Of course.. there is always the X based desktop option good on office apps, not so good on handheld browsers..though minimo is looking better.
can siag be compiled against qt? Looks at a quick glance.. like no. could be compiled for X though....
koffice compiled for z? could it be done?
I don't know much about non gtk office apps....
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The issue is still the small screen and code size. If you simplify and unclutter the interface to a big, heavy desktop office app, and cut out half the features to reduce code size in order to adapt it to a handheld, it's not clear to me that you end up with anything better suited to the small environment than if you had started from scratch. But there's all that free (in both senses) code out there, so the thought often occurs to me that this or that desktop app would do well on my Z. I'm looking at KNX in that regard now, although that guy is a bit of a special case as regards the UI.
The glaring ommision that Guylhem points out in his paper is the web browser piece. I got both Mozilla and Firefox running under pocket workstation on my Z, but that was with a 4GB microdrive and 128MB of swap! And still they were slooow. It is the first time I've tried that where the zaurus hasn't locked up, however, so that's progress. The last time I looked at Minimo, it didn't impress me. But it certainly has potential. If someone could give embedded konqueror some love, it might be made to be servicable.
My guess is that there are too many crying needs and not enough skilled volunteers. That's why the whole split with OE dismays me so much. I've been away from the community for a couple of years, so I hadn't caught up with developments. I'm still not all the way up to speed, but the tension between modern features and backwards compatibility is a familiar story. (
heh heh. he said "familiar") The trouble is that users often get squeezed in such disputes, and that certainly seems to be happening here.
Maybe an "entente cordiale" isn't possible between the Qtopia and OPIE crowds. Maybe what's needed is a shotgun wedding, in which neither the bride nor groom need be present. That is, can we devise an environment that will host
both types of apps? If WINE can run winders on Linux, surely its possible to play with union mounts and the dynamic loader in such a way as to give each type of app what it expects from the system?
In that connection, can someone point me at documentation on hard vs. soft float on the ARM? I thought it was
all soft float since the ARM doesn't have an ALU.