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What would someone say about you after only knowing you for 5 minutes?Today I want to introduce you to Bjarni, I'm here in Iceland and many of the places we have stayed have been small fishing villages, but our stop in Dalvik was different. From the moment I met Bjarni I knew he was one I wanted to sit down with and learn more about; from the way he was so quick to treat us all like friends, share a coffee, and his towns history with us, I'm so honored to be able to share more of this truly lovely human with you all We chat about what it's like living in and doing what he can alongside his wife to preserve the history and culture of his hometown, how he looks forward and is aspiring to become a full time grandfather, and the fear of outliving another of his children.He shares why he believes the way we view difficulties in life is a choice, how some heartbreaking and trying moments have impacted that view, and the reality of what real problems are in the world We chat about the impact of war and climate change, and how when something is detached from our personal experience we can often struggle to empathize or take action towards righting such wrongsBjarni is one that offers a gentle and yet confident reminder that life is a gift, that sharing space and time with others in this life is of immense value, and that we always have something to give to anotherSo tune in today and meet Bjarni a man that will walk around in shorts and a t shirt when everyone else is in a winter coat, and I think that is not unlike his heart; that maybe when so many of us are closed, needing more, or afraid to let the world see us, Bjarni is filled with the joy of what each day has and is giving him, he is one that will sit with you, share what he knows, and in what I found to be the most precious of all, allows others to know him and feel welcomed around himAnd to you Bjarni thank you, thank you for your hospitality, for the ease in which you show up in the world, for the time you shared in allowing me to hear your story. You are a man filled with integrity, one that is easy to trust and one that is deserving of such trust. I'm so grateful our travels brought us to Dalvik and for the joy in sharing a cup of coffee with you.
An airhacks.fm conversation with Bruce Hopkins about: transition from Basic to Java, work on Bluetooth technology and writing a book on Bluetooth for Java, involvement with Sun Microsystems and Java ME, becoming a Java Champion, shift to AI and natural language processing research, development of speech recognition and hands-free web navigation systems using pure Java, use of Hugging Face libraries for NLP in 2016, writing for Linux Magazine about mesh VPNs, discovery and exploration of ChatGPT, writing a book on integrating ChatGPT with Java, shared experiences and parallel paths in Java development, discussion about Sun Microsystems vs Oracle's approach to Java, mention of various Java-related technologies like JXTA, Sphinx, FreeTTS, and Dalvik, brief explanation of mesh VPNs and Tailscale, plans for a future podcast episode focused on Bruce's JavaChatGPT book
You're calling my name into the Dark. Feeling your arms. Hold me so tight. Running away. It's an endless fight. Buy Link: https://fanlink.to/sai048 ✨Jan Dalvik SC: https://soundcloud.com/jandalvik ✨Serafin Audio Imprint SC: @serafinaudio ✨KataHaifisch SC: @katahaifisch
What is the Dalvik Android Audio Library? Why did it cause a huge spike in Podcast listening numbers? What does it mean for advertisers? All questions that have been asked over the course of the last 4 weeks since a number of podcasts around the globe saw large spikes in "listeners" attributed to the application in their podcast hosting platforms. On this episode of Sound Business we take a look at exactly what caused the issues, what is being done to fix it and try and jargon-bust some of the information that has arisen since the incident. To do that, Jim Salveson speaks to Director of Operations at Voiceworks, Andrea Day who provides her insight on the last few weeks and also talks about the action that Voiceworks has taken to ensure both podcasters and advertisers alike have full confidence in the medium going forward. For help with your audio strategy come and talk to us at Voiceworks via www.voiceworks.ai Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Special Guests: Dan Misener- co-founder BumperDan Misener has looked at the new topics that Apple Podcasts is automatically allocating to shows (see our coverage on Nov 15, including our topics viewer). He's produced a number of network maps, designed to show links between different shows; and produced episode topic maps for every category in Apple Podcasts. Trevor Bell - Podcast Producer at The Iron Fist Velvet Glove PodcastTrevor argues that Value4Value is good for podcasting but rewarding podcasters with Satoshis is too early and other means of monetisation maybe better for now. Show Notes and Links Seeing loads of downloads from a mysterious app called Dalvik? You're not alone; they're all coming from Samsung Android phones, and we understand that the downloads are related to Samsung Free, the company's podcast app.Acast is encouraging the use of visual descriptions in podcasts, to make content more accessible for blind or low-vision people. Acast has launched a self-serve platform for podcast advertising. Hear the early days of podcasting in a special documentary, just added to Podnews Extra.Disctopia and Alby have added integration with “value 4 value” payments.Support the showGet in touch with our weekly review of all things podcasting! Website: weekly.podnews.net Twitter: @jamescridland / @podnews and @samsethi / @samtalkstech Boosts: ⚡james@crid.land and ⚡sam@getalby.com Mastodon: @james@crid.land and @samsethi@podcastindex.social Donate: ⚡James and ⚡ Sam This podcast supports both transcripts and chapters, if your podcast app doesn't then grab a new app from podnews.net/newpodcastappsSponsored By: Buzzsprout
