hello guys, thanks for the compliment. just share the knowledge.
alexsync is more help i think.
new kernel promising a lot of enhancement. gonna be big revolution i think. seem like our G5 will not aging. subpyske said it will be improve time to time..
My "secret" project: I ported the Code Aurora kernel to our phone

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The kernel version is still 2.6.32-9, but it has hundreds of bugfixes and improvements compared to our Samsung kernel source. At the moment, it's 85% functional: USB, Camera and headphones are broken, and everything else works (although I haven't really checked everything). The kernel is running very smooth so far - it seems to perform better than our old kernel.
What does this mean for you folks?
In the short term (when it's released), you'll see more stability and better power savings. Maybe a bit better performance, and if we're lucky, the sleep issue will be fixed.
In the mid-term, the audio and video codecs will hopefully get fixed (as it's also a kernel-side problem). I can also backport native USB tethering from the 2.6.35 kernel (it's not so difficult to do compared to Samsung's sources).
In the long term (once the port is verified to be working well and free of bugs), we can use this new kernel source as a base to try to port our phone to newer kernels. This goal may not be entirely reasonable, as we still rely on two closed-source kernel modules (the NAND drivers). They were compiled for a 2.6.32-9 kernel, and may not work on 2.6.35+ (but we can try, at least).
Please, don't bother me with silly questions (such as asking when it will be ready, or pestering me to release it quickly) - I'm not ready to give a testing version yet, and I need time (and peace!) to fix the remaining problems. So be patient and dont' expect any releases (kernels or Cyanogen itself) for a couple of days. If you have kernel programming experience, however, I would appreciate any help. In the next day or so, I'll upload the entire source to github.
another reason to stick with cm7..