It's pretty common that these devices broadcast messages without
registering them properly. Hopefully the companies that the OEMS are
outsourcing their work to will figure out the right way soon.
So far, HTC, Samsung and Sharp PPC devices for sure do this. Probaly
others. I suspect we're dealing with dev teams who are still a little in
the embedded systems mindset - "the device will always be in the state
it is when we ship it".
CV
The PocketTV Team wrote:
> we just confirmed that the Samsung i-600 has the same firmware bug than the
> Motorola Q, i.e. it sends spurious private messages to the applications.
>
> this firmware bug is documented here:
> http://www.modaco.com/Motorola-Q-Spu...a-t242539.html
>
> in the case of the Samsung i-600, the spurious messages are sent when the
> phone is flipped open or closed. the message sent to all application is
> 0x000080ca - which is a value reserved for interthread-communications in
> applications and should NEVER be sent to an application unless it expects
> this message to be sent.
>
> this can cause applications to randomly crash or misbehave when the Samsung
> i-600 is flipped closed or opened.
>
> i think that the Samsung i-600 is also known as the Sprint PCS Vision Smart
> Device SP-i600 (as we had other reports of this from people using this
> device).
>
> we have received reports that the same firmware bug also affects the Asus
> P525.
>
> it is very important that MSFT makes sure that they tests this in their
> platform validation tests.
>
>