This week: Samsung Free app issue causes spike in downloads, Transistor joins email spam prevention movement, How streaming TV is bracing for the recession, and Spreaker debuts two new offerings, one of which sounds like a cool robot. New auto-playing Samsung app spikes downloads. Manuela: Our top story this week, fitting for a holiday weekend, is one of collaboration and teamwork against all odds. Last week Samsung launched the Listen tab on Samsung Free, a media streaming app pre-installed on every Samsung Galaxy smartphone. When clicked on, the Listen tab would open a full-screen player with a three second timer. If not manually stopped within the three seconds, the app would begin to auto-play segments of featured podcast episodes, with each episode in the queue pre-downloaded for instant play. This auto-downloading and auto-listening lead to podcasters seeing a sudden spike of listens coming from the Dalvik user agent. Like something out of a heartwarming holiday special, the podcasting community came together on a long weekend to work together and solve the problem. In the Sounds Profitable Partners Slack channels, employees of Audioboom, Triton, Spreaker, and others jumped into threads to discuss how to handle the issue. James Cridland's Monday edition of the Podnews segment The Tech Stuff details why a download spike from Dalvik isn't necessarily an easy fix. Cridland says: “Some podcast hosting companies have blocked the “Dalvik” useragent entirely. However, blocking Dalvik - even with the Samsung model numbers - will also block, among other things, Google News's audio player, which uses an identical audio useragent. At least one app powered by Podcast Index also uses this generic Dalvik useragent along with PodcastAddict, and Indian podcast app Gaana also retains Dalvik in its useragent.” Luckily, there's a happy ending to this Thanksgiving story. Multiple employees on a holiday weekend managed to get the attention of Samsung, a company only just now entering podcasting, and get the problem fully solved. According to Podnews reporting, Samsung Free content partner Acast has since demonetized any traffic from the Dalvik user agent, and a fix to the app to prevent any future download spikes is set to be published soon. What could have been a massive headache for many people was quickly resolved fully without any half-measure bandage fixes, all on a holiday weekend, thanks to the cohesiveness of the community. That we can certainly be thankful for. Transistor joins email spam prevention movement. Shreya: Back on November 3rd we covered Buzzsprout's announcement that they were removing email addressed from podcast RSS feeds. Presented as the company ‘fighting back against email spam,' Buzzsprout only inserts a podcaster's email address into the feed on request to verify the feed with other services and platforms. On August 22nd Apple Podcasts announced updates to RSS feed requirements in 2023, including the end of support for the ‘owner' tag. “The owner tag and its contact information, including email, will no longer be recommended.” In addition to Buzzsprout embracing the email-free future, Podbean and - most recently - Transistor have joined the cause. From their blog post this monday: “Unfortunately, because podcast feeds are public, spammers can scrape these email addresses and use them to send unwanted emails (like pitches for guests to appear on your show).” Meanwhile, yesterday's Podnews published an alternate take on this move to prevent email spam. The Canadian Podcast Awards told Podnews they neither agree with nor support the removal of email addresses from RSS feeds. From yesterday's issue: “We do not have any plans at the moment to support feeds without contact information.” Email spam has become a growing problem in podcasting. Back in July, James Cridland published the results of an email spam-trap he'd created in the Podnews RSS feed. Over the course of three months his experiment received 240 unsolicited commercial emails. Similarly to Buzzsprout, Transistor has removed email addresses from the feed by default, but include a tool to manually reveal it for verification purposes. In addition, they now have a verification code entry field designed to work with Apple Podcast's new code-based verification system. A new verification method that, hopefully, will help ease the concerns of objecting organizations like the Canadian Podcast Awards. How streaming TV is bracing for a recession Manuela: Depending on who you ask, the next recession is either here already or fast approaching. On November 17th Maia Vines, writing for AdAge, published a piece detailing how streaming television is battening down the hatches. From the article: “Brands have already started to re-prioritize where they are placing their ad dollars, said Lisa Herdman, senior VP and executive director of strategic investments at RPA.” Heather Stewart, General Motors' general director of global media and marketing services presents a contrasting opinion: she expressed concern advertisers might be talking themselves into a recession with reactions to false indicators. After over a decade of consumers demanding the death of the traditional model of cable television bundling providers together, the a la carte model has begun to slip as multiple platforms come under control of media conglomerates. Currently Paramount, Warner Bros. Discover, and Disney either already group multiple services into one bundle or are planning on offering one in future. A proposed path to soothe worries during economic downturn is commerce-enabled TV and interactive ads. Netflix VP of advertising sales Peter Laylor told AdAge: “One thing that I think is a great opportunity is maybe a dual-screen experience, and people have experimented there, but the research shows that the vast majority of people have their phone with them when they're consuming TV streaming content.” Even with new tactics and status-quo breaking experiments like bringing one-click-buy options to streaming TV in US markets, there's a consistent throughline to how streamers are prepping for a recession: they're making things simple for the consumer. A task podcast advertisers have been refining since the format required listeners to manually copy an MP3 file to an iPod. Spreaker debuts first-party data audience segments, MAGDA brand safety tech. Shreya: Time for a special Spreaker segment, as the platform has made two large announcements while we were gone on holiday break and it's time to get you up to speed. Starting on the 17th, they announced a new first-party data for high-impact audience segmentation and targeting