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Mobile
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30 minute webcasts optimized for Mobile PC's
Jeff Alexander
writes "There are a bunch of new public Webcasts that have just become available....specifically designed as an in depth look at applications built for Windows Vista mobility. These include data synchronization, power management, ink annotation, ink recognition, network awareness, data access, enhanced UI for touch and Windows Sideshow gadgets.....only 30 minutes long. "
Tablet PC meet up at TechEd
Frank La Vigne
writes "....I'm actually speaking at Tech Ed this year on the Tablet PC as a Smart Client and hosting a Birds of a Feather topic on Tablet PC Development. Anyone out there interested in a Tablet PC meetup?"
Mobile 5.0 Development
James Senior
writes "Interesting Mobile 5.0 APIs are being released - you'll get them in ROM and hence do not have to be deployed to the target by your setup programs. To code against them, you need to download the free Windows Mobile 5.0 SDK which installs the six libraries that you can reference from your Visual Studio 2005 Smart Device project, so you can use the namespaces and types and gain access to the new features. The SDK also provides Windows Mobile 5.0 emulators for use from within Visual Studio 2005. These class libraries are (in no particular order): ..."
No "Live Drive" at CES
Windows Connected
writes "Mary Jo Foley was able to dig up some more details about what we can expect from Windows Live during CES and absent from the list was Live Drive. Which I had thought might be related to this ad. A spokesperson told Mary Jo that..."
Desktop Applications and Fear
John Gunning
writes "Nick Bradbury, the creator of the FeedDemon news aggregator has some good commentary on the general move to web applications in spite of users: .... Nick also talks about the significant “trust barriers” that Microsoft puts in front of installers of desktop software. I wholeheartedly agree - I don’t recall seeing any security prompts warning me off when I signed up for Gmail!"
How to mark Read and Delete E-mail on Smartphones and Pocket PCs
Aaron Tiensivu
writes "I honestly think this should be included with the OS by default, and believe it or not, it is part of an example source code for programming under Windows Mobile. You can download a pre-compiled version"
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