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On this episode: Riot retro gaming presents Xbox Jtag emulation: Microsoft's Emulator to Run x86 64-Bit Windows Apps on ARM Devices as preview build 21277. PlayStation emulator running on your Xbox Series X|S, H: Xbox Series S Runs N64 games ... The emulator used for the testing is a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) called Retro Arch, which supports the Xbox Series S|X. On this episode: Our friends from across the pond. Riot Retro Gaming presents Xbox Jtag emulation: Microsoft's Emulator to Run x86 64-Bit Windows Apps on ARM Devices as preview build 21277. PlayStation emulator running on your Xbox Series X|S, H: Xbox Series S Runs N64 games ... running emulators on a Pi, The emulator used for the testing is a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) called Retro Arch, which supports the Xbox Series S|X. Have an emulator experience? Leave a voicemail to 313-MAN-0231.............. ° ͜ʖ ͡°) ◕_◕ ༽ 1980s*‿'*(•_•)じゃ ┌༼ຈل͜ຈ༽┐ ¬^(-¬) and we I'll air it
This week I share about my recent office reorganization and the resulting tech purge that it has resulted in as I start to clear out old technology and e-cycle it. We catch up on a slow week for Windows Insiders and discuss the potential release of the first 19H2 bits to testers. Then we discuss COMPUTEX and Microsoft's interesting announcement about a modern operating system right in the middle of them sharing about new OEM hardware running Windows 10. Of course, spread throughout the show we talk about other things like the changes around the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) and why some believe it is dead, tons of updates around apps and services, plus tidbits about gaming, security, and social media. As always enjoy the show and thanks again for listening!
This week on the Windows Central Podcast, we talk new builds, the definition of an Always-Connected PC, the future of UWP, and more! Daniel Rubino and Zac Bowden talk about the week's news in the Windows universe, including the latest build of Redstone 5, and trying to parse the actual meaning of 'Always Connected PC'. They also speculate on the age old privacy question — Who is 'they'? And, apropos of nothing, Dan seems to know an awful lot about how super-criminals use computers. Finally, Dan and Zac discuss the future for UWP apps on Windows 10 and the Lenovo Thunderbolt 3 Graphics Dock. Join us! Help us make this show the best Microsoft podcast in the world. Tell your friends, share it on social media using the hashtag #wcpodcast, and give us a five-star rating wherever you download your podcasts! Thank you so much for listening! Links: Windows 10 Redstone 5 changelog: All the changes so far What the heck is an 'Always Connected PC' anyway? Is there a future for true Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps on Windows 10? Lenovo Thunderbolt 3 Graphics Dock review: Glorious external NVIDIA GTX 1050 graphics Sponsors: Simple Contacts Simple Contacts is the most convenient way to renew your contact lens prescription and reorder your brand of contacts from anywhere, in minutes.To save $20 on your lenses, just go to simplecontacts.com/wcp or enter the code WCP at checkout. Hosts Daniel Rubino Zac Bowden Make this show great by participating! Send in your comments, questions, and feedback to: Email: wcpodcast@windowscentral.com Twitter: @WindowsCentral with hashtag #wcpodcast
The rise of the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) and Android applications have allowed for developers to make less versions of their apps, which can now reach much larger audiences
Telerik UI for the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) by Progress is a suite of 20+ UI controls for developers building UWP applications. It includes a wide range of controls for various application scenarios, including data management, scheduling, layout, editing, navigation, data/geo visualization, and interactivity.Join Jerry Nixon as he welcomes John Bristow and Sam Basu from Progress as they discuss how these controls allow developers to build highly-performant applications for all Windows 10 devices — desktop, tablets and phones, as well as for IoT, Xbox and VR devices.[03:19] What is the UI Control suite for UWP?[09:39] Why is this UWP Control system special?[12:47] How about customizing the UWP controls? Is this possible?[13:45] How would you describe the state of UWP today?[17:13] What's my experience look like when I go to a non-Windows platform using your UWP Controls?[19:37] What kind of guidance do you give developers who are looking for UI best practices?[21:41] How do get this into the my UWP application?[30:01] Any advice for developers who just want to build their own control?[33:40] Talk to us about the UWP ecosystem. How's the Community Toolkit compare to yours?[39:17] What does XAML Standard mean for UWP?If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogDownload the Free Open-Sourced edition here!