solution that is now available for both programmatic and direct sales on the Spreaker network. Martín Haro, Data and Insights Lead at Spreaker says in the press release: “Now with Spreaker's first-party data audience segments, our solution ingests data through AI and machine learning from real listeners' listening patterns, behaviors, and podcast content, which has enabled us to build specific audience segments that have proven to be 3X more accurate than third-party data.” Then, yesterday, the platform followed up with a brand new tech with a cool name: “Spreaker, the global leader in programmatic ad tech, today announced its first-to-market M.A.G.D.A technology to increase quality in programmatic advertising. This unprecedented technology is set to transform programmatic podcast advertising, adding a layer of control to protect content creators.” In addition to sounding like a cool robot sidekick from an 80s movie, M.A.G.D.A bridges a gap in brand safety and suitability. Advertisers are well-covered on their end, now Spreaker can provide an extra layer of protection from the publisher side. Blocking IAB categories to avoid certain kinds of advertisements works pretty well, at least until a campaign is mis-categorized. Spreaker has now solved for that. From the press release: “M.A.G.D.A technology works by transcribing programmatic ads that go through the Spreaker ad marketplace in real-time. Spreaker has created machine-learning models to auto-categorize ads. In addition, the technology can also detect miscategorized ads. For example, if a political ad is miscategorized as fast food M.A.G.D.A will flag this for rectification.” What does the M-A-G-D-A stand for? The name serves a dual purpose. First, it stands for Machine Augmented Guard for Dynamic Advertising. Spreaker explains: “However, Magda is also a member of the Spreaker team. She was the first person to work on ad quality control for the company, and today Spreaker has an entire division dedicated to ad quality spearheaded by Magda herself—the company felt it fitting to name the technology after her.” In addition to having a touching name dedication, M.A.G.D.A is a fascinating piece of tech that provides a much-needed bit of security in an industry very much concerned about brand safety and suitability. Quick Hits Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Can We Stop It With The Brand Safety Double Standard Already? By Allison Schiff for AdExchanger. An opinion piece that addresses a proposed double-standard advertisers have with brand safety concerns. Schiff points out the same brands skittish about serving ads on journalistic content featuring negative stories are prominently featured in between bouts of serial killer-crafted gore on her nightly watch-through of Criminal Minds on Hulu. Google and iHeartMedia allegedly paid radio talent to promote the Pixel 4—without ever giving them the phone, according to the FTC, by Ryan Barwick for MarketingBrew. Barwick covers the details of a recently-settled case in which the FTC alleges iHeartMedia gave on-air talent scripts for testimonies about how much they loved using a Google Pixel phone they had never actually used. The Cumulus Media & Signal Hill Insights Podcast Download Fall 2022 report is now available. This year features special focus on the growing prevalence of podcasts with video elements. This includes a finding that 28% of consumers prefer actively watching a podcast with a video component. The Last Yard - the blog post that started it all, by Adam Curry, published to Podnews. Thought lost for years, a copy of Adam Curry's 2001 blog The Last Yard has been discovered on the Wayback Machine and duplicated by Podnews with permission. A piece of industry history, Curry's post lead to a meeting with Dave Winer that lead to the creation of podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week: Samsung Free app issue causes spike in downloads, Transistor joins email spam prevention movement, How streaming TV is bracing for the recession, and Spreaker debuts two new offerings, one of which sounds like a cool robot. New auto-playing Samsung app spikes downloads. Manuela: Our top story this week, fitting for a holiday weekend, is one of collaboration and teamwork against all odds. Last week Samsung launched the Listen tab on Samsung Free, a media streaming app pre-installed on every Samsung Galaxy smartphone. When clicked on, the Listen tab would open a full-screen player with a three second timer. If not manually stopped within the three seconds, the app would begin to auto-play segments of featured podcast episodes, with each episode in the queue pre-downloaded for instant play. This auto-downloading and auto-listening lead to podcasters seeing a sudden spike of listens coming from the Dalvik user agent. Like something out of a heartwarming holiday special, the podcasting community came together on a long weekend to work together and solve the problem. In the Sounds Profitable Partners Slack channels, employees of Audioboom, Triton, Spreaker, and others jumped into threads to discuss how to handle the issue. James Cridland's Monday edition of the Podnews segment The Tech Stuff details why a download spike from Dalvik isn't necessarily an easy fix. Cridland says: “Some podcast hosting companies have blocked the “Dalvik” useragent entirely. However, blocking Dalvik - even with the Samsung model numbers - will also block, among other things, Google News's audio player, which uses an identical audio useragent. At least one app powered by Podcast Index also uses this generic Dalvik useragent along with PodcastAddict, and Indian podcast app Gaana also retains Dalvik in its useragent.” Luckily, there's a happy ending to this Thanksgiving story. Multiple employees on a holiday weekend managed to get the attention of Samsung, a company only just now entering podcasting, and get the problem fully solved. According to Podnews reporting, Samsung Free content partner Acast has since demonetized any traffic from the Dalvik user agent, and a fix to the app to prevent any future download spikes is set to be published soon. What could have been a massive headache for many people was quickly resolved fully without any half-measure bandage fixes, all on a holiday weekend, thanks to the cohesiveness of the community. That we can