These listed libraries are written in WTL. But it s really hard to mix both MFC & WTL together. Obviously, it s not reasonable to ask a developer or a team to giving up MFC and move to the WTL world just because there were some great controls or visual Frameworks written in WTL (there are many things that should be considered especially in a company with hundreds of developers like the company I work for). Unfortunately, there was no such good and free visual Framework in MFC until now. Whatever difficulties there are, I still desire to be able to use them and now my effort is here to be shared with you.
Under the Hood
The BeeStack Application Development Guide describes how to develop an application for
BeeStack, including discussions on major considerations for commercial applications.
This document is intended for software developers who write applications for BeeStack-based
products using Freescale development tools.
It is assumed the reader is a programmer with at least rudimentary skills in the C programming
language and that the reader is already familiar with the edit/compile/debug process.
written as well.
8.Strong leadership skills to keep the team motivated and focused at all times to meet customer deliverables.
9. Experience in managing a team of developers as their technical leader
Nice to have requirements:
Proven experience on Symbian and/Windows mobile, etc.
Familiar with mobile
Welcome to Beginning Algorithms, a step-by-step introduction to computing algorithms for the real world.
developers use algorithms and data structures every day of their working lives. Having a good understanding
of these algorithms and knowledge of when to apply them is essential to producing software
that not only works correctly, but also performs efficiently.
This book aims to explain those algorithms and data structures most commonly encountered in day-today
software development, while remaining at all times practical, concise, and to the point, with little or
no verbiage to distract from the core concepts and examples.
IBM® Rational® Application Developer V6.0 is the full function Eclipse 3.0 based
development platform for developing Java™ 2 Platform Standard Edition (J2SE)
and Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition (J2EE) applications with a focus on
applications to be deployed to IBM WebSphere® Application Server and IBM
WebSphere Portal. Rational Application Developer provides integrated
development tools for all development roles, including Web developers, Java
developers, business analysts, architects, and enterprise programmers.
This IBM Redbook is a programming guide that highlights the features and
tooling included with IBM Rational Application Developer V6.0. Many of the
chapters provide working examples that demonstrate how to use the tooling to
develop applications as well as achieve the benefits of visual and rapid Web
development.
The Radio Interface Layer is the name for an interface that was developed especially for the Pocket PC Phone Edition. It is meant to abstract the interface with a phone/modem device. To achieve this it is closely modelled after the GSM AT command interface. Unfortunately the API was not published officially by Microsoft. Instead more high level API s were published that should be sufficient for developers. Again, unfortunately they are not sufficient. For example the API for receiving notification of incoming SMS messages is arranged for exclusively for one application per type of SMS. Apparently this will be improved upon in Pocket PC 2003. Another area is the availablity of a true AT command modem interface to interact with the GSM modem directly, which is also absent.
Programming C#, the top selling book on Microsoft s high-performance C# programming language, is now in its fourth edition. Aimed at experienced programmers and web developers, this comprehensive guide focuses on the features and programming patterns that are new to C#, and fundamental to the programming of web services and web applications on Microsoft s .NET platform.
Finally: a hands-on, Java-centric workbook companion for the classic Design Patterns! Workbook approach deepens your understanding, builds your confidence, and strengthens your skills. Covers all five categories of design pattern intent: interfaces, responsibility, construction, operations, and extensions. CD-ROM contains all code examples from the book -- plus bonus code examples not found in the book. About the Author: Steven John Metsker is a researcher and author focused on advanced techniques for magnifying the abilities of object-oriented software developers. A rising star in the patterns community, he was recently invited to join the acclaimed Hillside Group. He is author of Building Parsers with Java? (Addison-Wesley).
Abstract—Wireless networks in combination with image
sensors open up a multitude of previously unthinkable sensing
applications. Capable tools and testbeds for these wireless image
sensor networks can greatly accelerate development of complex,
yet efficient algorithms that meet application requirements. In this
paper, we introduce WiSNAP, a Matlab-based application
development platform intended for wireless image sensor
networks. It allows researchers and developers of such networks
to investigate, design, and evaluate algorithms and applications
using real target hardware. WiSNAP offers standardized and
easy-to-use Application Program Interfaces (APIs) to control
image sensors and wireless motes, which do not require detailed
knowledge of the target hardware. Nonetheless, its open system
architecture enables support of virtually any kind of sensor or
wireless mote. Application examples are presented to illustrate the
usage of WiSNAP as a powerful development tool.
This tutorial illustrates how to use the versatile Eclipse environment to facilitate
development of Globus Toolkit V4 (GT4) grid services. The tutorial is written for
Web service and grid developers who would like the convenience of
orchestrating the whole grid service development process from within the
Eclipse IDE on Windows-based platforms.