After an admittedly brief search for a "sfw" file/video format, I'm guessing that the Adobe (formerly Macromedia) swf file format is intended, standing for "small web format" or "Shockwave Flash" depending on the day of week. That's what the read link provided shows after being transgibberdized through Google's better-than-nothing service as "Mosaic positive 2.4-inch screen and can SWF format AVI video broadcast shows the rate can reach 30 frames / sec," which I'm guessing is closer to the source than the english pages cited (though, so far, I haven't been successful verifying that from the horse's mouth at www.aigo.com.cn).
If, indeed, it is Flash, per the usual, no word on what version of Flash it is (Flash 4/5/6/7/8/9, Flash Lite 1.1/2.0+, etc.), whether or not it processes ActionScript for programmatic control, or whether or not it is a licensed version or a home-grown (or third-source) version. For what it's worth, the site www.beareyes.com.cn reports, "2.4 inch color display, support for MP4 (avi), swf format Video Player." However, that doesn't definitively address whether it can run programs (like games other than the usual non-Flash, 16-bit games) or not. Recently, the Ramos V100 had claimed swf ability, but it turns out (according to one programmer) that it only supported timeline playback. Meanwhile, the Ramos V300 (with a seemingly unusual screen resolution) is explicitly claiming Flash Lite 1.1/2.0 ability, but who knows. As always, it's not easy to find full information about Flash compatibility. Perhaps a Chinese-literate person can delve deeper....
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After an admittedly brief search for a "sfw" file/video format, I'm guessing that the Adobe (formerly Macromedia) swf file format is intended, standing for "small web format" or "Shockwave Flash" depending on the day of week. That's what the read link provided shows after being transgibberdized through Google's better-than-nothing service as "Mosaic positive 2.4-inch screen and can SWF format AVI video broadcast shows the rate can reach 30 frames / sec," which I'm guessing is closer to the source than the english pages cited (though, so far, I haven't been successful verifying that from the horse's mouth at www.aigo.com.cn).
If, indeed, it is Flash, per the usual, no word on what version of Flash it is (Flash 4/5/6/7/8/9, Flash Lite 1.1/2.0+, etc.), whether or not it processes ActionScript for programmatic control, or whether or not it is a licensed version or a home-grown (or third-source) version. For what it's worth, the site www.beareyes.com.cn reports, "2.4 inch color display, support for MP4 (avi), swf format Video Player." However, that doesn't definitively address whether it can run programs (like games other than the usual non-Flash, 16-bit games) or not. Recently, the Ramos V100 had claimed swf ability, but it turns out (according to one programmer) that it only supported timeline playback. Meanwhile, the Ramos V300 (with a seemingly unusual screen resolution) is explicitly claiming Flash Lite 1.1/2.0 ability, but who knows. As always, it's not easy to find full information about Flash compatibility. Perhaps a Chinese-literate person can delve deeper....