certainly be thankful for. Transistor joins email spam prevention movement. Shreya: Back on November 3rd we covered Buzzsprout's announcement that they were removing email addressed from podcast RSS feeds. Presented as the company ‘fighting back against email spam,' Buzzsprout only inserts a podcaster's email address into the feed on request to verify the feed with other services and platforms. On August 22nd Apple Podcasts announced updates to RSS feed requirements in 2023, including the end of support for the ‘owner' tag. “The owner tag and its contact information, including email, will no longer be recommended.” In addition to Buzzsprout embracing the email-free future, Podbean and - most recently - Transistor have joined the cause. From their blog post this monday: “Unfortunately, because podcast feeds are public, spammers can scrape these email addresses and use them to send unwanted emails (like pitches for guests to appear on your show).” Meanwhile, yesterday's Podnews published an alternate take on this move to prevent email spam. The Canadian Podcast Awards told Podnews they neither agree with nor support the removal of email addresses from RSS feeds. From yesterday's issue: “We do not have any plans at the moment to support feeds without contact information.” Email spam has become a growing problem in podcasting. Back in July, James Cridland published the results of an email spam-trap he'd created in the Podnews RSS feed. Over the course of three months his experiment received 240 unsolicited commercial emails. Similarly to Buzzsprout, Transistor has removed email addresses from the feed by default, but include a tool to manually reveal it for verification purposes. In addition, they now have a verification code entry field designed to work with Apple Podcast's new code-based verification system. A new verification method that, hopefully, will help ease the concerns of objecting organizations like the Canadian Podcast Awards. How streaming TV is bracing for a recession Manuela: Depending on who you ask, the next recession is either here already or fast approaching. On November 17th Maia Vines, writing for AdAge, published a piece detailing how streaming television is battening down the hatches. From the article: “Brands have already started to re-prioritize where they are placing their ad dollars, said Lisa Herdman, senior VP and executive director of strategic investments at RPA.” Heather Stewart, General Motors' general director of global media and marketing services presents a contrasting opinion: she expressed concern advertisers might be talking themselves into a recession with reactions to false indicators. After over a decade of consumers demanding the death of the traditional model of cable television bundling providers together, the a la carte model has begun to slip as multiple platforms come under control of media conglomerates. Currently Paramount, Warner Bros. Discover, and Disney either already group multiple services into one bundle or are planning on offering one in future. A proposed path to soothe worries during economic downturn is commerce-enabled TV and interactive ads. Netflix VP of advertising sales Peter Laylor told AdAge: “One thing that I think is a great opportunity is maybe a dual-screen experience, and people have experimented there, but the research shows that the vast majority of people have their phone with them when they're consuming TV streaming content.” Even with new tactics and status-quo breaking experiments like bringing one-click-buy options to streaming TV in US markets, there's a consistent throughline to how streamers are prepping for a recession: they're making things simple for the consumer. A task podcast advertisers have been refining since the format required listeners to manually copy an MP3 file to an iPod. Spreaker debuts first-party data audience segments, MAGDA brand safety tech. Shreya: Time for a special Spreaker segment, as the platform has made two large announcements while we were gone on holiday break and it's time to get you up to speed. Starting on the 17th, they announced a new first-party data for high-impact audience segmentation and targeting solution that is now available for both programmatic and direct sales on the Spreaker network. Martín Haro, Data and Insights Lead at Spreaker says in the press release: “Now with Spreaker's first-party data audience segments, our solution ingests data through AI and machine learning from real listeners' listening patterns, behaviors, and podcast content, which has enabled us to build specific audience segments that have proven to be 3X more accurate than third-party data.” Then, yesterday, the platform followed up with a brand new tech with a cool name: “Spreaker, the global leader in programmatic ad tech, today announced its first-to-market M.A.G.D.A technology to increase quality in programmatic advertising. This unprecedented technology is set to transform programmatic podcast advertising, adding a layer of control to protect content creators.” In addition to sounding like a cool robot sidekick from an 80s movie, M.A.G.D.A bridges a gap in brand safety and suitability. Advertisers are well-covered on their end, now Spreaker can provide an extra layer of protection from the publisher side. Blocking IAB categories to avoid certain kinds of advertisements works pretty well, at least until a campaign is mis-categorized. Spreaker has now solved for that. From the press release: “M.A.G.D.A technology works by transcribing programmatic ads that go through the Spreaker ad marketplace in real-time. Spreaker has created machine-learning models to auto-categorize ads. In addition, the technology can also detect miscategorized ads. For example, if a political ad is miscategorized as fast food M.A.G.D.A will flag this for rectification.” What does the M-A-G-D-A stand for? The name serves a dual purpose. First, it stands for Machine Augmented Guard for Dynamic Advertising. Spreaker explains: “However, Magda is also a member of the Spreaker team. She was the first person to work on ad quality control for the company, and today Spreaker has an entire division dedicated to ad quality spearheaded by Magda herself—the company felt it fitting to name the technology after her.” In addition to having a touching name dedication, M.A.G.D.A is a fascinating