. Although, in my own personal completely unscientific test, 2 out of 3 AT&T SIM cards worked. Check out the unboxing of a complete FreeRunner (along with debug board) and my experience getting the FreeRunner up and running. Or a direct link to the pictures for those of you bored with text. If you feel brave enough to take the plunge, you can buy your own FreeRunner from the OpenMoko store."

Related Stories

[+] Mobile: OpenMoko In Stores On July 4 212 comments
ruphus13 writes "July 4 will be day when OpenMoko's Neo FreeRunner will be available to US consumers. Being Open Source, it is modifiable down to the core. From the article: 'The FreeRunner is based on a GNU/Linux, and it will initially ship with basic software to make calls, send and receive SMS, and manage contacts. But the company is encouraging users to write and install their own applications. Software updates will add features to the phone over time, and the company said an August update will enable location-based services.'"
[+] Mobile: Canadian Firms Get Behind OpenMoko/FreeRunner 132 comments
mario writes "Now that the OpenMoko platform has stabilized enough to provide the OM2008 image (supporting the three major toolkits), things are starting to heat up. Linuxdevices is reporting on the start of a port of Devicescape's connect application. Koolu (another Canadian company) is also doing development for its W.E. phone (a branded FreeRunner). Which leads me to ask: Where are the American companies?"
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  • by jacquesm (154384) <j&ww,com> on Tuesday July 15, @02:09PM (#24199993) Homepage

    When I realized it did not have a camera. While a hackable phone has immense appeal having to lug around a second phone or camera is really too much a of a hassle. Oh well, we'll just wait for release II I guess.

  • by bill_mcgonigle (4333) * on Tuesday July 15, @02:11PM (#24200027) Homepage Journal

    Lots of North America is only served (or well-served) by CDMA networks. Hopefully, with Verizon embracing LTE [wikipedia.org] for its next network build-out we'll finally have compatible transcontinental coverage. Next, the world.

      • by bill_mcgonigle (4333) * on Tuesday July 15, @02:41PM (#24200591) Homepage Journal

        hopefully CDMA areas are GSM in 4 years!

        Hey, at least click the link I bothered to include. :)

        First, 3G GSM adopted the W-CDMA air interface. Now, the traditionally-CDMA carriers are adopting the 3GPP's new IP-based protocol with an OFDM air-interface. The old definitions are just confusing at this point, but the upshot is the standards are converging. LTE allows for integrated fail-over to older tech, so the carriers don't have to have a build-out completely done on day 1 - they can do it incrementally and the phones will work as people move, but technically a Verizon user could roam on an AT&T tower.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          I'm trying recall the name of the project that is the open radio system. With something such as a general radio and an antenna to handle multiple frequencies, couldn't the phone use either GSM or CDMA?

          *google*

          Ahh! http://hpsdr.org/ [hpsdr.org]

          The term I was looking for was software defined radio.

  • by Goaway (82658) on Tuesday July 15, @02:15PM (#24200091) Homepage

    Although, in my own personal completely unscientific test, 2 out 3 AT&T SIM cards worked.

    Sounds like Open Source to me!

  • 3G network... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Etherized (1038092) on Tuesday July 15, @02:39PM (#24200545)

    OpenMoko still has problems with some 3G networks, including AT&T.

    This claim is misleading - the device has no UMTS radio, so of course AT&T's 3G network isn't supported. What's really happening is that some people who have "3G" SIM cards are having trouble accessing AT&Ts GSM network.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 15, @03:31PM (#24201565)

    I just got mine, and all I have to say is....

    game over!

    This is not just a phone. It is a handheld Linux based router! It has a full stack via USB, and in the other direction via the GSM. It is open source hardware, using open source software. I hope a few of you realize what I am talking about. I don't think a device like this (this small, and compact) existed which has this functionality. Routing.

    After testing three different sim cards I finally got it to work with ATT. (G3 Fireball, not the one with the round contacts on the back, the one with the square contacts on the back it ends in G 4003 or something to that effect, its posted on the openmoko wiki.

    Mark this post, this is the beginning of the end my friends!

    • Re:Pictures (Score:5, Informative)

      by holdenkarau (1130485) on Tuesday July 15, @01:54PM (#24199747) Homepage

      Take them OF the phone, not WITH the phone!

      The phone actually has no camera, so the pictures were taken with a kodak digital camera. I'm not very good at takeing pictures I'll admit.

      • i suspect there is an actual macro button on that camera - it looks like a small flower.

        and tilt the unit slightly and you'll stop taking pictures of yourself taking pictures.

        unless of course you're the guy in the ebay tea kettle pic...

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      the webbrowser currently available through the repositories is quite a pain in the ass. the rendering is butt-ugly, scrolling is only possible using scrollbars, zooming is only possible using the tiny zoom-buttons and the keyboard didn't show up when I focused the textfield at google. but I'm sure things will get better soon.
    • by Tony (765) on Tuesday July 15, @02:54PM (#24200867) Homepage Journal

      First and foremost, because you control the software.

      Secondly, the iPhone is *much* more than $200. That's the subsidized price. By the time you finish with the contract, you've spent quite a bit on your iPhone.

      Really, though, you'd only want one right now if you wish to hack on it. There's no reason to get one as your regular phone if you're not a hacker. The software stack is still in its infancy.

      Mine is supposed to arrive in a week. I'm pretty damned excited. I figure it needs some good games, like Nethack.

    • Sounds to me like they made a bunch of stuff up. The OpenMoko folks have gone to great lengths to develop the hardware platform from a completely open perspective, so that it developers can have full access to the hardware and full specs to program to.

      Ultimately, calling this a Windows phone running Linux is like saying that all ARM processors are really Windows machines that can also run Linux.

      The article really focused on OpenMoko vs. iPhone, but at least as far as I read, didn't get the point. The iPhone is geared toward those who buy things already working and the FreeRunner is aimed at those who want to make it better.
      -N