By David Meyer on 7 September 2006 11:40
Despite being created purely for developers, the Greenphone is a more attractive device than one might imagine. Nord explained: "We wanted developers to use it as their everyday phone."
He added: "It's kind of mind-boggling for developers. Everybody usually wants to protect the software in their phone but we want to let the developers experiment and innovate."
Manufactured by Yuhua Teltech in Shanghai, the Greenphone runs on a 312MHz Intel XScale processor, has a mini-USB port and a 1.3 megapixel camera and takes standard mini-SD cards. It has a touchscreen and stylus, which Nord says will help developers create paint applications.
It also has session initiation protocol (SIP) stack capabilities, which according to Nord made it "easy" to produce VoIP capabilities and add multimedia functionality. "We'll see tons of applications but I'm also interested in seeing new ways that people can interact with their phones," he said.
Future iterations of the device are likely to include built-in wi-fi capabilities but there are no plans at present to include GPS.
Photo credit: David Meyer








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1. anonymous
Hmm - about 5x too expensive for me ... and most Linux developers.