Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"We need a digital camera that can be switched on and fire off that first shot fast. It's not a commonly tracked statistic on any review site, and nobody seems to have this information for every camera. We were hoping other readers could inform us as to what small digital cameras can fire off their first pics in under a second (ideally under half a second). It needs to be small, but mostly, just really quick in operation. Thanks!"
my droid with an omap 3430 has been clocked at 1.25ghz for the past few months. but welcome to the club palm
@tallen1331 The droid looks like it can run at that speed.
there's nothing about the pre hardware that gives you the perception that 1 is possible, let alone 1.2. Mine sure doesn't (i have a weakling pre that can't run it, not a chuck norris pre as they call it).
@tallen1331 Actually the Droid with OMAP has stability issues being clocked past the 1.2+ghz just as the Pre does...the droid is not immune to overclocking issues...
@tallen1331 Then your aware that the Droid had stability issues just the same as the Pre when hitting 1.2 Ghz
@carpediemwine
Im well aware, just saying that the droid community has been able to clock past 1.2 for quite some time using the same processor. the only stability issues ive come across were when using an ultra low voltage kernel clocked past 1.2 ghz. But the standard voltage 1.25 has been 100% stable for months, all the while getting 2X the stock battery life (petes BB rom)
@tallen1331 For the record, I don't really recommend running it past 800MHz.
@tallen1331 To those who are constantly saying "Droid did it", please realize that most of the source to WebOS was available to the public for a lot less time than Android was, by almost a year.
A lot of homebrew developers on the WebOS platform may have been a little slow by a couple months, but they've spent a lot of time working on an on-device installer that can install and remove custom kernels on the fly, sideload apps, install themes and modify the OS UI just to name one project, several others have spent time on other things like a native IRC app, backup utility, and dealing with Palm repeatedly making changes on the back-end.
We don't need to load a custom ROM or force ourselves to constantly install our hacks via USB, we do it mostly on the device itself. Which says a lot for the platform.
@Kyusaku Well said. Add to that the fact that Palm approves of and publicly lauds the homebrew and patch community (well, maybe not the overclocking, but even there Palm stopped short of prohibiting overclocking or saying it would definitely void the warranty), and that HP has continued that trend. {ProfJonathan}
@Kyusaku what are you talking about.....
@patp
He's talking about loading things via preware mostly.
@Kyusaku Have you never heard of ROM Manager? No? Didn't think so.