Quote:
Originally Posted by kamizase
This is a _very_ questionable statement.
The Nook Touch has a different SOC inside, a TI OMAP3621. That one contains a PowerVR SGX530 gpu. This is an old 3d video accelerator, but it does have OpenGL ES 2.0 capability. While the Freescale iMX508 used on most modern ereaders doesn't have anything like that, no need for 3d acceleration in a ereader. So it won't run anything that makes OpenGL calls (and those doesn't have to be 3d related, 2d is accelerated too). That means that Beryll's list doesn't mean a lot in the context of other devices than Nooks.
Which is probably why ereader manufacturers aren't storming to install Android on their devices, because what would be the point of that? Android market? If this is such a great idea, why doesn't Nook come with it? Why do you have to root it first?
One word: control.
Can you guarantee your device will run every possible app out there? Apparently you can't with the given hardware. Which is why widespread Android in ereaders is a Pipedream, at least during the current generation. Maybe next...
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My Sony PRS-T1 sports the same processor as the M92, and it is powered by android.
Not all android software works, but at least my favorite dictionary app, Goldendict, which works in perfect combination with FBreader, has offered me a great reading experience for a long time.
One software can make a big difference. For every user it can be a different piece of software that proves very important. Most people today use desktop computers, portable computers, pads, phones, that offer millions of software to please everyone, because everyone has slightly or entirely different needs from the guy next door. Most companies selling readers (and their marketing people on forums such as mobileread, the number one forum about readers on this planet) want us to believe that we should be happy with closed systems. Of course this point of view is only an expression of a commercial strategy : preventing readers from becoming commodities and maintaining the margins that go with a closed device. This strategy has no future : as technology progresses (fast refresh rate, color), readers will become closer to pads, and customers will not put up with anything less than android/iOS/Windows/Ubuntu.