How so vis-a-vis mobile Flash?
I must echo the experience with Flash on the Xoom running 3.1. Performance is, finally, quite acceptable.
Regarding 1) Flash on Android doesn't run in the background.
An app that is using android.drm will probably be looking for specific DRM plugins.
Here's what I believe is going on: Honeycomb adds a framework to support DRM plugins. Android 3.1 adds an actual implementation of a DRM plugin called Widevine (acquired by Google in Dec. 2010). Android 3.1 also…
I too was confused by their use of the name Hype and the awesome open source Hype Framework. Apparently there's no connection.
It's quite premature to call this game. No one has seen Apple's cloud music offering. How locked up will it be? How much will it cost? Will it support MP3s not purchased from iTunes? Will it work on non-Apple-brand…
Apple's consolidated.db is not a "mistake". A mistake would not have gotten rewritten for iOS 4 when the database got converted from XML to SQLite and moved to user data.…
This seems like a mighty convenient "bug" given that HTML frameworks like jQuerry Mobile are just starting to be able to deliver a native-app-like user experience.
IF they put you into a featured listing! First you have to figure out who to sleep with on the App Store team.
If I was head of Windows Phone 7 Developer Relations I wouldn't be writing public blogs critical of Scoble's evangelizing Android development. People might misinterpret my motivations.
How so vis-a-vis mobile Flash?
I must echo the experience with Flash on the Xoom running 3.1. Performance is, finally, quite acceptable.
Regarding 1) Flash on Android doesn't run in the background.
An app that is using android.drm will probably be looking for specific DRM plugins.
Here's what I believe is going on: Honeycomb adds a framework to support DRM plugins. Android 3.1 adds an actual implementation of a DRM plugin called Widevine (acquired by Google in Dec. 2010). Android 3.1 also…
I too was confused by their use of the name Hype and the awesome open source Hype Framework. Apparently there's no connection.
It's quite premature to call this game. No one has seen Apple's cloud music offering. How locked up will it be? How much will it cost? Will it support MP3s not purchased from iTunes? Will it work on non-Apple-brand…
Apple's consolidated.db is not a "mistake". A mistake would not have gotten rewritten for iOS 4 when the database got converted from XML to SQLite and moved to user data.…
This seems like a mighty convenient "bug" given that HTML frameworks like jQuerry Mobile are just starting to be able to deliver a native-app-like user experience.
IF they put you into a featured listing! First you have to figure out who to sleep with on the App Store team.
If I was head of Windows Phone 7 Developer Relations I wouldn't be writing public blogs critical of Scoble's evangelizing Android development. People might misinterpret my motivations.