Here are a few things that I have learned. First of all, one can connect a data cable to the handset. I used the FutureDial cable number 19 (which has a built-in Prolific PL2303 USB-serial converter). This is important for connecting to my Mac OS X machine, since there are no Mac drivers compatible with the Curitel USB interface within the phone itself. The Prolific drivers can be found on their web site. There are some people who have hacked the similar Audiovox 8900 and the Virgin Mobile Snapper. They have been able to upload graphics, sounds, and game applets. The graphics and sound part sounds a little strange to me, since I can just message myself with a graphics attachment and save that as a wallpaper or screen-saver.
I was able to decipher the binary phone book formats of my old and new phones enough to be able to download and parse the old phone book entries, and convert and upload the entries to the new phone. Too bad BitPIM doesn't support this phone. The developers seem to have a moratorium on development for it, after seeing enough people with problems. Sigh.
By snooping the phone's file system, I also found a reference to an XML file containing the phone's capabilities. Here are some interesting tidbits:
- It has an ARM7 processor;
- It accepts MMS messages up to 100K in size (and graphics 480x640 in dimension);
- It accepts J2ME java downloadable programs (JVM version VMID 2.0);
- The networking software is capable of IPv4, SSL-3.0 and TLS-1.0;
- The web browser does tables but not Java or Javascript;
At least one brave person has tried it and documented how he did it. The hacker in me says, "cool."
1 comment:
good informative article about audiovox thanks for shearing.
Audiovox Battries
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