MetaDoctor
I decided to update the 3/4 of my Palm WebOS devices. The Pre (not pictured) and Pre2 (middle) were my primary, daily-driver phones for over two years, from September 2009 through to spring 2012, when I acquired a Galaxy Nexus and made the jump to Android.
See the webos-internals wiki for meta-doctor: Application:MetaDoctor - WebOS Internals As it stands the meta-doctor tool is used only on a Linux can be used on a Mac or Linux desktop to create custom webOS Doctor builds. I imagine that this will not change. Meta Alternatives. Meta is described as 'powerful yet easy to use music tag editor for Mac. Batch edit audio metadata, rename files, replace characters, embed artworks, create playlists and more' and is an app in the Audio & Music category.
The Pre3 (right) I also picked up on eBay. It came in box, with all accessories, and a spare battery.
The Pixi (left) I picked up cheap on eBay. “For Parts”, because it “Does not move from activation screen”. Now, the Pixi was a low-end device when it launched. It doesn’t even have WiFi. This isn’t a device you’d buy to use. But as a curiosity, I was interested. Due to the Palm servers being taken offline in January 2015, the activation process will never complete. Interestingly, this “Sprint” Pixi has a “Verizon” faceplate, possibly swapped from a Pixi Plus at some point. Model number confirms it is a Sprint device.

The Pre & Pixi are CDMA phones, locked to Bell Mobility and Sprint respectively. So they’re effectively useless.
The Pre2 & Pre3 are HSPA+ phones, and I should be able to use them on my current provider, assuming I can locate a SIM adapter.
MetatOGGer free download: OGG tagger software for Windows. Safe PC download for Windows 32-bit and 64-bit, latest version. PLEASE CLICK FOR MORE INFO. Make sure to read the entire Meta-Doctor and WebOS 2 Upgrade pages at the WebOS Internals wiki before proceeding, for the latest.
Download empia driver. Following the MetaDoctor Wiki is fairly straight forward.
Note:
“WebOS Doctor” is Palm’s official firmware update program + firmware images
“MetaDoctor” is a community-driven makefile that alters the above “WebOS Doctor” images with user-chosen modifications.
After fetching metadoctor from github, you’re required to fetch the WebOS firmware images from Palm. Palm, of course, doesn’t exist currently. Thankfully, you can get all WebOS Doctor images via archive.org.
You’ll have to rename the files after download to append the WebOS version to the filename. In my case:
An important resource is the MetaDoctor README file. It outlines all the options available. Myself, I just want to a few options. Instructions say to modify the Makefile, but passing args works just fine. These make commands will output a few assembled firmware images to the build
directory.
Note that I’m using CARRIER=att for the Pre3, due to this being an AT&T phone. However, ADD_EXTRA_CARRIERS=1 should provide whatever additional data (APN?) for it to work on my network. The Pre2 uses CARRIER=wr. There is no “rogers” carrier, but it is on the wiki. However, it links to the webosdoctorp224pre2wr.jar file.
Interestingly, WebOS Doctor images are more than just a firmware image, like you’d have with Android (or other devices). They’re actually executable java bundles, which will push the encased firmware to the device. So you execute it on your computer. On the bright-side, they’re Java, so they should work on any platform. On the super-bright-side, they actually work just fine with the OpenJDK installed in Fedora. No need to tarnish your system with Sun/Oracle Java.
Now, the down-side (of course there was one). There seems to be some trouble actually finding the USB device. It seems that it uses platform-specific builds of novacom
. Novacom is sort of like both fastboot
and adb
utilities in the Android world. Apparently there are libusb woes here. There are instructions on chasing down old libraries to resolve this issue…
Luckily, none of that matters on Fedora 24, since novacom is actually packaged.
Download etc driver. You’ll need to run it as root to allow direct access to USB devices (You can probably configure some udev permission rules, but I won’t be doing this often enough to bother). You can instruct it to fork, but I preferred opening a second terminal, so I could <CTRL+C> the process when I’m done.
Update: A systemd unit is actually installed. sudo systemctl start novacomd
would be the correct method to start the service
Mata Doctor
You should see a few lines of output indicating a device was found.
Back in our metadoctor terminal, run the WebOS Doctor firmware we assembled earlier:
A few clicks of “Next” should get your firmware flowing. Note that one of the ‘next’ buttons will be disabled if your device isn’t found.
As mentioned above, the Pixi was stuck in perpetual activation. You’ll need to force it into a mode that will accept firmware. This is sort of like bootloader
mode on Android. This process should be identical for all Palm WebOS hardware.
- Turn the device off
- Hold
- Either press , or Plug in USB (both turn on the phone)
The updater should see the device and enable you to load the firmware.
After a successful update, the initial boot screen will be a picture of Tux with a Palm Pre.
After booting up the Pixi, I noticed it immediately started in “International Roaming” mode, notified of pending voice mail, and has a phone number assigned to it.
I’ve immediately placed it into airplane mode, then yanked the battery. Since this device lacks Wifi, there is very little reason to look at it again.
There is a process to install WebOS 2 onto WebOS 1 devices, like the Pre and Pixi. I actually used WebOS 2 on my Pre when it was my primary device back in 2011. It added some notable features, such as voice dialing (handy with bluetooth). It was perfectly functional, though a tad sluggish at times (it was targeting better hardware).
That said, backporting WebOS 2 to these devices is an interesting exercise. There is a WebOS 2 upgrade procedure, which involves running the appropriate script from within the metadoctor directory:
The script will list the multiple WebOS Doctor images required at the top. You’ll need to preemptively fetch these, as the URLs are bad (pointing to offline Palm servers, again). Note that they use a slightly different naming scheme (they do not get the version appended to the end).
The firmware install procedure is the same as above.
Metadoctor Pro Review
If you tend to have a large music collection that isn't organized very well, it can become difficult to find the music you want to listen to without diving into your collection. Programs like MetatOGGer can help by bringing some order to your music collection.
With MetatOGGer, you can easily edit metadata in terms of artist, song tile, album or even genre without much fuss. You can also access other tag data if you need to.
In terms of making life easier, you can rename one or more files based on the information contained inside of the tags and choose whether to use uppercase, lowercase or something in between.
When making changes with MetaOGGer, you can preview changes in real-time so that changes not already made can easily be discarded.
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In conclusion: MetaOGGer is a simple and free program which can help you bring organization to your media collection and change music files with just a couple of clicks. It supports both OGG and MP3 files.
Features and highlights
Meta Doctor Coat
- Identify your duplicate files
- Identify the acoustic footprint
- Rename and organize your files
- Use a database record
MetatOGGer 7.0.1.1 on 32-bit and 64-bit PCs
This download is licensed as freeware for the Windows (32-bit and 64-bit) operating system on a laptop or desktop PC from mp3 tagging software without restrictions. Metatogger 7.0.1.1 is available to all software users as a free download for Windows.
Filed under:- MetatOGGer Download
- Freeware MP3 Tagging Software
- Major release: MetatOGGer 7.0
- OGG Tagging Software