piece of tech that provides a much-needed bit of security in an industry very much concerned about brand safety and suitability. Quick Hits Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Can We Stop It With The Brand Safety Double Standard Already? By Allison Schiff for AdExchanger. An opinion piece that addresses a proposed double-standard advertisers have with brand safety concerns. Schiff points out the same brands skittish about serving ads on journalistic content featuring negative stories are prominently featured in between bouts of serial killer-crafted gore on her nightly watch-through of Criminal Minds on Hulu. Google and iHeartMedia allegedly paid radio talent to promote the Pixel 4—without ever giving them the phone, according to the FTC, by Ryan Barwick for MarketingBrew. Barwick covers the details of a recently-settled case in which the FTC alleges iHeartMedia gave on-air talent scripts for testimonies about how much they loved using a Google Pixel phone they had never actually used. The Cumulus Media & Signal Hill Insights Podcast Download Fall 2022 report is now available. This year features special focus on the growing prevalence of podcasts with video elements. This includes a finding that 28% of consumers prefer actively watching a podcast with a video component. The Last Yard - the blog post that started it all, by Adam Curry, published to Podnews. Thought lost for years, a copy of Adam Curry's 2001 blog The Last Yard has been discovered on the Wayback Machine and duplicated by Podnews with permission. A piece of industry history, Curry's post lead to a meeting with Dave Winer that lead to the creation of podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's history time! Or even [pre-]ART History time!We didn't take a picture this time.Please imagine what we looked like.This time, Tor, Romain, and Chet were joined by Dan Bornstein, one of the early members of the Android team. Dan joined in 2005 to create a runtime for Android, which became Dalvik.We talked about some of the early placeholder VMs used while Dalvik was coming online, some of the design decisions for Dalvik (like its register-based vs. stack-based implementation), and nice techy details about runtimes, garbage collectors, and optimizations.Subscribe to the podcast feed or download the audio file directly.Chet: @chethaaseRomain: @romainguyTor: @tornorbyeDan: @danfuzzThanks to continued tolerance and support by our audio engineer, Dustin Elm.
TRACKLIST : 1) Nupar - Sites 2) Death on the Balcony - Evolving doors 3) Avidel - Red sunshine 4) Mariano Mellino - Val Haunter 5) B.A.X - Cloud 7 6) Hole Box - Alone 7) Juan Deminicis - Tao the king (GMJ & Matter’s remix) 8) Jimi Jules - We out here 9) Daniel Bortz - Down to the moon 10) Jan Dalvik - Ethu 11) Desogo - Beginning 12) Prins Thomas - Sakral Find more on : www.deepershades.net
How many times have you heard the terms ART, Dalvik, DVM, DEX, AAPT, Zygote Processes etc. and chose to ignore or read later. Well no more. In this episode of AndroIdiots Podcast we talk with Romi Chandra & Amanjeet Singh from Bobble Keyboard Engineering team about everything that goes under the hood of Android Runtime.
Feels Like... episode 57 with the Stockholm underground hero DALVIK!DALVIK has spent much of his life in the electronic music landscape and this mix give us a hint how eclectic his sets can be! Enjoy!Support Your Local Deep House Dealer!!!Episode 57 Tracklist1. Les Sun Rae - Revelation2. Fudge Fingas - Situation diminished3. Midnight Fantasy feat. Nadia - Is it me or is it her4. Agapé Sounds feat. Richie Weeks - Your love never fails5. Matt Warren - The way to my heart6. Louf - Dawn loop7. Elias Raam - Austre8. Love Creation - 0019. Low Flung - Floatie time10. Khotin - Nimbus11. Dubtribe Sound System - Sunshine's theme12. Ricardo Miranda - H.R.I.C.13. Thrilogy - Make your body14. DALVIK - ÅtervinningenFeels Like... is presented by Mix Media Arts! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In our second-longest ever, Mark explains the difference between an API and an SDK (and why it's important to know), Martha got her phone mugged and lost all her mobile game saves, and Stephen leads a discussion about designing for difficulty in your games (but mainly as an excuse to talk about fighting games again).All this, plus your nice hosts celebrate 30 episodes, and Mark doesn't edit out something Martha asks him to, but only because Martha was the one who edited this episode. Runtimes, SDKs, and APIs 0:02:31 Mark LaCroixToolsPopular RuntimesJava Virtual Machine - WikipediaAIR Runtime - WikipediaDalvik runtime - WikipediaAndroid Runtime (ART) - WikipediaCommon Language Runtime (.NET) - WikipediaArticles“A Primer For Unity Developers: What The Heck Is Mono?” - - Logan Booker, Lifehacker AU“What is the Difference Between an API and an SDK? - Kristopher Sandoval, Nordic APIs BlogStarling 2 - Starling WikiCitrus EngineGeneric Animation Framework Mobile Games 0:23:34 Martha MegarryGamingHardwareSlayin review - Chris Carter, DestructoidQuizUp is trying to reinvent itself by turning into a social network - Josh Lowensohn, The VergeAlphabear Review – Why Do Bears Like Spelling Bees? - Gamer BloggerHow to Monetize an Infinite Runner - Michail Katkoff, Game AnalyticsVirtual Buttons Are Holding Mobile Games Back - Muir Freeland, Game DeveloperMiyamoto Plays Super Mario Run, Eats Cake - BuzzFeed Multiplayer, YouTubeCivilization Revolution 2 is a Good Mobile Game, But is It a Good Civ Game? - Alex Newhouse, GameSpotTurns out, Hercules is both Greek and Roman. - Tufts UniversitySmash Hit Is The Most Addictive Android And iOS Game Of The Year So Far - Mihir Patkar , Make Use OfI've been texting with an astronaut - Laura Hudson, Boing BoingSpaceteam review - Rich Stanton, Eurogamer Difficulty 0:54:27 Stephen McGregorGame DesignStreet Fighter V Fans Are Not Sure What To Make Of Seemingly Simplistic Newcome… - Ian Walker, KotakuYomi - Urban dictionaryZelda: Breath of the Wild's first DLC pack sounds really neat - Samit Sarkar,, PolygonHard Mode: Good Difficulty Versus Bad Difficulty - Paul Suddaby, Envato Tuts+Difficulty is Difficult: Designing for Hard Modes in Games - Daniel Boutros, Game DeveloperWhere Did the Challenge Go? The Problem with Skyrim - j-u-i-c-e, Level SkipThe Civilization series has a difficulty problem, and Civ 6 solves it without e… - Jordan Forward, PCGamesNhttps://www.reddit.com/r/changemyview/comments/6cg9k1/cmv_dark_souls_isnt_hard_… - Vectornaut, r/ChangeMyView, RedditYoshi's Woolly World is tougher than it looks, but only if you want it to be - Matt Gerardi, AV ClubTim Schafer recalls when Steven Spielberg asked for a hint in Day of the Tentac… - Owen Good, PolygonTim Schafer's take on 'good puzzle theory' and being stuck as entertainment - Micheal McWhertor, Polygon
