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Xml Phone
 Wireless Programming with J2ME: Cracking the Code with CDROM by Hungry Minds, Cracking the Code™ Wireless Programming with J2ME™ Create Tomorrow' s Mobile Applications Today In this unique guide, a crack team of software engineers delivers the programming solutions and source code you need to jump-start a wide range of mobile application projects with Java 2 Micro Edition. Using flow charts and line-by-line analysis of six professional-quality applications, they show you how to solve for typical J2ME programming challenges — and create your own applications using CLDC, MIDP, XML, and other cutting-edge technologies. Take an In-Depth Look at 6 Professional-Grade Mobile ApplicationsOnline testing engine for Palm OS devicesOnline ordering system for cell phones and pagersMP3 player for Pocket PCsPeer-to-peer search application for Palm OS devicesMobile Web services (weather, movie ticket ordering, news) for cell phonesTarget practice game for Palm OS devicesPlus CLDC implementation, MIDP-MIDlet implementation, and XML parsing case studies and guidance on converting existing applications into J2MEAll software tested at the Dreamtech Software Research Lab CD-ROM Includes: 6 professional-quality applications and 3 topical case studies, complete with over 5,700 lines of source code Java 2 Software Development Kit Standard Edition version 1.3 for Windows Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition, Wireless Toolkit 1.0.1 Forte for Java, release 2.0, Community Edition for All Platforms Tomcat JavaServer Pages Implementation Server and kXML www.hungryminds.
 The Pebble and the Avalanche: How Taking Things Apart Creates Revolutions Important revolutions of the past 30 years include the Internet, personal computers, the XML programming language, and the breakup of AT&T. What do they have in common? All are based on innovations that break technology apart. After breaking a technology apart, it still works -- phone calls could still be made after the breakup of AT&T -- but it is composed of smaller and more flexible pieces that can be used to create new innovations. This process is called "disaggregation," so named because the pieces of the technology that were formerly stuck together are pried apart but not destroyed. Using the simple metaphor of the pebble and the avalanche -- prying rocks loose from a mountaintop releases tremendous energy -- this book explains the workings and benefits of disaggregation. Author Yudkowsky uses case studies from familiar companies and industries to explain how to generate similar innovations, in the process identifying strategies and tactics that maximize these innovations.
xmlphone
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