Welcome to this week's Mobile Development newsletter from CodeProject.
Announcing Telerik UI for iOS UI for iOS is a suite of native controls that fill the gaps in the UIKit Framework. The components aim to address various UI and data related scenarios and make the native development easy and pleasant. With this first official version, UI for iOS offers Chart, Calendar, AppFeedback and DataSync (Beta). (more: Telerik) What Developers Need To Know About Android L Google is taking a different tact for its newest version of Android than it has in the past. Instead of announcing and releasing an official version of the operating system, it has released a developer preview—dubbed "L"—thus giving developers and manufacturers time to get ready for it before its official released. (more: ReadWrite) Oracle hopes to entice mobile developers with new framework The Mobile Application Framework works with a variety of development tools and languages (more: Infoworld) BlackBerry Launches 'Fact Check Portal' to Dispel Negative Myths About Company There have been "many vocal voices from competitors trying to incite fear, uncertainty and doubt about BlackBerry," according to the company itself, which has prompted the Canadian smartphone maker to launch what it calls the "Fact Check Portal." (more: TechVibes) An Upper Limit For Apps? New Data Suggests Consumers Only Use Around Two Dozen Apps Per Month There are now well over a million mobile applications in both Google Play and the iTunes App Store alike, and growth of those app marketplaces shows no sign of slowing down. However, according to new data from Nielsen out this morning, there may be an upper limit to how many apps people will interact with over the course of a month, and that number – just over a couple dozen – hasn't grown much over the past few years. (more: Techcrunch) Survey: One in Seven Would Give Up Friends Before Smartphone Check out the results of a recent survey sponsored by Motorola Mobility and B2X, which found that one in seven Americans would rather give up their best friends for a week than part with their smartphones. (more: re/code) Why Windows Phone isn't going away anytime soon There are a lot of reasons for this, but the biggest one is that Microsoft simply can't afford to ditch Windows Phone unless it wants to get out of the software platform business all together. (more: BGR) Latest Articles2 articles overall. 2 new, 0 updated.New articles addedAndroid
New Technical Blogs addedWindows Phone 7/8
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Thứ Tư, 2 tháng 7, 2014
Mobile Newsletter - Motion Detection in Android - Howto
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