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  • Twazzup and App Engine

    Twazzup and App Engine An interview with the developers behind twazzup.com on how App Engine helps them run their application. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 1298 7 ratings Time: 08:37 More in Science & Technology

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  • Dartisans Ep. 16: Dart and Web Components Reloaded

    Dartisans Ep. 16: Dart and Web Components Reloaded In this episode of Dartisans, Dimitri Glazkov (one of the godfathers of Web Components) will give a presentation on Web Components. Also, John Messerly and Siggi Cherem (who helped build the dart-lang/dart-web-components library) will give a presentation on using Web Components in Dart. A lot of things have changed since our last episode focused on Web Components, and this is shaping up to be an awesome edition of Dartisans! From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 01:00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Chrome Mobile Monthly: Responsive vs Separate Sites

    Chrome Mobile Monthly: Responsive vs Separate Sites Join us on Wednesday October 31st at 9am PT for our Monthly Mobile Web Hangout! This month +Brad Frost will be joining us to talk about responsive design versus separate mobile sites. And in keeping with the season, it's a special Presidential Smackdown Edition. The US presidential race is in full swing, and the candidates are intensely debating the country's hot-button issues. The web design world is entrenched in our own debate about how to address the mobile web: should we create a separate mobile site or create a responsive experience instead? It just so happens that the two US presidential candidates have chosen different mobile web strategies for their official websites. In the red corner is Republican candidate Mitt Romney's dedicated mobile site, while in the blue corner is incumbent president Barack Obama's responsive website. Which will prevail? Sit back, crack open a cold one, and watch the battle unfold as Brad dissect the candidates' sites to uncover best practices and common mobile web pitfalls. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Dartisans ep 12 - Dart + Web Components

    Dartisans ep 12 - Dart + Web Components Web Components are ushering in the "declarative renaissance" for modern web development. Watch this episode of Dartisans to learn how you can build Web Components with Dart, and compile them into JavaScript to run across the modern web. Learn more about Dart at www.dartlang.org From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 2 0 ratings Time: 46:17 More in Science & Technology

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  • Chrome Apps Office Hours: Controlling an AR Parrot Drone

    Chrome Apps Office Hours: Controlling an AR Parrot Drone Ask and vote for questions: goo.gl Join us next week as we show you how we used a Chrome App to control an AR Parrot Drone! This is just one of the many cool things that you can do with Chrome Apps. Using the networking APIs, we were able to pilot the AR Parrot Drone, and get data back from its on-board sensors. We'll take the app apart, show you how were were able to get everything to work, and maybe even take it for a live spin on air! From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Android: Goto HTTP Url on Button Click

    - by George
    Hi all, I want to go to a web page on the click of a button in my android app. So say, I have a button called "Google", when the user clicks on that button I want google.com to open up on the screen. How is this achieved? Also, is there a way I can gain control back to my app once the user is finished with google? Thanks George

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  • Growing Up with Samba

    Next month Samba eXPerience 2010 , the ninth international Samba conference for users and developers, will be held in G?ttingen, Germany from May 3rd - 7th. Jeremy Allison...

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  • Rendering in WebKit

    Rendering in WebKit A deep dive into the guts of webkit. Eric Seidel explains the process from loading the resources, building the DOM tree, and the various trees involved in rendering. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 4525 26 ratings Time: 34:45 More in Science & Technology

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  • What is the XACT API?

    - by EddieV223
    I wanted to use DirectMusic in my game, but it's not in the June 2010 SDK, so I thought that I had to use DirectSound. Then I saw the XAudio2.h header in the SDK's include folder and found that XAudio2 is the replacement for DirectSound. Both are low-level. During my research I stumbled across the XACT API, but can't find a good explanation on it. Is XACT to XAudio2 what DirectMusic was to DirectSound? By which I mean, is the XACT API a high-level, easier-to-use API for playing sounds that abstracts away the details of XAudio2? If not, what is it?

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  • JAX-RS 2.0, JTA 1.1, JMS 2.0 Replay: Java EE 7 Launch Webinar Technical Breakouts on YouTube

    - by John Clingan
    As stated previously (here) (here), the On-Demand Replay of Java EE 7 Launch Webinar is already available. You can watch the entire Strategy and Technical Keynote there, and all other Technical Breakout sessions as well. We are releasing the next set of Technical Breakout sessions on GlassFishVideos YouTube channel as well. In this series, we are releasing JAX-RS 2.0, JTA 1.1, and JMS 2.0. Here's the JAX-RS 2.0 session: Enjoy watching them over the next few days before we release the next set of videos! And don't forget to download Java EE 7 SDK and try numerous bundled samples. "here), we are releasing the next set of Technical Breakout sessions on GlassFishVideos YouTube channel as well. In this series, the next three videos are released. Here's the JAX-RS 2.0 session: Enjoy watching them over the next few days before we release the next set of videos! And don't forget to download Java EE 7 SDK and try numerous bundled samples.

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  • GWT Community Updates

    It's been a while since we've put together what's been going on in the GWT community, and there's no time like the present to do so. Below are...