Telerik UI for the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) by Progress is a suite of 20+ UI controls for developers building UWP applications. It includes a wide range of controls for various application scenarios, including data management, scheduling, layout, editing, navigation, data/geo visualization, and interactivity.Join Jerry Nixon as he welcomes John Bristow and Sam Basu from Progress as they discuss how these controls allow developers to build highly-performant applications for all Windows 10 devices — desktop, tablets and phones, as well as for IoT, Xbox and VR devices.[03:19] What is the UI Control suite for UWP?[09:39] Why is this UWP Control system special?[12:47] How about customizing the UWP controls? Is this possible?[13:45] How would you describe the state of UWP today?[17:13] What's my experience look like when I go to a non-Windows platform using your UWP Controls?[19:37] What kind of guidance do you give developers who are looking for UI best practices?[21:41] How do get this into the my UWP application?[30:01] Any advice for developers who just want to build their own control?[33:40] Talk to us about the UWP ecosystem. How's the Community Toolkit compare to yours?[39:17] What does XAML Standard mean for UWP?If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogDownload the Free Open-Sourced edition here!
Telerik UI for the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) by Progress is a suite of 20+ UI controls for developers building UWP applications. It includes a wide range of controls for various application scenarios, including data management, scheduling, layout, editing, navigation, data/geo visualization, and interactivity.Join Jerry Nixon as he welcomes John Bristow and Sam Basu from Progress as they discuss how these controls allow developers to build highly-performant applications for all Windows 10 devices — desktop, tablets and phones, as well as for IoT, Xbox and VR devices.[03:19] What is the UI Control suite for UWP?[09:39] Why is this UWP Control system special?[12:47] How about customizing the UWP controls? Is this possible?[13:45] How would you describe the state of UWP today?[17:13] What's my experience look like when I go to a non-Windows platform using your UWP Controls?[19:37] What kind of guidance do you give developers who are looking for UI best practices?[21:41] How do get this into the my UWP application?[30:01] Any advice for developers who just want to build their own control?[33:40] Talk to us about the UWP ecosystem. How's the Community Toolkit compare to yours?[39:17] What does XAML Standard mean for UWP?If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogDownload the Free Open-Sourced edition here!
Universal Apps are becoming more universal - arriving on the XBox One! Carl and Richard talk to Chris Gomez about the announcements at the Microsoft Build event around building software for the XBox One. Now, any developer can write code using the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) approach, which means you can code in C#, Javascript... pretty much any language you want in the CLR space. Chris explains that while you have limited access to all the resources in the XBox One, the UWP approach is a starting point to building bigger things if that's what you want to do - the XBox team is watching!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Universal Apps are becoming more universal - arriving on the XBox One! Carl and Richard talk to Chris Gomez about the announcements at the Microsoft Build event around building software for the XBox One. Now, any developer can write code using the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) approach, which means you can code in C#, Javascript... pretty much any language you want in the CLR space. Chris explains that while you have limited access to all the resources in the XBox One, the UWP approach is a starting point to building bigger things if that's what you want to do - the XBox team is watching!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
00:00 - Intro Welcome to the Show All Nude News Podcast – more episodes, more concise, more fun! We are part of the Tech Podcast Network Word of the Week is "Build" 4:00 - News Microsoft still has no idea what to do about phones - or Did Microsoft just kill Windows Phone? Terry Myerson Said …. "We're fully committed to that 4-inch screen, there will be a time for it to be our focus, but right now it's part of the family, but it's not the core of where I hope to generate developer interest over the next year." "If you wanted to reach a lot of phone customers, Windows Phone isn't the way to do it," Windows Bridge for iOS. – Create Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps that can run on Windows 10 devices using iOS APIs and Objective-C code The Windows Bridge for iOS is an open-source project that allows you to create Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps that can run on Windows 10 devices using iOS APIs and Objective-C code. Centennial Bridge coming to Windows Insiders with the next build The bridge will allow developers to bring their Classic Windows Apps (Win32 / .NET) to the Windows Store and update them via the Store, too. This functionality is based on Microsoft's App-V technology. Anniversary Update coming to Windows 10 (on July 29th?) Windows Unlock in Anniversary Update Use your Windows Phone or Android phone as remote credential store which can be used to unlock any of your Windows 10 