Smartphones has become a necessary part in everyone’s life. Nobody can imagine their lives without holing technology in hand. And, in this tech era, this is not enough. People want a smartphones with more power, more speed and fast performance and all theses coulb be happened if the device is blessed by more powerful RAM. But, leaving the league of all smartphone makers, Mozilla is looking at smartphones with a complete new phenomenon.
Mozilla is coming out with its Flame handset which will give the power to developers. Company made great effort to create a sound mobile ecosystem for smartphone market while iOS and Android have already been proved their suzerainty. Now Mozilla is exhorting developers to develop HTML5 apps for low cost smartphone devices for emerging markets.
This Flame smartphone is first official Firefox OS reference phone that started for pre-order in last May and then Mozilla begun to ship the device in last July, after ending the preorder duration for developers. But, the phone faced some bugs and errors. Now, company has decided to bring back the device with a new article- "getting started with your Flame device" to instruct developers about functionality of using it.
Flame is priced at $170 which is a 3G touch phone with dual SIM support. It comes along with 1GB of RAM and takes the power from 1.2GHZ dual-core processor. It sports 4.5-inch display that offers 854x480 pixels resolution. It comes integrated with 5-megapixel rear camera and 2-megapixel front-facing snapper.
According to Geeksphone, Flame handset is technically a developer phone not a consumer phone without carrier distribution. On the other side, some other devices, run on Firefox OS are quite different from Flame. As an example, Alcatel's One Touch Fire which has only 256MB RAM. Some more low-cost smartphone devices with low-end specs, run on Firefox OS are still in line to enter in the emerging market including India, China and Indonesia.
So, the center of news is the instruction guideline which has been added for developers to instructs them about how to use ADB to check that their apps will work efficiently on Flame’s 1GB of RAM or not.