Archive for the ‘Mobilité’ Category

Apprendre le développement avec Small Basic

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

small basic

J’aurai aimé découvrir Small Basic lors de mes premiers cours de développement…. Voici un outil tout récent et parfait pour apprendre les bases développement en toute simplicité!

Je vous invite à le découvrir ici et à suivre les premiers pas au travers celui-ci….

SmallBasic

Original post by blog.nospam@nospam.benjamingauthey.com (bgauth)

Apprendre le développement avec Small Basic

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

small basic

J’aurai aimé découvrir Small Basic lors de mes premiers cours de développement…. Voici un outil tout récent et parfait pour apprendre les bases développement en toute simplicité!

Je vous invite à le découvrir ici et à suivre les premiers pas au travers celui-ci….

SmallBasic

Original post by blog.nospam@nospam.benjamingauthey.com (bgauth)

Search Like It’s 2001 On Google

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Google has been going ten years this year and to mark the occassion they’ve released a version of their database as of ten years ago.
First thing that you’ll notice is that it’s got an old school Google logo - not exactly sure if that’s the accurate one, as drop-shadows might have been beyond them.

Original post by Simon Perry

Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 Wallpapers

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

sonyericsson-xperia-x1-desktop-wallpaper02.jpgNot wallpapers for the gadget itself mind you, which is slated to come out as the year ends, but for your desktop or laptop. Check out dailymobile.se for more of them, and be prepared to do some image resizing; the wallpapers are only available at an unorthodox 1200 x 900.

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Original post by Rico

Screen Grabs: Mike Traceur needs to speak to his girlfriend… on her X1

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

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Screen grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dt com.

Sure, Knight Rider is probably the worst show ever in the history of the moving picture, but that doesn’t stop Sony Ericsson from wanting to throw some money in its direction (or not, seeing as the company’s logo has apparently been scrubbed). Between the nearly intolerable dialogue and absurdly fake green-screen car chases, check out a glimpse of the forthcoming Xperia X1… if you can tolerate even a moment of this abomination.

[Thanks, Marco]

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

XPERIA X1 gets examined in-depth on video

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

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Sony Ericsson itself showed off its XPERIA X1 handset in a webcast the other day, but if you just can’t get enough of it (and, judging from the number of comments the phone has gotten, plenty of you can’t), you may want to hit up the::unwired website, which has an even more extensive hands-on video of a pre-production unit. Among other things, it shows that switching from portrait to landscape mode takes far less time than before, and the all-important panels seem to be a good deal more responsive as well — the build being used is from early September, so it should be a reasonable indication of what the final software will be like. Hit up the link below to check out all sixteen minutes of it for yourself.

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Original post by Donald Melanson

Future Xperia phones may not rely on Windows Mobile, sez SE

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

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We′ve known for what feels like ages that Sony Ericsson’s Xperia ͱ would be based on Windows Mobile, but we wouldn’t count on the X2, X3 or X99 to just follow suit. At the launch of its digital marketing campaign for said handset, the firm made clear that future SE Xperia phones may not be based on Microsoft’s OS, with Magnus Andersson, product manager for the X1, noting that “the brand is not tied into any specific technical platform.” Unfortunately, he didn’t elaborate nor give any indication what other systems we could eventually see, but at least we know that there will be life after the X1 in one form or another, right?

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Original post by Darren Murph

XPERIA X1 gets demoed in Sony Ericsson webcast

Monday, September 15th, 2008

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Those following the XPERIA X1’s every move no doubt caught this as it happened earlier today, but for those that missed it, the Inexperia website has now posted most of Sony Ericsson’s latest webcast, in which the X1’s interface gets shown off to a far greater extent than we’ve seen previously. That includes a look at the phone’s much talked about panel system and a glimpse of its video-playing abilities, plus some expected gushing about the phone’s design, which is described as feeling like a well-tailored suit. Head on past the break for the video courtesy of Inexperia, and look for the whole thing to be available direct from Sony Ericsson on September 17th.

[Thanks, Reginald]

Continue reading XPERIA X1 gets demoed in Sony Ericsson webcast

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Original post by Donald Melanson

Sony Ericsson goes viral with Xperia X1 marketing

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

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Sony Ericsson is taking the viral route on marketing with its forthcoming Xperia X1, launching a new “alternative reality thriller” centered around a mysterious character named Johnny X. There’s not much meat in the video the company is desperately trying to sneak into your daily YouTube diet, but at least we get to see action-packed chases, Memento-stealing plot points of the highest order, and one weird, seemingly backmasked utterance of “Johneeeeeeeeeee… X!” Hit the read link for the full clip, and check out another video after the break which helps to unravel the mystery.

