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| Mobile Linux device stack gains motion detection | |
| 摘自: linuxdevices.com 被阅读次数: 1110 | |
由 yangyi 于 2007-10-25 18:45:32 提供 | |
Oct. 24, 2007 Trolltech is extending its Qtopia embedded Linux development platform with iPhone-like motion control. Thanks to a partnership with motion-control software firm F-Origin, Qtopia developers will soon be able to trick out their mobile devices with interfaces that respond to landscape/portrait rotation, gestures, and gravity.
Iris comprises a set of APIs and libraries that can be integrated globally for the whole OS, or linked into specific applications. The API offers tools for detection and notification of motion events such as gestures or rotation, and is said to let users:
![]() Iris Motion Control integration architecture (Click to enlarge) According to F-Origin, Iris typically resides in 30-60KB of flash, and when running consumes 500KB of RAM and 1 MIPS (million instructions per second) of processor bandwidth. The key Iris components are Orientation and Mirror, which respectively translate accelerometer data into an internal model of the device's current orientation and reference plan, and then project the virtual display buffer onto the smaller physical display while managing projection and view changes. ![]() Iris Motion Control software architecture (Click to enlarge) Trolltech's Qtopia is a major application development framework and application stack for Linux-powered devices and embedded systems. Stated Benoit Schillings, Trolltech CTO, "Our partnership with F-Origin will aim to efficiently deliver the next-generation of user interfaces." Availability Trolltech did not reveal details about pricing or availability of the Iris extensions. Related Stories:
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