In our second-longest ever, Mark explains the difference between an API and an SDK (and why it's important to know), Martha got her phone mugged and lost all her mobile game saves, and Stephen leads a discussion about designing for difficulty in your games (but mainly as an excuse to talk about fighting games again). All this, plus your nice hosts celebrate 30 episodes, and Mark doesn't edit out something Martha asks him to, but only because Martha was the one who edited this episode. Runtimes, SDKs, and APIs 0:02:31 Mark LaCroix Category Tools Popular Runtimes Java Virtual Machine AIR Runtime Dalvik runtime Android Runtime (ART) Common Language Runtime (.NET) Articles “A Primer For Unity Developers: What The Heck Is Mono?” - - Logan Booker , Lifehacker AU “What is the Difference Between an API and an SDK? - Kristopher Sandoval , Nordic APIs Blog Starling 2 - Starling Wiki Citrus Engine Generic Animation Framework Mobile Games 0:23:34 Martha Megarry Category Gaming Hardware Slayin review - Chris Carter , Distructoid “QuizUp is trying to reinvent itself by turning into a social network” - Josh Lowensohn , The Verge “Alphabear Review – Why Do Bears Like Spelling Bees?” - Gamer Blogger “How to Monetize an Infinite Runner” - Michail Katkoff , Game Analytics “Virtual Buttons Are Holding Mobile Games Back” - Muir Freeland Miyamoto Plays Super Mario Run, Eats Cake - BuzzFeed Multiplayer , YouTube “Civilization Revolution 2 is a Good Mobile Game, But is It a Good Civ Game?” - - Alex Newhouse , Gamespot 2 Turns out, Hercules is both Greek and Roman. - Tufts University “Smash Hit Is The Most Addictive Android And iOS Game Of The Year So Far" - Mihir Patkar , Make Use Of "I've been texting with an astronaut" - Laura Hudson , Boing Boing Spaceteam review - - Rich Stanton , Eurogamer DIfficulty 0:54:27 Stephen McGregor Category Game Design “Street Fighter V Fans Are Not Sure What To Make Of Seemingly Simplistic Newcom… - Ian Walker , Kotaku Yomi - Urban dictionary “Zelda: Breath of the Wild’s first DLC pack sounds really neat” - Samit Sarkar, , Polygon “Hard Mode: Good Difficulty Versus Bad Difficulty” - Paul Suddaby , envantotuts+ Difficulty is Difficult: Designing for Hard Modes in Games - Daniel Boutros , Gamasutra 2 "Where Did the Challenge Go? The Problem with Skyrim" - j-u-i-c-e , Level Skip The Civilization series has a difficulty problem, and Civ 6 solves it without e… - Jordan Forward , PCGames https://www.reddit.com/r/changemyview/comments/6cg9k1/cmv_dark_souls_isnt_hard_… - Vectornaut, r/ChangeMyView , Reddit “Yoshi’s Woolly World is tougher than it looks, but only if you want it to be” - Matt Gerardi , A.V. Club “Tim Schafer recalls when Steven Spielberg asked for a hint in Day of the Tenta… - Owen Good , Polygon “Tim Schafer's take on 'good puzzle theory' and being stuck as entertainment” - Micheal McWhertor , Polygon
小he流水 2017-05-19 18:03YUN OS & android OS最近阿里云OS又经常出现在我们的眼前,上一年在阿里巴巴入股魅族后发布了搭载阿里云系统的手机,最近退居三线的手机品牌康佳又发布了搭载YUNOS的手机S3,据说锤子科技下半年也要发布搭载阿里云系统的新机。比起什么品牌要发布阿里云系统我想大家更想知道究竟阿里云系统和安卓的区别吧!今天我就跟大家说说其中的故事吧!有人说阿里云OS就是盗版的安卓,与其说是国产的系统倒不如说就是和miui、flyme、都是基于安卓深度定制的ui。也有人说阿里云OS是阿里公司独立开发的系统,具有自己的系统构架,只是兼容安卓应用而已。究竟谁是谁非,下面让我们一起深入了解一下。首先,让我们看一下两个系统的结构图:不难看出,有些东西非常相似,说实话很难相信阿里云系统是完全独立于安卓系统的国产系统。阿里云采用的是兼容的模式,从底层往上看,阿里云系统的虚拟机是由阿里公司独立研制的并能够提供与Dalvik虚拟机兼容运行环境,就是说阿里独立研制的虚拟机与安卓的是兼容的,但其中有几分相同就不好说了。然后就是应用构架层了,与安卓最大的区别就是没有谷歌服务增加了阿里自己的云服务和构架,但最终还是加入对安卓的兼容,再接着就是ui了,和miui那些一样都是与安卓没有多大的相似之处了。最后由于层层的兼容,阿里云OS就能够运行安卓应用了。那么,问题又来了,为什么YunOS既然说自己是独立的系统为什么还要兼容安卓的应用而没有自己的应用呢?因为安卓已经非常的成熟,有着非常多的应用,想要让这么多的开发者为你的系统重新开发软件是谈何容易啊。所以YunOS就选择了通过兼容来获得自己的应用,这也是没有办法的办法了。应用问题也是国产的电脑系统做不起来的原因吧。恰好安卓是一个开源的系统,所以YunOS才可以通过兼容的方式获取自己的应用,而windows就不能被国产系统兼容了。有人曾经这样评价Android和YunOS:当Android系统死去,那么MIUI、EMUI这些国内手机厂商开发的UI就会停滞在AndroidX.X版本,而使用YunOS的那些手机依然可以推出YunOS6.0/7.0/8.0。为什么这么说呢?从上面的图中可以看出YunOS是从底层的有别于安卓,更新换代是自己的事情,与安卓系统是否更新没有直接的关系。而那些国产的ui是基于安卓系统设计修改ui层达到目的,本质上还是安卓系统。如果说了哪么多,你还是非得问我YunOS到底是国产系统还是安卓系统,我只能说一半一半吧,即使独立应用构架、自己开发的虚拟机,毕竟用安卓的应用,难道你敢说你和安卓没有半毛钱关系?不能说盗版,但是说从安卓中衍生出来的也不为过。
你好,这里是《科技最前沿》,喜爱科学的你来啦,我是你的老朋友丘孔语论。这一期我给大家分享《强势突围!继麒麟芯片后,一国产系统再为中国制造打强心针》,这篇文章来自于欧界科技。科技最前沿,丘孔语论带你遨游科技的海洋,天文、物理、互联网、人工智能、数码、编程、大数据、创新创业、化学医学、养生、心理学、灵性等等等统统都可能涉及到;海内外,宇宙中,跟着我,就够了……开始聆听科技的声音吧:欧界报道:最近,网上关于Windows系统和Android系统的消息层出不穷,今天你更新,明天我更新,你来我往,不绝于耳。确实,作为全球两大操作系统巨头,一动一静都被放大研究。尤其是前段时间,StatCounter发布的今年二月份全球上网设备操作系统统计数据显示,Android的市场份额已经高达37.4%,直逼Windows的38.6%,Windows的王位大有被Android取代之势。然后又赶上Win10更新和安卓8.0新出的节骨眼上,这下,操作系统又引起了国内更多的关注。PC时代,微软的Windows毫无疑问是世界第一大操作系统。如果单独统计PC市场的话,Windows系统到目前为止依然是霸主,其市场份额高达84.1%,无人可出其右。以前,很多国家都基于Linux搞了一套自己的pc端操作系统,起名都颇具特色,比如:麒麟、红星、Boss、Nova等,但依然无法与Windows抗衡而日渐消磨匿迹。而到如今,智能手机逐渐取代PC,人们更多的就是关注移动端操作系统。目前的手机系统主流是安卓和IOS两种,而微软的WP已经基本上退出了市场,IOS是苹果iPhone手机专属,安卓则是千千万万的手机厂商必备的系统。国内最畅销的手机品牌华为、小米、OPPO、VIVO都无一例外的选择了谷歌的安卓系统。虽然华为和小米对安卓系统做了一些优化,但终究还是基于安卓的底层技术。根据StatCounter最新统计显示,如果以智能手机市场来划分,Android和iOS瓜分了全部份额,Android占了85%,剩下的全是iOS,Windows移动版、黑莓、三星Tizen基本为零。随着谷歌对安卓系统的越来越限制,开发国产系统的呼声越来越强。其实,在操作系统领域曾有多家实力雄厚的巨头试图进入,其中就包括百度,但最后只有阿里依靠小品牌手机,实现了对谷歌、苹果巨头的突围。我们在天猫上可以看到,使用的YunOS的手机主要有小辣椒、朵唯、天语、康佳、长虹等小品牌。YunOS是阿里巴巴集团研发的智能操作系统,根据赛诺数据显示,其已经成为第三大移动操作系统。融合了阿里巴巴多个领域技术成果的Yunos是基于linux研发的,搭载了自主研发的操作系统功能和组件,增强了云端服务的能力,并提供与Dalvik虚拟机兼容的运行环境。但作为一个新系统最大的挑战就是软件生态,为了不至于没有应用可用,YunOS取巧地保留了安卓的app虚拟机。不过,安卓的核心部分毕竟被换了,所以,YunOS是一个新的独立的系统,不再是安卓。虽然YunOS还不是很完美,无法ROOT,无法搞所谓的底层优化、刷机,无法完全兼容安卓的app,但YunOS在安全性方面也是非常出色,通过了工信部5级安全认证的它可为用户提供全面的手机安全体系。而且,与谷歌Android和苹果iOS不同的是,阿里YunOS并非只能运用于智能手机和平板电脑等产品,而是着眼于万物互联网。我们在智能汽车、路由、净化器、智能手表等产品上也均能见到YunOS的身影。可以说阿里YunOS正在成为万物互联时代的底层操作系统。值得注意的是,在刚过去的MWC2017大会上,消失已久的芬兰Jolla宣布回归中国市场,表示将成立Sailfish中国联盟,致力为中国市场打造本土移动操作系统,可为智能手机、汽车工业、电视、物联网和智能手表等提供Sailfish OS的移动操作系统解决方案。虽然目前YunOS系统并没有什么高端机使用,但相较于镜中月般的Sailfish本土移动操作系统,成为全球第三手机系统的YunOS还是更有期待性。尤其是阿里入股魅族后,魅族开始全面使用阿里的YunOS。小编相信,国产系统崛起道路虽曲折,然而前途却是光明的!好了,所有的内容就是这些了。做一档科普类的节目,我的语速放的很慢,希望我的普通话不至于吓到你。请务必留出点时间关个注、点个赞或者留个言,这样会给我把节目做的更好的动力。交流讨论请关注微信公众号 丘孔语论 ,微信号是qiukong365 ,也可以扫描语音下面的二维码关注。丘孔语论,倒过来念就是 论语孔丘 ,聪明如你,知道这四个字怎么写吗?
