Windows Phone 8 is just around the corner. There are now over 110,000 apps in the Windows Phone Store. Combined with the release of Windows 8, the new Microsoft Surface, and sexy new hardware devices from Nokia , HTC and Samsung , it looks like the Windows...
Tags / NetAdvantage, Data Visualization, Android, Mobile Development, Windows Phone, Enterprise Mobility, Infragistics, Mango, Free Tools, Windows Phone SDK, Nokia, Lumia 800, Samsung, Apollo, iOS, HTML5, jQuery Mobile, jQuery, Javascript, Windows 8, C#, MobileAdvantage, XAML, iguanaUI, NucliOS, Windows Phone Store, igniteUI, ListPicker, AutoCompleteBox, Calendar, DatePicker, TimePicker, HTC, TileManager, ContextMenu, ToggleSwitch
A debate is raging in the technology world these days: Is there a need for a third mobile ecosystem? (FYI, iOS and Android are the first two) If so, which is it gonna be? My position is that yes, we need a third mobile ecosystem, and Windows Phone is...
Tags / Product Management, Windows 7, NetAdvantage, Android, Geek Life, Mobile Development, MVP, Touch Computing, Windows Phone, Enterprise Mobility, Microsoft, Infragistics, iPhone, Visual Basic, Mango, Tango, Open Source, Google, Nokia, Apple App Store, Lumia 800, Samsung, Storage, Apple, Dual-core, Symbian, Apollo, Windows RT, DroidRage, Nintendo, Open Handset Alliance, MeeGo, Linux, PlayStation, Mobile Ecosystem, Wii, Metro, Lumia 900, Mac, Bada, Technology Wars, Sega, Windows Mobile, Cars, Xbox 360, WebOS, AJAX, Bitlocker, Blu-Ray, Windows CE, Skype, iOS, RIM, Research in Motion
Say what you will about Windows Phone vs iOS or Android, one thing most experts agree with is Microsoft knows how to make really good development tools. Windows Phone is no exception. The Windows Phone SDK, combined with Visual Studio 2010, provide us...
Tags / XNA, NetAdvantage, Mobile Development, Windows Phone, Enterprise Mobility, Microsoft, Infragistics, Community, Silverlight, Mango, Azure, Silverlight Toolkit, MVVM, Free Tools, Nuget, SQL Server CE, Windows Phone SDK, Open Source, Coding4Fun, CodePlex
Ever since I started working with Microsoft technologies back in the early 1990's, I quickly noticed that Redmond suffers from severe name-confusion issues. It's baffling how Microsoft Marketing often insists on using fully-descriptive-but-boring...