User manual

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So your Pandora just arrived after being in the post for two months. Jolly good! But now that it's actually here, what on earth do you do with it? Don't panic! Let's take a look at what's included in the box(so you don't miss anything!) and then hop on over to setting it up for that extended Ms. Pacman marathon I know you've been waiting for!

Safety Information

First of all, let's get this out of the way. DO NOT EAT YOUR PANDORA! It will be hard enough to break your teeth, and it may or may not work after digestion.
The Pandora contains small parts that could be swallowed by children(and let's face it, we're all pretty much children the day we see our Pandora on our doorstep), such as the stylus or an odd button or screw.
Keep the Pandora in normal temperatures under 140F/60C. The battery is a standard Lithium Polymer battery. Do not dispose of in fire or water. Do not dissasemble, crush, or puncture the battery, or it may explode! Do not short circuit external contacts! Dispose of properly, please.
The Pandora contains a 4.3" touchscreen. Although you can touch it, do not hit it too hard or you may risk breaking it. Also, the touchscreen can(gasp!) display 16.7 million colors. That's 16.7 million ways to injure an epileptic person, so please! Exercise caution and common sense when handling the screen.

Box Contents

When you first open Pandora's box, a slew of demons and raging emotions may forcibly leave the box. This is normal. After that, you may or may not be surprised to find a:

  • Pandora console
  • Stylus(located in stylus slot on the side of the Pandora)
  • DC Wall Charger
  • TV-Out Cable(ONLY if you ordered it separately)
  • Carrying Case(ONLY if you ordered it separately)

After you take those things out, you may find a sliver of Hope left over. It's best to keep it, as you never know when you could use some Hope.

Specifications

Highlights

  • ARM® Cortex™-A8 600Mhz+ CPU running Linux
  • 430-MHz TMS320C64x+™ DSP Core
  • PowerVR SGX OpenGL 2.0 ES compliant 3D hardware
  • 800x480 4.3" 16.7 million colours touchscreen LCD
  • Wifi 802.11b/g, Bluetooth & High Speed USB 2.0 Host
  • Dual SDHC card slots & SVideo TV output
  • Dual Analogue and Digital gaming controls
  • 43 button QWERTY and numeric keypad
  • Around 10+ Hours battery life

Specs

  • Texas Instruments OMAP3530 processor at 600MHz (officially)
  • 256MB DDR-333 SDRAM
  • 512MB NAND FLASH memory
  • IVA2+ audio and video processor using TI's DaVinci™ technology (430MHz C64x DSP)
  • ARM® Cortex™-A8 superscalar microprocessor core
  • PowerVR SGX530 (110MHz officially) OpenGL ES 2.0 compliant 3D hardware
  • integrated Wifi 802.11b/g (up to 18dBm output)
  • integrated Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR (3Mbps) (Class 2, + 4dBm)
  • 800x480 resolution LTPS LCD with resistive touch screen, 4.3" widescreen, 16.7 million colors (300 cd/m2 brightness, 450:1 contrast ratio)
  • Dual analog controllers
  • Full gamepad controls plus shoulder buttons
  • Dual SDHC card slots (up to 64GB of storage currently)
  • headphone output up to 150mW/channel into 16 ohms, 99dB SNR (up to 24 bit/48KHz)
  • TV output (composite and S-Video)
  • Internal microphone plus ability to connect external microphone through headset
  • Stereo line level inputs and outputs
  • 43 button QWERTY and numeric keypad
  • USB 2.0 OTG port (1.5/12/480Mbps) with capability to charge device
  • USB 2.0 HOST port (480Mbps) capable of providing the full 500mA to attached devices (examples include USB memory, keyboard, mouse, 3G modem, GPS)
  • up to two externally accessible UARTs and/or four PWM signals for hardware hacking, robot control, debugging, etc.
  • un-brickable design with integrated boot loader for safe code experimentation
  • Power and hold switch useful for "instant on" and key lockout to aid in media player applications on the go
  • Runs on the Linux operating system (2.6.x)
  • Dimensions: 140x83.4x27.5mm
  • Weight: 335g (with 4000mAh battery)

Features

The Pandora is a mixture between a PC and a gaming console. That's why it has gaming controls (Buttons, DPad and analogue nubs). It is fast enough to emulate many other systems, run a full desktop, access the internet via FireFox and play games such as Quake3. However, it is not as big as a netbook. Believe it or not, it will fit in your pocket. It's a bit bigger than the Nintendo DS.

First Time Use

Charging

First Boot

Calibrating The Touchscreen

Basic Use

Applications

What Is Included?

Where Can I Get More Apps?

Introduction To .PNDs

What Are .PNDs?

Where Do .PNDs Go?

How Do I Make .PNDs?

More Info About .PNDs

Configuration

Adjusting Brightness/Contrast

Changing Your Theme