




An Open Source Alternative to Verizon's GetItNow? 54
"A bit of explanation: Recently, I was trying to find ringtones for my LG cell phone, and was having some difficulties in figuring out how to even get them onto my phone without the cable.
Finally, I contacted Verizon Wireless via email.
My original email: 'How do I provide content *I create* on the GetItNow network AND/OR how do I SMS the content to my own phone?'
Their response was to first explain how to use GetItNow to download ringtones (many of which really suck, none of which are free). They continued with 'You are unable to SMS Get It Now created from any websites to your phone
and [we] apologize for any inconvience this might have caused.
To my humor (due to the fact that every application I had downloaded had crashed), they also said: 'Verizon Wireless requires extensive lab and field-testing of the Get It Now
applications we choose to offer, to ensure that our customers get the highest-quality applications in the marketplace
today. (Emphasis, mine)
In response, I asked: 'How would an open-source developer put applications onto the get-it-now phones without charging customers for use of the program? And, while we are at it, can I only use Brew to write applications for verizon phones, or can I use Java?'
They gave me the link to the GetItNow developer site (click on Developer Zone at the bottom) and said, 'Verizon Wireless does offer SMS downloads of ringtones and graphics through our Vtext.com website.'
As a side question: I would prefer to write my applications in Java instead of Brew (which Verizon GetItNow does NOT support). Has anyone had experience using any of the Brew-in-Java implementations (like the one from IBM)?"
Ultimately. (Score:1, Offtopic)
The more money companies making all kinds of digital devices recieve when they allow us to really change/hack them, is the incentive for this to continue.
Fix the bigger problem (Score:3, Interesting)
* Users spot the need for software that doesn't yet exist
* People 'vote' (or something) on the importance of these projects, and/or share any relevant information (like an existing project which can do the same thing)
* Groups of coders, documenters, testers etc. form to make these project a reality.
Let's face it - a lot of ideas get lost because the people who happen to think of them don't happen to have the time or the skills to code them.
Re:Fix the bigger problem (Score:3, Interesting)
market research (Score:2)
Without those popularity ratings, software market pre
certified? (Score:3, Interesting)
Verizon Wireless requires extensive lab and field-testing of the Get It Now applications we choose to offer, to ensure that our customers get the highest-quality applications in the marketplace today.
That sounds like a "Verizon-certified" thingy. Similar to the Nintendo Seal on old NES games. A way for consumers to know if what they are getting meets some quality standard.
There almost has to be a way around it and develop personal software for GetItNow, much like the volumes upon volumes of games out there without Nintendo's little seal of approval.
Perhaps a better way to present it to VErizon is to ask "Is it possible for me to develop my own little personal application for GetItNow?" rather than linking in open source. Verizon doesn't necessarily need to know that you're trying to come up with some open source stuff.
Re:certified? (Score:1)
Re:certified? (Score:2)
The other side of that is that all of the programs I *have* downloaded suck and crash all the time, so I am not sure I would want their seal of approval
Re:certified? (Score:5, Interesting)
Brew applications are written in C/C++. The reason for the testing/certification is because they can trivially cause all sorts of damage (remember you can make pointers to anything and trash anything - you don't get an industrial strength operating system in the phone with applications and data suitably protected). Additionally the Brew programming environment is crap. For example the way you find out free space on the EFS (embedded file system) is to write a file, fill up the filesystem, and see how big the file got! [This actually also causes some models to panic, reboot, panic on an infinite cycle] Contrast with J2ME which uses a defined virtual machine which can be proven to be safe.
The "quality standard" is it not crashing the phone. The vast majority of the games are pure unadulterated crap. For example there is a XXX game (you know the big action film with Vin Diesel in it). After several screens of copyrights and license agreements, you end up with a clone of Pole Position (that ancient Atari game where you move a blob between parallel blobs that are supposed to be a road going off into the distance). And it is REALLY REALLY bad. In fact most of the games look like they took an entire afternoon to write.
Qualcomm and Verizon will lose this game. People expect much more, and will vote with their money. Here is by far the best explanation of just how dismal it is [colinfahey.com].
certified? usually yes (Score:1)
The big difference btwn nintendo and verizon is that verizon has much stricter controls built into the hardware/software to prevent just the kind of thing you mentioned
Re:certified? usually yes (Score:3, Interesting)
When I try to download from any site other than Sprint, I get a message on my phone letting me know this is untrusted content and Sprint is not responsible for it's behavior and a Yes/No check box to proceed or cancel the download.
Other than that one extra step, there isn't much difference between an open source download (like the Mobile Mule program that lets you remotely monitor
Re:certified? (Score:1)
You're out of luck... (Score:4, Informative)
Basically you have to join the program, pay qualcomm to unlock your phone and then pay around $1000 per phone to have your app tested.
They're unlikely to let you in because people are paying $$'s for games that are poorer than open source equivalents. The $$'s go to subsidise the cost of handsets.
I got discouraged, but feel free to poke around the brew websites + user forums for more info. As much as it screws homebrew development brew seems fairly popular (read profitable).
you don't get on to the real web from verizons or. (Score:2, Interesting)
providing j2me's for download(over-the-air download) for example is easy as making pie, you just need the right mimetypes set on the server and you're set(sdk's availabe from sun&phonemakers). then the guy wanting your app just browses to your page with his phone and downloads it. providing sms(mms) installation is a bit harder and not so simple as it (doh!) involves getting all the things required for starting to send mms's on demand.
you could very easily create a librar
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:3, Informative)
Meanwhile Verizon doesn't allow you to run custom apps on the hardware you bought.
