this is 2nd hand info from my g/f who happens to deal with Qualcomm from time to time (the makers of the before mentioned driverless chips people bemoan), and their licensing is really wacky... its easy to licence the chip for use with features unsupported in the agreement (through either hardware chopping, or software lack of support). The company she is working for (that assists carriers, and makers of cell phones) do the same kind of thing... a chip that can have features enabled, or disabled with the presence of more, or less money.
So it quite honestly is probably not a case of 'Give me the drivers already damnit!', and more a case of... damn... we should have sprung for all the features on that chip.
If it was as easy as a driver... it probably would have already been done.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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this is 2nd hand info from my g/f who happens to deal with Qualcomm from time to time (the makers of the before mentioned driverless chips people bemoan), and their licensing is really wacky... its easy to licence the chip for use with features unsupported in the agreement (through either hardware chopping, or software lack of support). The company she is working for (that assists carriers, and makers of cell phones) do the same kind of thing... a chip that can have features enabled, or disabled with the presence of more, or less money.
So it quite honestly is probably not a case of 'Give me the drivers already damnit!', and more a case of... damn... we should have sprung for all the features on that chip.
If it was as easy as a driver... it probably would have already been done.