Feels Like... episode 40 we're hanging with one of Stockholms underground heros DALVIK!House music producer DALVIK has spent much of his life in the electronic music landscape. With a history of being a promoter of clubs and a frequent punter attending parties and raves his music is always rooted from the dance floor. In the shine of a pulsating red light and beams of colours, surrounded by compact darkness and people eager to the beat.Locally he is also known as Håkan "D-Wike" Dalvik, and back in the day he was pioneering the UK-Garage sound in Sweden. But now it's full focus of the underground electronics such as deep-house, tech-house and techno. This mix is full of underground deep tech sounds, just the way we like it! Enjoy!Support Your Local Deep House Dealer!!!Episode 40 Tracklist1. Dubquest - Intro (Vagabundo Interpretation)2. DALVIK - återvinningen3. Fred P - Adjusted Perception4. RAAM - Ment (Samo DJ & Alexi3d Rmx)5. Luixar KL - Right now6. Neverdogs - Cambridge Garden7. DALVIK - Real (Rmx)8. Radio Slave - Vision9. Dubquest - Dry Tool10. Len Vitz - Waiting11. Fred P - Reap Love12. Muallem - Holland Tunnel13. RAAM - Ment14. Tony Ransom - Spread LoveFeels Like... is presented by Mix Media Arts! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Kenneth, Kevin and Len are joined by Rebecca Franks to discuss the world of mobile development for Android, Google's developer platform and her recent Google Developer Expert accolade. We take a dive into all things Android, starting with the Play Store and the impact that's made on the app ecosystem before going into the more technical details of building and testing Android apps and the tooling behind it. We speak through some of the nuances of building against Android's APIs and look at alternatives to Java and the ability to interop with native code through Android's NDK. Follow Rebecca online: Twitter: https://twitter.com/riggaroo Blog: http://riggaroo.co.za/ Android Studio - http://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html Google Play Store - https://play.google.com/store Apple App Store - https://itunes.apple.com/za/genre/ios/id36 A/B testing in the Google Play Store - http://bit.ly/1MYZJJx Bookdash - Rebecca's App - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.bookdash.android Android API levels - http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/uses-sdk-element.html Android Support Repository - http://developer.android.com/tools/support-library/setup.html Browserstack - https://www.browserstack.com Genymotion - https://www.genymotion.com/ Google test lab - https://developers.google.com/cloud-test-lab/ Espresso - https://google.github.io/android-testing-support-library/docs/espresso/ Mockito - http://mockito.org/ Android Marshmallow permissions - http://developer.android.com/training/permissions/requesting.html Understanding Battery Usage in your Android App - http://riggaroo.co.za/understanding-battery-usage-android-app/ IntelliJ - https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/ Dalvik - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalvik_(software) Kotlin - https://kotlinlang.org/ Gradle - http://gradle.org/ Xtend - http://www.eclipse.org/xtend/ Xtendroid - https://github.com/tobykurien/Xtendroid Cordova - https://cordova.apache.org/ React Native - https://facebook.github.io/react-native/ Android NDK - http://developer.android.com/tools/sdk/ndk Google Developer Expert - https://developers.google.com/experts/ Local Android developer spots: GDG Cape Town - http://www.meetup.com/Google-Developer-Group-Cape-Town-Meetup/ GDG Pretoria - https://developers.google.com/groups/chapter/117599647232533838312/ GDG Johannesburg - https://developers.google.com/groups/chapter/102185667048205980695/ Johannesburg Android Usergroup - http://www.meetup.com/androidug-joburg/ Picks Kenneth: AfrikaBurn - http://www.afrikaburn.com Len: Durable Queue - https://github.com/Factual/durable-queue Rebecca: Android Weekly - http://androidweekly.net/ Riggaroo blog - http://riggaroo.co.za/ Kevin: Evening of Mastery - http://stream.drivenalliance.com/events/AnEveningOfMastery/ Clean Code - http://www.amazon.com/Clean-Code-Handbook-Software-Craftsmanship/dp/0132350882 The Clean Coder - http://www.amazon.com/Clean-Coder-Conduct-Professional-Programmers/dp/0137081073 Working Effectively with Legacy Code - http://www.amazon.com/Working-Effectively-Legacy-Michael-Feathers/dp/0131177052 Refactoring - http://www.amazon.com/Refactoring-Improving-Design-Existing-Code/dp/0201485672 The Deep Synergy between Testability and Good Design - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cVZvoFGJTU Thanks for listening! Stay in touch: * Socialize - https://twitter.com/zadevchat & http://facebook.com/ZADevChat/ * Suggestions and feedback - https://github.com/zadevchat/ping * Subscribe and rate in iTunes - http://bit.ly/zadevchat-itunes
Sean and Derek talk about the state of Android tooling, refactoring journeys, and an approach to rails form objects. Dalvik executables limited to 65,536 methods ProGuard Stylesheet limits in Internet Explorer A refactoring jounrney in animated gif form. Simple Form wrappers ScalaForms Type-safe URLs in Yesod Django forms Batching up touch calls Issues with uniqueness validations
Slides Here:https://www.defcon.org/images/defcon-22/dc-22-presentations/Strazzere-Sawyer/DEFCON-22-Strazzere-and-Sawyer-Android-Hacker-Protection-Level-UPDATED.pdf Android Hacker Protection Level 0 Tim Strazzere LEAD RESEARCH & RESPONSE ENGINEER Jon Sawyer CTO OF APPLIED CYBERSECURITY LLC Obfuscator here, packer there - the Android ecosystem is becoming a bit cramped with different protectors for developers to choose. With such limited resources online about attacking these protectors, what is a new reverse engineer to do? Have no fear, after drinking all the cheap wine two Android hackers have attacked all the protectors currently available for everyones enjoyment! Whether you've never reversed Android before or are a hardened veteran there will be something for you, along with all the glorious PoC tools and plugins for your little heart could ever desire. Tim "diff" Strazzere is a Lead Research and Response Engineer at Lookout Mobile Security. Along with writing security software, he specializes in reverse engineering and malware analysis. Some interesting past projects include having reversing the Android Market protocol, Dalvik decompilers and memory manipulation on mobile devices. Past speaking engagements have included DEFCON, BlackHat, SyScan, HiTCON and EICAR. Jon "Justin Case" Sawyer - 31 yr old father of four, and CTO of Applied Cybersecurity LLC. Jon likes to spend his nights with a fine (cheap) glass of wine, writing exploits for the latest Android devices. When not researching vulnerabilities or writing exploits, he dabbles in dalvik obfuscation.