Now I gotta go back and use their crappy service again, really blows!
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:3, Informative)
There are ways to install brew apps via a data cable, but you still need a generated license file from Qualcomm for the thing to run. Getting this file runs upwar
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:2)
thank god tie-in is illeagal here(and therefore there is nothing 'locked' in the phones sold, and gsm providers have to compete with calling/data prices that are easily comparable).
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:2)
Why oh why is the US so unenlightened
Too bad Verizon CDMA has far and away the best coverage. T-M can't touch them in that regard. The worst is that I'll have to cough up my $200 "termination fee" unless I can beg the powers that be to let me out of it since I'm about halfway thru a 2 year contract.
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:1)
wouldn't matter, most likely she would have been transferred by now to a completely new location/business/job description by now.
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:2)
Re:you don't get on to the real web from verizons (Score:1)
There are a few sites around (Score:3, Informative)
Another one is Midlet.org [midlet.org], but I've been mailing the site admin for 2 months trying to get a J2ME RSS reader I wrote posted on the site, with no reply. The downloads look like they were last updated on Jan 23rd and there is a fairly lively forum.
You can download via wap at http://midlet.org/wap
Re:There are a few sites around (Score:3, Informative)
Brew is the only was short of possibly assembler to make an app for a verizon phone, and you have to pay to have the brew apps signed so that they will even run once you copy them to the phone.
GAGIN, BALpatches, PST and HowardForums (Score:5, Informative)
It let me see files, but not download or upload them to my 1monthold Motorola T720c.
BALpatches are other binary patches to AppLoader.
If you get the "update" for Motorola TrueSync 3.1, you can install it without having an earlier version (again, in violation of the EULA) and use a $16 USB or serial cable to syncronize Outlook or PalmDesktop to your phone. It also comes with USB drivers (for Windows of course) to handle the USB-to-serial (I think the T720 just has a Prolific chip or integrated IP to handle USB) and let you use the phone as a modem.
PST is a Motorola app for messing with all sorts of really deep, nasty stuff in your phone. The guy who distributes it (google beavermjr) supplies a patch, but that didn't come down right for me, so I don't know what it does. PST comes with a large collection of USB drivers, so I assume the app isn't talking to the phone with a set of AT-command extensions.
HowardForums have a lot of frustrated Verizon subscribers discussing how to use the capabilities their phones already come with without paying VZW $more.
I have a Windows COM port "interposer" that watches traffic & colors in the display window according to direction. It would be good for reverse-engineering the protocol for implementation in open source. I'll post the name when I find it again.
Re:GAGIN, BALpatches, PST and HowardForums (Score:1)
lg vx 6000 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:lg vx 6000 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:lg vx 6000 (Score:2)
Re:lg vx 6000 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:lg vx 6000 (Score:2)
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Re:lg vx 6000 (Score:2)
BitPim (Score:1, Informative)
Vtext.com? (Score:2)
Try it for yourself, and post the resul
Re:Vtext.com? (Score:2)
I tried sending it directly from Eudora, but the Detach Object is disabled.
So, I found the user manual online, and almost all of the advanced features say they are not implemented! How the hell can they sell phones based on features that aren't implemented???
Re:Vtext.com? (Score:5, Informative)
I've found that if you use phone_number@vzwpix.com you can attach jpegs up to about 30k. Oddly, if you send a
Re:Vtext.com? (Score:2)
Remote host said: 550 Invalid email address in MAIL FROM:my email removed for /. posting
Re:Vtext.com? (Score:2)
You get charged for text messaging to use it if your package doesn't have unlimited messages.
too bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Carriers like Verizon and Sprint do their best to limit what you can do with your phone. They think that earning pennies by selling crappy applications and ringtones is of greater value than keeping their customers happy.
Nokia also provides enormous support to software developers. You can download free IDE's and SDK's [nokia.com] from their website. Pick your favorite language - C++, Java, OPL, VisualBasic, and soon Python [mobitopia.com]. Nokia puts no restrictions on what you can do with YOUR phone. WHY? Because they know that they're in the business of selling phones, not software.
Re:too bad (Score:3, Informative)
might have something to do that here in Finland you can't sell packages that have a phone+gsm subscription(rationale is that it becomes too hard for the customer to evaluate the REAL price of the phone when the price is tied into a monthly subscription and complicated fees). also ther newer(series60) phones would be pretty much reduced to useless crap if there weren't the huge number of 3rd party apps available.
besides, this way there has been an enermous number of companie
Re:too bad (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, Sprint sells stuff on their site and probably makes a lot of money that way (I get a $5 per month free credit towards Sprint downloads as part of my package) but I get 99% of my apps, games, ringers, etc. from the free websites.
Sprint PCS (Score:2, Informative)
With Sprint you can roll your own apps and download them from the web if you have your MIME types set correctly. Google for it, you should find all the info you need.
Re:Sprint PCS (Score:2)
Finally, after complaining by phone and in person about 10 times (including contacting them with their in-store Corporate Phone a couple times, and writing them a letter on
Motorola T720 (Score:2, Informative)
So far, I'm very happy with the T720 - the only negative is it
Re:Motorola T720 (Score:1)
Re:Motorola T720 (Score:2)
There was a post further up [slashdot.org] that had some info.
http://www.3gupload.com (Score:1, Informative)
Re:http://www.3gupload.com (Score:1)