PCs and authenticate with apps and services that support Windows Hello and Microsoft Passport based authentication. Microsoft is building a Bot army! Bots are conversational agents. They're meant to help users achieve and/or complete a particular task. From Developers can build bots via the Microsoft Bot Framework that work in text/SMS, Office 365 mail, Skype, Slack, GroupMe, Telegram and the Web Just like ELIZA Colin wants a Bot to be a co-host on the podcast More Windows 10 Anniversary Update News Windows Ink. Windows Hello support for apps and web sites. Cortana from the lock screen. Cortana proactive suggestions. Cortana Collection. Microsoft and Canonical bring Ubuntu Linux binaries and Bash Shell to Windows 10 This is the year of the Linux Desktop, and it's going to run Windows 10 Win10 (UWP and Cortana) on Xbox UWP apps and unified store on Xbox One. Windows Desktop Converter Cortana on Xbox One. Background music on Xbox One. Surface Phone Update Cut to Crickets Chirping Nexdoc is a Laptop without a Computer A Laptop that uses the power of your tablet or phone Skype has a Hololense add-in Windows 10 blue screen of death? Now Microsoft adds QR codes to BSOD crash support 25:00 - Outro - Call for your help with the podcast, please… Follow and Re-tweet, @SurfaceSmiths Facebook www.facebook.com/SurfaceSmithsPodcast Listen www.SurfaceSmiths.com Email Podcast@SurfaceSmith.com Purchase Amazon A Store 28:00 - Whiskey of the Week Welcome Time travelling Pierre Roman to Whiskey of the Week! Bastille Whisky 1789
This week we talk the Ghostbusters 2016 trailer, Microsoft's Universal Windows Platform (UWP) initiative, Pokemon GO, E3, VR Rollercoasters, and more! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/trps/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/trps/support
In this episode, Jeremy Thake and Richard DiZerega talk to Andrew Salamatov about the Outlook announcements at Build and Ignite along with a two hackathons that were run in New York and Chicago. Weekly updates Office Dev Show Episode 4—Getting started with PHPOffice 365 Developer Patterns and Practices: August 2015 release Office 365 API updates—OneNote Office add-in updates—PowerPoint, Word, Excel Property Manager Hero Demo version 2 Ships! Connecting to Office 365 from an Office add-in by Richard DiZerega Contacts API Windows 10 Universal Windows Platform (UWP) by Richard DiZerega Connecting to Office 365 APIs from a Windows 10 UWP by Richard DiZerega Glyma for SharePoint is now open source! by Paul Culmsee The Office 365 API—OneDrive / Files API by Add-in Express How to setup a simple STS for web application development—Part 1 of 3 by Bas Lijten Configure claims-based web applications using OWIN WsFederation middleware by Bas Lijten A Worldmap list visualization for SharePoint OnLine by Yuri Burger Web add-ins—Coercion types in Word By Cindy Meister VBA->JS: Error handling (Syntax & Concept) By Cindy Meister My Experiences with the Office Dev PnP PowerShell Cmdlets By Daniel Laskewitz Modify Regional and Language settings with JSOM and JavaScript by Vardhaman Despande All you need to know about Azure Active Directory Applications in a few lines by Stephane Eysken’s Webcam add-in for SharePoint by John Liu Show notes EfficiencyNext @napkatz Got questions or comments about the show? Join the O365 Dev Podcast on the Office 365 Technical Network. The podcast RSS is available iTunes or search for it on “Office 365 Developer Podcast” or add directly with the RSS http://feeds.feedburner.com/Office365DeveloperPodcast. About Paul Katz Paul Katz is president and chief software architect of EfficiencyNext, a software solutions company in Washington DC. Paul has worked with Microsoft technologies for the last 18 years and has been an active SharePoint developer over the last 5 years, pursuing integration stories both by the book and by using new design patterns. Most recently, Paul has migrated much of his skills onto Microsoft Azure and Microsoft Office 365, leveraging tighter DevOps models the new platforms enable. A busy parent with two kids, Paul understands the need to extract value out of every minute and sees Office 365 and the add-Ins model as powerful tools for doing so. About the hosts Jeremy is a technical product manager at Microsoft responsible for the Visual Studio Developer story for Office 365 development. Previously he worked at AvePoint Inc., a large ISV, as the chief architect shipping two apps to the Office Store. He has been heavily involved in the SharePoint community since 2006 and was awarded the SharePoint MVP award four years in a row before retiring the title to move to Microsoft. You can find Jeremy blogging at www.jeremythake.com and tweeting at @jthake. Richard is a software engineer in Microsoft’s Developer Experience (DX) group, where he helps developers and software vendors maximize their use of Microsoft cloud services in Office 365 and Azure. Richard has spent a good portion of the last decade architecting Office-centric solutions, many that span Microsoft’s diverse technology portfolio. He is a passionate technology evangelist and frequent speaker are worldwide conferences, trainings and events. Richard is highly active in the Office 365 community, popular blogger at www.richdizz.com, and can be found on twitter at @richdizz. Richard is born, raised and based in Dallas, TX but works on a worldwide team based in Redmond. In his spare time, Richard is an avid builder of things (BoT), musician, and lightning fast runner.
