Quote:
Originally Posted by makkonen
I wish I had a good list of things to do that would be helpful, but I don't really know. I haven't spent much time on android lately myself, so I can't really give great direction.
I wish some people with extra devices could jump in and start playing around with flashing/accessing NAND from Android, because that seems like it'd be a big step in the right direction.
|
Are you referring to someone with a native android device? Or is that something I can do with my TP? It is the only one I have, so if I can use it for advancment without a huge risk (I know anything carries some risk
) I would be willing to try.
Quote:
Of course, if you're willing to jump into the C code and try to figure it out, then there's all sorts of things that could be worked on -- but that's a lot of effort, and after looking at it for 6 months, I'm still not much use at it, so I wouldn't recommend it to anyone else, unless you're interested for your own edification.
|
I am a coder by nature, and while C may be far ahead of what I am actually good at I know that learning any programming language only advances knowledge and capacity in others. So if you can point me somewhere to get started I'm ready
(Though it may take a while before I am good enough to be useful
)
Quote:
My suggestion is just to find the things you use your phone for, the features that are lacking, and try to figure out why. Like the folks here have done with MMS -- you might not be able to get everything working, but you'll start to figure out what works and what needs fixing.
|
My current complaints are the same ones everyone else has i.e. camera, gps, battery life, and SD access. If there is something specific in any of those areas you can point me to work on (particularly the camera or SD access) I would appreciate it! Side note: MMS doesn't work with smartphones on my carrier last I was aware
Don't really ever use them, but I hope they catch up with things soon, as I really like their rates and customer service, the phone selection and network features just leave much to be desired.