Visual Studio 2008 problem. When developing in C#, .NET 3.5 Compact Framework, the toolbox is grayed out!?
Jan 02, 2009 by myrmydon_lord | Posted in Programming & Design
That is I exceptional to show all. If not, the toolbox is just empty!
Further details: Visual Studio 2008 SP1 on Vista Maximum SP1! Windows Mobile 6 Professional SDK!
I am through with this shit! If I can't solve it by tomorrow with or without your help, I am selling all my WinMO phones and switching to Android!
I toughened the Smart Device template in C#, and selected Windows Mobile 6 Professional SDK(.NET 3.5 Compacted FRAMEWORK)
I am tried both admin and non admin mode! I restarted several times!
It is not the stand for version! It is the pro!
Hello!
I am tournament Visual C# Express Edition and I haven't had that toolbar problem. I suggest rebooting your computer and try sustained VS in administrator mode or maybe changing the compatibility mode.
Hope it helps!
P.S. I am not a monumental fan of my WinMo 5 phone :P.
kandutech | Jan 02, 2009
what code language are pocket pc programs made in.?
Dec 22, 2008 by jaklad8 | Posted in Programming & Design
also is there an SDK for making windows mobile 6 programs? can you use visual studio 9.0? if yes what pattern of project is it>
Embedded Visual C++, embedded Visual Prime and C#. All are free for download. Check the pocket pc OS that you have for compatibility.
meow | Dec 22, 2008
Ok now with the Palm Pre for Sprint, what is the best phone G1 (T-Mobile), Storm (Verizon) or iPhone (AT&T)?
Jan 10, 2009 by We R not D same. I am an ANDROID | Posted in Cell Phones & Plans
CES 2009 brought us a new competitor in the smartphone upper-echelon. Let's drill down and see how the Palm Pre compares with the iPhone and Android's G1.
1. Multitouch touchscreen/action control: All three are capacitive, only the Pre and iPhone have multitouch. The Pre's glowy little "indication area" has dropped the touchable real estate all the way down tto the bottom of the phone, which is capacious for being able to navigate with one hand and not interfere with the screen at all. The wavey dock you feature up from the bottom looks awesome, but can you use it out of the box without a second thought or page through the manual? That's my question. More favourably: iPhone/Pre tossup.
2. Multitasking: One of the beefiest of our beefs with the iPhone SDK is its insistence on Apps race one at a time. The G1's notifications drawer was definitely a step in the right direction, but the Pre's interface is the first smartphone OS that was built with multitasking as a essence design element. Resembling the Xbox's old Blades, or a less-jarring OS X Expose even, the Pre's "Cards" interface always places you in the surroundings of every app running for fast switching, and notifications from other apps don't pull you away root from the task at hand. Multitasking is hugely important on a phone, and it's a good take on board that Palm recognizes. Advantage: Pre
3. Hardware: Adrian says:
While the hardware is to be sure high quality, I'm not entirely blown away by the design. It looks indeed nice, and original, but it's a little too cutesy in shape and kind of reminds me of an oversized pebble. A reduce larger screen could have definitely been put to good use, and I really don't like the black duration on the sides of the screen.
A phone with a built-in QWERTY still hasn't touched the iPhone in terms of sleekness and sinless sex. And it might still be a while. Advantage: iPhone
4. Development platform: The Pre's "Web OS" sure sounds exact—all developers need to know is JavaScript, HTML and CSS? Sounds good in theory, but structure a mobile app will never be as easy as cranking out a new theme for your Tumblr. Palm's stressing ease of maturation, though, so it will be interesting to see how it stacks up against Apple's solid, familiar-to-devs OS X-based SDK and Android's fully unrestricted source approach. Advantage: Pre? If it's straight-up JavaScript, that's a lot of programmers ready to go. Note: we had iPhone here before, but we've switched with a qualification. Developer community still goes to iPhone for loudness.
5. Web Integration: The Pre subtly integrates the internet into the phone at every opportunity, and it's awesome. Contacts get pulled in from Facebook, Gmail, IM and and scanned for dupes; the messaging app shows your last several emails, IMs and SMS with that get hold of in a single window. Really, really smart stuff. Advantage: Pre
6. App Accumulation/developer community: A smartphone is only as good as the software it runs. On the Pre, Palm is still keeping industry delivery details like pricing behind the curtain, but they did say the app delivery will be entirely handled by the phone (without a desktop app), which is a abashment. They're saying that they're not going to duplicate Apple's Hobbesian app approval black box indiscretion, which Android has also hasn't fallen for, but there will be an approval process based on "insurance and stability." But as we know with Android, a dev community needs enough devices in the hands of consumers to reach important mass, which the Pre will have to match. Advantage: iPhone, even with the black box, but Android and Pre's more open stances are reassuring.