[Via Pocket-lint]

Continue reading Sony Ericsson goes viral with Xperia X1 marketing

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Super Nintendo controller table signals a trend

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

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Remember that fad where everyone had dining room tables of their favorite Disney character? Or the age in the 70s where tables were shaped like lava lamps? No? At any rate, the modders over at SCAD Inc. have spent all summer crafting a fully-functional Super Nintendo controller-table, which reminds us an awful lot of the fully-functional NES controller-table we saw in May of this year. So, which geek is gonna take on the N64 controller table? Or better yet, the Virtual Boy?

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Original post by Darren Murph

DIY Wall-Mounted Digital Picture Gallery

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Here’s some family-friendly tech that doesn’t come off as boring. Kudos to Verizon for finding a natural way to advertise their FiOS service—even if they sneaked in the hard-sell from time to time.

The concept is simple: hook up a computer to the internet. Hook up lots of monitors to said computer. Set-up Windows to display photos it pulls from whichever online photo feeds you specify. The kicker is that, as new photos are added to these online streams, they show up on the so-called “memory wall”.

Less simple is how to do this. The instructions are clear enough, but we imagine it will take some master carpentry and patience to make this work. Well worth the effort though.

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Original post by Rico

TouchKit: modular multitouch development kit primed for DIYers

Monday, August 25th, 2008

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NOR_/D’s TouchKit is a modular multitouch development kit that aims to “make multitouch readily available in an open source fashion.” If that sounds awfully familiar, you’re probably thinking of its sister project Cubit, both of which are hoping to get multitouch into the mainstream as quickly as humanly possible. The kit itself is composed of hardware and software aspects, and of course, source files are provided for poking, prodding and researching. Interested? It’ll be $1,580 shipped with a “fully assembled, frameless 70- x 50-centimeter multitouch screen, a calibrated infra-red camera, and the full base software pack.”

[Via Gizmag]

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Original post by Darren Murph

PS3 backup hack kinda clarified, still kinda sketchy

Monday, August 25th, 2008

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There was (and still is) plenty of buzz surrounding StreetskaterFU’s recent hack that enabled Blu-ray games to be played back from the PlayStation 3′s internal hard drive, and now it seems like details are beginning to seep out. Fellow hacker ATOC has released an admittedly sketchy step-by-step guide for getting a number of backups to boot from the PS3, though it has only been thoroughly tested on Warhawk and Call of Duty 3. Hit up the links below for instructions, but think long and hard before you make any irreversible decisions and come dangerously close to destroying the universe.

[Thanks, Bob]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Video: Furby Gurdy makes “music,” trips you out

Monday, August 25th, 2008

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The Nervous Squirrel’s Furby Gurdy (version 2) isn′t the first music maker we’ve seen that’s better understood when viewed during an out-of-body experience, but it’s certainly one of the strangest. The circuit bent Furby sequencer, which is linked to a Korg SQ-10 in the demonstration vid after the break, combines centuries-old musical methods with some of the strangest characters to ever grace planet Earth. We could talk for hours on end and still not do this thing justice, so just click through and mash play to see what we’re referring to. We’re warning you, though — we haven’t seen anything this weird since Smash Mouth’s lead singer showed up at an Intel press event.

[Via Hack-A-Day]

Continue reading Video: Furby Gurdy makes “music,” trips you out

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Original post by Darren Murph

Amazon’s Kindle gets display transplant, Sony Reader acts as donor

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

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Oh sure, we’ve seen a limited number of hacks surface for the hotly selling (but still unsightly) Amazon Kindle, but we’ve yet to see a hardware mod of this magnitude. We’ve always heard that desperate times call for desperate measures, and evidently said mantra is very true. After having the display in his Kindle smashed around 8 months ago (thanks, kid sister…), blakebevin set out to perform an unprecedented surgery. With an unwanted Sony Reader LCD in hand and a badly broken Kindle on the operating table, he attempted to give the latter unit new life with a few pixels from a cross-town rival. We’ll warn you — this one’s not for the rookies in attendance, and even Mr. Bevin (it is Mr. Bevin, right?) had some “nagging button issues” once the thing was sewn back up. Give the read link a look if you ever find yourself in this admittedly peculiar situation.

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Original post by Darren Murph


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