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  • GDL Presents: All the Web's a Stage

    GDL Presents: All the Web's a Stage All the Web's a Stage: Building a 3D Space in the Browser Thursday, October 11 - 10:30AM PDT Meet the designers and creative team behind a new sensory Chrome experiment, Movi.Kanti.Revo, in a live, design-focused Q&A. Learn how Cirque du Soleil and Subatomic Systems worked to translate the wonder of Cirque into an environment built entirely with markup and CSS. Host: Pete LePage, Developer Advocate Guests: Gillian Ferrabee, Cirque du Soleil | Nicole McDonald, Director/Creative Director, Subatomic Systems From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • General Address Parser for Freeform Text

    - by Daemonic
    We have a program that displays map data (think Google Maps, but with much more interactivity and custom layers for our clients). We allow navigation via a set of combo boxes that prefill certain fields with a bunch of data (ie: Country: Canada, the Province field is filled in. Select Ontario, and a list of Counties/Regions is filled in. Select a county/region, and a city is filled in, etc...). While this guarantees accurate addresses, it's a pain for the users if they don't know where a street address or a city are located (ie, which county/region is kitchener in?). So we are looking at trying to do an address parser with a freeform text field. The user could enter something like this (similar to Google Maps, Bing Maps, etc...): 22 Main St, Kitchener, On And we could compartmentalize it into sections and do lookups on the data and get to the point they are looking for (or suggest alternatives). The problem with this is that how do we properly compartmentalize information? How do we break up the sections and find possible matches? I'm guessing we wouldn't be guaranteed that the user would enter data in a format we always expected (obviously). A follow up to this would be how to present the data if we don't find an exact match (or find multiple exact matches... two cities with the same street name in different counties, for example). We have a ton of data available in the mapping data (mapinfo tab format mostly). So we can do quick scans of street names, cities, states, etc. But I'm not sure about the best way to go about approaching this problem. Sure, using Google Maps would be nice, bue most of our clients are in closed in networks where outside access is not usually allowed and most aren't willing to rely on google maps (since it doesn't contain as much information as they need, such as custom map layers). They could, obviously, go to google and get the proper location then move to our software, but this would time consuming and speed of the process can be quite important.

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  • Accessing SQL Server data from iOS apps

    - by RobertChipperfield
    Almost all mobile apps need access to external data to be valuable. With a huge amount of existing business data residing in Microsoft SQL Server databases, and an ever-increasing drive to make more and more available to mobile users, how do you marry the rather separate worlds of Microsoft's SQL Server and Apple's iOS devices? The classic answer: write a web service layer Look at any of the questions on this topic asked in Internet discussion forums, and you'll inevitably see the answer, "just write a web service and use that!". But what does this process gain? For a well-designed database with a solid security model, and business logic in the database, writing a custom web service on top of this just to access some of the data from a different platform seems inefficient and unnecessary. Desktop applications interact with the SQL Server directly - why should mobile apps be any different? The better answer: the iSql SDK Working along the lines of "if you do something more than once, make it shared," we set about coming up with a better solution for the general case. And so the iSql SDK was born: sitting between SQL Server and your iOS apps, it provides the simple API you're used to if you've been developing desktop apps using the Microsoft SQL Native Client. It turns out a web service remained a sensible idea: HTTP is much more suited to the Big Bad Internet than SQL Server's native TDS protocol, removing the need for complex configuration, firewall configuration, and the like. However, rather than writing a web service for every app that needs data access, we made the web service generic, serving only as a proxy between the SQL Server and a client library integrated into the iPhone or iPad app. This client library handles all the network communication, and provides a clean API. OSQL in 25 lines of code As an example of how to use the API, I put together a very simple app that allowed the user to enter one or more SQL statements, and displayed the results in a rather primitively formatted text field. The total amount of Objective-C code responsible for doing the work? About 25 lines. You can see this in action in the demo video. Beta out now - your chance to give us your suggestions! We've released the iSql SDK as a beta on the MobileFoo website: you're welcome to download a copy, have a play in your own apps, and let us know what we've missed using the Feedback button on the site. Software development should be fun and rewarding: no-one wants to spend their time writing boiler-plate code over and over again, so stop writing the same web service code, and start doing exciting things in the new world of mobile data!

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  • Unconventional webapps con GWT/Elemental WebRTC e WebGL (parte 2)

    Unconventional webapps con GWT/Elemental WebRTC e WebGL (parte 2) Seconda parte del'intervento di Alberto Mancini del GDG Firenze: realizzata l'app di base, grazie a GWT e NyARToolkit, sarà possibile aggiungere della realtà aumentata direttamente sullo streaming video utilizzando dei marker. Post con esempi di codice all'indirizzo jooink.blogspot.it From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 28 2 ratings Time: 19:08 More in Science & Technology

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  • how to change link url on the web browser's status bar.

    - by sunglim
    I already read many article about this issue in here, SO. I just want to discuss how to do it. NOT the moral issue. -- for example. at the google search webpage. before I click the link, the link does not indicate the google url. but After I click the link with shift-key, the url on the status bar is changed. this mean the google webpage indicate 'Fake URL'. the google compressed script is too difficult to read and analyze. # edited The second url should work on ie8 even if I click with ctrl key.

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