Tor and Chet may not know ART, but they know what they like. In this episode, the first in a two-pART series, they talk with Anwar Ghuloum from the ART, or Android Runtime team. ART is the new runtime for Android, which came online in the KitKat release as an alternative to Dalvik. Now ART is not only enabled by default: it’s the only runtime. We’ll talk about what it is, how it works, why it’s better, and the future and very meaning of ART in modern society.Subscribe to the podcast feed or download the audio file directly.ARTicles:Introducing ART: http://source.android.com/devices/tech/dalvik/art.htmlVerifying App Behavior: http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/verifying-apps-art.htmlGoogle I/O 2014 Session:The ART Runtime: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBlTzQsUoOwOther Resources:Systrace: http://developer.android.com/tools/help/systrace.htmlTor: google.com/+TorNorbyeChet: google.com/+ChetHaase
Agnès, Amira, Lidwine et Mathilde discutent de WWDC et notamment la sortie de Swift, de la VM Android post Dalvik. Elles débattent aussi sur le TDD et sur l’intérêt d’enfoncer des portes ouvertes. Enregistré le 23 juin 2014 Téléchargement de l’épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–105.mp3 News Agnès Crepet Amira Lakhal Ludwine Probst Mathilde Lemée Les Duchesses Langages Groovy Now Runs on Android Max OS X Yosemite Swift Guide du langage Swift Une FAQ sur Swift Les benchmarks sur Swift par forcement bons TestFlight Android : Mort de Dalvik Machine virtuelle ART Les sorties d’outils/fwks The 2014 State of DevOps Spring Boot 1.1 Spring Cloud 1.0 DockerCon Docker 1.0 Clocker Site web CloudCon Google’s Web Starter Kit by @addyosmani Redisson - driver asynchrone pour Redis Facebook lance Apollo Débats Le débat: #isTDDDead avec Martin Fowler, Kent Beck et David Heinemeier Hansson : https://plus.google.com/u/0/events/cco30ri6dpkej4h4d8mejmat98o http://www.phpclasses.org/blog/post/237-7-Reasons-Why-TDD-Failed-to-become-Mainstream.html http://www.infoq.com/news/2014/06/tdd-dead-controversy Nomock movement La vitesse du développent logiciel Slack Duchess France et les femmes dans les conférences Du coté des startups Mesosphere (SAAS de Mesos) leve 10.5m$ Lima lève 2.5m$ France Digital fait un bilan stats des startups Les conférences Google IO Spark change USI CFP de Droidcon Paris est ouvert : Paris 22–23 septembre CFP Nipconf : 24 octobre 2014 Lausanne, Suisse Soft-shake CFP BlendWebMix : Lyon 29 & 30 octobre CFP Devfest Nantes 2014 : 7 novembre 2014 à la cité des congrès de Nantes Codeurs en seine CFP du JugSummerCamp est ouvert : La Rochelle 19 septembre CFP de Scala IO est ouvert : Paris 23–24 octobre Nous contacter Contactez-nous via twitter http://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs sur le groupe Google http://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs ou sur le site web http://lescastcodeurs.com/ Flattr-ez nous (dons) sur http://lescastcodeurs.com/ En savoir plus sur le sponsoring? sponsors@lescastcodeurs.com
Kenn Ejimaさんをゲストに迎えて、WWDC, OS X, JavaScript, Handoff, App Store, Swift, Android Java などについて話しました。 スポンサー: SUZURI Show Notes Rebuild: 46: Worldwide Stockholm Syndrome (naan, hak) Apple Has (Partly) Lifted the NDA for Beta Releases ASCIIwwdc NSHipster Swype, Fleksy, and SwiftKey Working on Custom Keyboards for iOS 8 JavaScript for Automation AppleScript: Graphic User Interface Scripting Apple - iOS 8 - Continuity Daring Fireball: Only Apple Handoff Programming Guide: About Handoff SUZURI ★ Friending the App Store Apple Acquires Chomp; App Store Search And Discovery To Be Completely Revamped Apple Buys Topsy Apple Services iOS Developers With New App Store Analytics iOS Developers Need to Know Objective-C EastMeetEast Rebuild: 45: Remembering WSDL (gfx) Google I/O 2014 Go Support for Android Native Android applications with Dart Groovy Now Runs on Android Dalvik is dead, long live Dalvik!
Presentation de l'equipe Les nouvelles * Google App Engine http://googleappengine.blogspot.com/2009/04/seriously-this-time-new-language-on-app.html http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/whatisgoogleappengine.html http://code.google.com/intl/fr/appengine/docs/java/jrewhitelist.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalvik_virtual_machine http://openjdk.java.net * IBM rachete Sun... ou pas http://tech.yahoo.com/news/nm/20090318/tc_nm/us_sunmicro_takeover_ibm * Le directeur informatique (CTO) de JBoss s'en va http://sacha.labourey.com/2009/03/29/i-am-leaving-red-hat-onward/ http://markclittle.blogspot.com/2009/03/new-job.html * Project Coin http://www.jroller.com/scolebourne/entry/jdk_7_language_changes_everyone http://blogs.sun.com/darcy/entry/project_coin http://openjdk.java.net/projects/coin/ * Java EE 6 en proposed final draft http://jcp.org http://in.relation.to/tag/Bean+Validation Conferences GR8Conf, 18 - 19 mai a copenhague - http://www.gr8conf.org USI Juillet 2009 par octo JAX, 20 - 24 avril Mayence allemagne DSLDevCon, Seattle JavaOne, 2-5 Juin SpringOne - avril 27 29 GeekCon JUG de Cracovie sur 2 jours Google I/O semaine avant JavaOne USI 2009 -- Conference organizee par Octo Jazoon 22, 25 juin GIDS April 22 - 25 http://www.developersummit.com/ Les mains dans le cambouis Calculs flottants, doubles floats et mauvaises surprises http://firstclassthoughts.co.uk/java/traps/java_double_traps.html Outils de l'episode JarInspector - http://www.codeland.org/index.html IntelliJ IDEA - http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/ m2eclipse - http://m2eclipse.codehaus.org/ Feedback http://lescastcodeurs.com commentaire@lescastcodeurs.com
Programmation sur plateforme mobile : application à iOS et Android (2103/2014, HD)
Cette séquence fait une présentation rapide d'Android et des mécanismes sous jacents tels que la machine virtuelle Dalvik utilisé ou l'environnement de développement.