Posted by planetbeing on under iphe, realiti, comex, obama, oses, worst case, sdk, voodoo, kernel, presidency, sectors, samsung, linux, map |

So the big news yesterday (other than Obama winning the presidency!) is that we have enough of a low-level NAND driver now that we're able to read from NAND! It was epic win. There turns out to be not as much hardware voodoo as, say, Merlot, so that's pretty good news. It seems to work (albeit slowly) and I even wrote the ECC routines today (and those seem to work as well).
Unfortunately, in the course of this, we discovered several unfortunate things. First, I can't seem to find anything that might write to NAND. It's probably not much more complicated and probably reuses a lot of the stuff we've been doing, but it means that we might have to look in the kernel for that code, which sort of bites (a lot of the kernel is in C++ and not as friendly to reverse).
The second thing is the realization that all of Samsung's proprietary FTL code is in this thing. Without being able to understand it, we can't actually map sectors to data and we can't make sense of the NAND data or write new data to it in a useful way. Unfortunately, this code is liable to be ridiculously complex, since it's basically their SDK they ship to everyone. Without it, we can still proceed, but the iPhone can't read Linux's data and Linux can't read iPhone's data. In the worst case, we can't even have both OSes on the NAND at once.
Still, being able to dump NAND through USB is a substantial accomplishment, and we're well on our way.
Tagi: iphe, realiti, comex, obama, oses, worst case, sdk, voodoo, kernel, presidency, sectors, samsung, linux, map
Posted by on under vivaz, wall street journal, handset sales, sony ericsson, quarterly profit, fri, oses, handsets, milli, net profit, last quarter, q1, q2, x10, launch, buggy, wall street, stockholm, nbsp, surprise |


Can it be, did Sony Ericsson just post its first quarterly profit since Q2 2008? Make.Believe it: the fantastically handsome crew from Stockholm is reporting a Q1 2010 net profit of €21 million, besting analysts who were expecting a €128 million loss. Importantly, SE managed to bump the average handset selling price to €134 on 10.5 million sold compared to the 14.5 million sold at an average of €120 a year prior thanks, in part, to the launch of its
uneven X10 and
buggy Vivaz. For those keeping track, that drops Sony Ericsson's share of global handset sales down from 5% last quarter to around 4% currently. So yeah,
slashing head count and closing facilities has earned Sony Ericsson a short-term win on Wall Street. Remains to be seen, however, if they're now spread too thin to continue juggling Symbian, Windows Mobile, and Android with
expectations for even more Sony Ericsson supported OSes in the future.
Sony Ericsson posts surprise profit from unsurprising handsets originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Apr 2010 04:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tagi: vivaz, wall street journal, handset sales, sony ericsson, quarterly profit, fri, oses, handsets, milli, net profit, last quarter, q1, q2, x10, launch, buggy, wall street, stockholm, nbsp, surprise