Continuamos con Raspberry PI y veremos en el capítulo de hoy Windows 10 para Raspberry Pi. Sin duda alguna una opción interesante para este exitoso dispositivo.Si tienes alguna duda sobre Raspberry Pi o algún otro tema de tecnología puedes contactar con nosotros a través del formulario de contacto, en Twitter y en Facebook. También tenemos a tu disposición una lista de distribución.Sí, has leído bien: es posible instalar Windows 10 en tu Raspberry Pi 2 ¿Significa esto que vas a tener un PC Windows de escritorio por unos 40 euros? No. En realidad estamos hablando de instalar la nueva versión de Windows 10 IoT(Internet of things) o lo que es lo mismo: la nueva plataforma Windows orientada para trabajar con dispositivos electrónicos conectados.Con este nuevo e interesante proyecto, podremos desarrollar a través de Visual Studio aplicaciones con las que gestionar diferentes dispositivos electrónicos, para hacernos una idea podemos ver algunos proyectos en la página de Microsoft.¿Internet de las cosas?Ya hablamos en nuestro podcast de este concepto que está arrancando poco a poco y que cada vez más las empresas están apostando a medio-largo plazo, Microsoft Incluida. Este concepto trata de describir la posibilidad de interconexión de los dispositivos electrónicos cotidianos, como pueden ser una lámpara, un termostato o una máquina industrial.Instalando Windows 10 IoT:Si nos interesa indagar sobre este mundo, lo primero que tendremos que hacer es instalar Windows 10 for IoT en nuestra Raspberry Pi 2 (importante indicar que solo es posible desplegarlo en este modelo de Raspberry Pi). Antes de empezar es muy importante tener en cuenta los siguientes requisitos:Contar con un sistema operativo Windows 10. Actualmente la versión definitiva todavía no ha sido lanzada, podremos utilizar las versiones previas. También tener en cuenta que algunos miembros de la comunidad aseguran haber realizado esta operación mediante una máquina virtual.Contar con una Raspberry Pi 2 Model B. Solo este modelo funciona actualmente con este sistema operativo.También disponer de una Micro SD con espacio suficiente para poder ubicar el sistema, con 8GB serán suficientes. Ojo, perderemos todos los datos de la tarjeta de memoria al realizar la operación.Y ahora ya que estamos seguros de que cumplimos los requisitos, nos ponemos manos a la obra. Estos son los pasos a seguir:Descargar la imagen del sistema operativo en la web de Microsoft.Una vez descargada, hacer doble clic sobre la imagen y ésta se montará en una unidad virtual.Al abrir la imagen podremos realizar la instalación en nuestro PC, desde el instalador "Windows_10_IoT_Core_RPi2.msi".Una vez finalizada la instalación, observaremos que en la ruta: "C:Program Files (x86)Microsoft IoTFFURaspberryPi2" tenemos la imagen a volcar a la Raspberry.Para volcar dicha imagen, tendremos que mediante este ejecutable: "IoTCoreImageHelper.exe" flashear la tarjeta micro SD que está destinada a la Raspberry Pi 2.Tan solo tendremos que elegir la unidad de destino de la SD y la de la imagen que volcaremos a la Raspberry: "C:Program Files (x86)Microsoft IoTFFURaspberryPi2flash.ffu".FlahIoTToolHacemos clic en "Flash".Tras un proceso de copiado de la imagen a tu tarjeta MicroSD ya tendrás lista tu tarjeta! Podrás introducirla en tu Raspberry y conectarla a la alimentación.A partir de ahora podremos desarrollar para ella con el nuevo Visual Studio 2015 utilizando el proyecto del tipo "Universal Windows Platform (UWP)".Pronto os explicaremos como desarrollar una aplicación para este dispositivo. Estamos seguros de que os gustará.A continuación te dejamos los enlaces de los que hacemos mención en este podcast:El Internet de las Cosas10. Cómo afecta el Big Data a nuestras vidasProyectos con Windows IoTDescarga de Imágen Windows 10 IoTRecurso del díaPuttyEs un cliente ligero para conectar a dispositivos mediante SSH o Telnet desde el sistema operativo Windows. Es muy liviano y además es Open Source. Imprescindible para conectar a dispositivos como Raspberry Pi.Muchas gracias a todos por los comentarios y valoraciones que nos hacéis en iVoox, iTunes, Spreaker y Overcast nos dan mucho ánimo para seguir con este proyecto.