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  • EVO 4G loses 30fps limit thanks to devoted community (video)

    EVO 4G loses 30fps limit thanks to devoted community (video)

    Whatever the reason HTC instituted that 30fps cap on the EVO's graphical output, the issue has just been remedied by -- surprise, surprise -- coders over at xda-developers. We've come across video evidence of the EVO 4G rolling along at a swift 54fps average clip, and another motion picture reel shows the positive effect this has had on the touch-tracking of the handset. Check them both out after the break and hit the source to get educated on how to make this happen on your own EVO. You should be warned that there are still some issues to resolve before the whole thing's buttery smooth, but hey, it's still a lot better than waiting for HTC to do it.

    [Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

    Continue reading EVO 4G loses 30fps limit thanks to devoted community (video)

    EVO 4G loses 30fps limit thanks to devoted community (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Jun 2010 05:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • webOS 1.3.5 to finally kill off app storage limit?

    webOS 1.3.5 to finally kill off app storage limit?

    There's no debating it: having 8GB of onboard storage on your phone is great. What's even better, though, is if you can actually use it -- and currently, owners of Palm Pres and Pixis are stuck with an arbitrary limit for curious technical reasons that caps app installations after a couple hundred megabytes and change. Back in the day when the App Catalog had a few dozen submissions, that was fine and dandy -- but these days, owners are staring down the barrel of a selection more than 500 apps deep, so the time's definitely come to put this annoyance to bed. PreCentral is reporting that webOS 1.3.5 will finally kill this one by moving app storage to another partition on the device's memory -- the media partition -- which has about 7GB free on a completely virgin phone. Coincidentally, this is the same partition that gets used when you hook up mass storage mode on a PC, so to prevent unencumbered copying of apps off the device, Palm will allegedly be employing some sort of on-the-fly encryption that keeps apps secure while connected. Next step, Palm: microSD expansion so we can install each and every one of those 500-plus apps. What do you say?

    webOS 1.3.5 to finally kill off app storage limit? originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 08:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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