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  • mardi 14 juin 2011, par Vincent Guigui

    9 juin 2011By Dr. Francois Druel Comme c’est le cas à chaque fois, la dernière keynote d’Apple (le 6 juin dernier) a fait l’objet d’un buzz important avant l’évennement et sucité un grand nombre d’analyses depuis. Chacun dissèque, essaye de comprendre, présente les enjeux des innovations de la marque à la pomme. Je ne reviens pas sur la forme très particulière de ces keynotes, véritables actions de communication et de vente qui suivent un scénario très précis et qui appliquent des méthodes d’une (...)
  • dimanche 1er mai 2011, par Vincent Guigui

    Date: Tuesday, April 26, 2011, 12:00:00 AM Tags: iPhone, WP7, Porting, language, C# In the previous chapter, we looked at the user interface guidelines for WP7 applications. We will now dive deeper into what it takes to implement a WP7 application. In this chapter, we will look at the various C# features that map to the most common Objective-C features. We will provide code snippets which will ease your way into C# code. We will point to the key C# features that help (...)
  • vendredi 29 avril 2011, par JC Cimetiere

    Update - 6/9/2011: WP7 to Android API Mapping to is now available Assuming you are a happy coder, the joy of developing software all comes down to a few things: Building something cool that users will enjoy Getting rewards from users and recognition from peers Learning how to solve new challenges and build novel features. Even if you have a solid expertise on a particular platform/language, I think it is essential to be a “polyglot” developer. In other words, you might have a native or (...)
  • mercredi 20 avril 2011, par Vlad Savov

    If you didn't already think your smartphone knows too much about you, here's a handy reminder. A duo of UK researchers have uncovered a worrying (and oddly enough, undocumented) feature in iOS 4: it asks your iPhone to record your location constantly, then timestamps that data and records it for posterity. Without alerting you that it's doing it and without asking for permission. The bigger trouble with this unsolicited location tracking is that the hidden file that holds the data is (...)
  • vendredi 8 avril 2011, par Vincent Guigui

    Titanium is not a wrapper around a web view as stated before (though that accurately explains how Phonegap works). Jeff's answer, linked in the question, is a technically correct explanation of how Titanium works, but here's the best version I've heard so far, from Marshall Culpepper: It's true that Titanium Mobile used the WebView (in both Android and iOS) in the pre-1.0 days. However, this is no longer true and hasn't been since our 1.0 release is March 2010. Since 1.0, we've shipped (...)