05.03.2013 Views

Data Hacking

Data Hacking

Data Hacking

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

230 Part III — <strong>Data</strong> <strong>Hacking</strong><br />

H/PC 2000<br />

■ ARM<br />

■ MIPS<br />

H/PC 2.11<br />

■ SH4<br />

■ SH3<br />

■ ARM<br />

■ MIPS<br />

The different versions are for different processors running the handheld devices. To find the<br />

processor that your device contains, refer to the manual or consult the “About” screen, accessible<br />

from somewhere in the operating system. The screen shown in Figure 10-11 is from an<br />

iPAQ 3950.<br />

FIGURE 10-11: G7toCE in action<br />

The good thing about G7toCE is that all the different versions are virtually identical in the<br />

way they work and look.<br />

Before you can start to use G7toCE, you will need to install it on your handheld device. First<br />

you have to download the appropriate file for your hardware and operating system from www.<br />

gpsinformation.org/ronh. People who have problems installing this software normally<br />

do so because they have downloaded the incorrect file for their combination of hardware and<br />

operating system. Currently, there is no single “install” file that covers all possibilities, so you<br />

have to choose carefully.<br />

For this example, we are installing it onto a Pocket PC 2002 machine, so we need to download<br />

the appropriate file for that. This file is called g7toce_PPC_2002_arm.zip.<br />

After you have downloaded the package (a zipped, or compressed, file), you can open it using a<br />

utility such as WinZip. This file contains four program files (see Figure 10-12):

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!