7. Wireless charger: We've seen wireless charger tech for years at CES, but it's bewitched this long for a major consumer gadget to come bundled with its own wireless charger in the box. Whoops, it's not in the box, sold alone for unknown $$. But still: Bravo. Advantage: Pre
8. The Network: Dan Hesse, Sprint's CEO, gave our beach-to-coast 3G test a shout out in his press conference. Of course he did: Sprint won (in download speeds). Sprint was the only worst carrier without a powerful, hype-catching smartphone choice, and now they have one. The Pre is a data-centric phone with a network we've proven to be better than average in a large swatch of the country—that's a good combo. But would you switch to Sprint for the Pre? Ugh. Usefulness: Not cut and dry for everyone, but we stand by our numbers: Sprint is the best 3G network in our tests.
9. Physical keyboard: It's inclination, but one held by a large swathe of the gadget buying public: physical QWERTY keypads are still the mainstream input of preference. Touch is getting better all the time, but a lot of people still want physical keyboards. But better yet is the capacity to choose; unfortunately, the Pre doesn't have a soft onscreen keyboard, and its slide-out is the same meh QWERTY from the Treo Pro. Superiority: It's preference, but on me, the iPhone's soft keyboard can't be beat.
10. Camera: The P
re has an LED Flash for its 3MP camera, something both the iPhone and G1 deficit. Flash cellphone photos are ugly, but for a lot of people, they're good enough. So credit for throwing it in. Gain: Pre
11. Battery: Apple's still an outlier with their non-removable battery; like the G1's, the Pre's comes out for a slender swap too. We've heard Apple's reasons for this a million times, we know the auger, but removable batteries will never stop being handy. Advantage: Pre
12. Copy & Paste: Yep, Pre's got it. iPhone still doesn't. Head start: Pre/G1
13. Browser: All three use a browser based on WebKit, which has become the standard for the mobile web. We couldn't put it through our Mobile Browser Battlemodo ringer unmistakeably, but what we saw looked great, and it's the only other mobile browser besides the iPhone that supports multitouch zooming. Head start: iPhone/Pre
So there you have it. We're excited. Are you?
( http://i.gizmodo.com/5126870/in-a-nutshe ll-palm-pre-vs-iphone-vs-g1 )
More info on the Pre
( http://www.palm.com/us/products/phones/p re/typography hand.html )
( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wo3SZ_20k ZI )
Palm Pre has the new Palm OS, from the videos and regard I have seen, it's better than all the phones listed, but google is coming out with G2. it's a never ending war.
Palmfan O | Jan 13, 2009
Bluetooth remote control program (Windows Mobile 6 SDK)
- can inaccessible computer by WM Smartphone - can transtrate PPT file by remote
txtr's e-reader offers a 6-inch e-Ink display, plenty in the way ...
by Joseph L. Flatley
Tete- of an e-reader from txtr GmbH -- a podium for online authenticate hosting and storage -- has been making the rounds for a while now, with the detail once making the upswing from vaporware to full fledged gadgethood at the Frankfurt Order Unprejudiced yesterday. Built around an ARM11 CPU and a 6-inch grayscale e-Ink pageant, this guy features undergo for ePub form documents, microSD practical joker storage (ships with 8GB) and access to your documents either via USB, WiFI, or the txtr Net wireless benefit -- which, as next-door we can lecture is Germany-only -- where you can wish to pay about €14.99 ($22) a month for a three month acquire or $11.99 ($18) per month for the year. Among the many enticements offered to magnet you away from Amazon (or, perhaps, Barnes and Lord ), the corporation is encouraging that this will be an in every respect unconcealed plank for devs, and they're throwing in a unconventional by Thomas Klupp (which, as far as we can recognize, is only accessible in German). Pre-orders start December 1st, 2009 for €319 ($477), with plans to get these guys in European and American buyer's hands before Christmas. PR after the disperse. Berlin, October 14th, 2009--This is what fans of digital reading preference have been waiting for: Today, txtr GmbH presents its online-compatible txtr Reader at the Frankfurt Lyrics Disinterested. At the same continuously, the txtr Fund is launched, allowing to without difficulty and conveniently get eBooks from your where it hurts and eventually also when you are away from institution. In dissimilarity to competitors, txtr Reader as well as the stand are bare for developers in the mould of an SDK with documented APIs. Thus it will be still this year that the Berlin based start-up coterie will proffer the first fair complete revelation for acquiring, storing, publishing, and sharing digital documents – while allowing full mobility. And the reading meaning will be provided, too: The txtr Reader will have the flourishing untried "Paradiso" by Thomas Klupp pre-installed which was published in 2009 by Berlin Verlag, as well...