If you have been wanting to develop in Tizen and been wanting to get your hands on a Tizen Smartphone Developer Device, but did not get to attend the Tizen Developer Conference in San Francisco or the Tizen mini-summit in LinuxCon Japan, well here’s your chance! Tizen.org just announced that you can sign-up for one if you meet the following requirements:
The selection criteria are as follows:
It seems like there are only 30 units available, according to the Development Unit Program Application page, so good luck!
Links: Tizen.org Announcement | Program Details
Continuing his hacking spree, Thomas Perl this time managed to build Qt 4.3.1 in SBS and copy over the files to the Tizen Developer Device running Tizen 1.0 Larkspur. He notes that he only did a full cross-compile, so there might still be some work and porting to be done to make it fully usable.
Thomas posted the full instructions at the Tizen Talk – Hacks forum, in case you have questions or intend to help with the project.
The video below shows the Qt demo running on the Tizen Developer Device:
Thomas has started a thread in the Tizen Talk – Hacks forum to discuss and share your experience with Python on Tizen.
The video below shows samegame by Joel Murielle running on the Tizen Developer Device:
It seems like the Tizen folks have provided a special mode on the Tizen Developer Device to view the boot log and more importantly boot from an image from the built-in SD card slot.
From my good pal, Thomas Perl‘s (@thp4) tweet:
Tizen Developer Device bootloader (Vol+, Vol- and Power to boot): http://flic.kr/p/bXUoPq http://flic.kr/p/bXUpdG #tizenconf via @stskeeps
To activate the menu, you have to hold down the Volume +, Volume -, and Power button to boot the the device, and then hold down the same three keys again to enter the User Mode. You then use the Volume buttons to scroll through the boot modes, and use the Power button to select.


I wonder how easy to boot a hacked Tizen image and what other OSes can run on this Developer Device?
Several companies doing demos at the 2012 Tizen Developer Conference are using Samsung provided developer smartphones. Specs are still a bit sketchy but from from what I have been told, they are dual-cores, 1.2GHz, and ARM-based. Check out the photos I took from the Samsung’s booth:
Update: Samsung’s Executive Vice President, J-D Choi revealed some details with regards to the specs of the device: