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February 2006 - You Can Take it With You
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As many of you know, the Windows Mobile database API CEDB has been deprecated and is being replaced by EDB. The EDB API is much more performant, robust and secure then CEDB and has been engineered with CEDB compatibility in mind. An interesting sidebar...
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Just a quick note on two new whitepapers that came online in the past week. Windows Mobile 5.0 Multimedia Capabilities Windows Mobile 5.0 adds tremendous support for multimedia with virtually all of these new capabilities exposed directly to the .NET...
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Did you ever wonder how to programmatically discover the list of available wireless networks from a .NET Compact Framework application? Well it turns out that although there are a number of native functions that make wireless network information available...
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As I mentioned in my post the other day , my latest column discusses some of the more fundamental uses and capabilities of the State and Notifications Broker. The State and Notifications Broker is one of the most significant new features of Windows Mobile...
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I just became aware of what appears to be an undocumented change in the way Pocket Outlook stores all-day appointments on Windows Mobile 5.0. Prior to Windows Mobile 5.0, an all-day appointment for a given date such as 20-February is stored with a start...
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One of the most commonly asked questions at conferences and events is about detecting when a device receives and looses network connectivity. For a long time, the answers available for providing a generic solution to detecting changes in network connectivity...
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Several of us have been working feverishly in recent months to get together the Windows Mobile Wiki . We're happy to announce that it is now online as part of MSDN Channel 9 . All of the content from the old Windows Mobile FAQ has been moved over there...
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For most of the life of Windows Mobile, their were two primary development tools, eMbedded Visual C/C++ (eVC) and eMbedded Visual Basic (eVB). With both of these tools being free, a significant number of hobbyist developers began developing Windows Mobile...
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It really seems to be the season of unexpected (and previously unimaginable) alliances. Microsoft's XBox is using IBM's PowerPC chip rather then Intel Apple computers will now have Intel chips instead of IBM's PowerPC Steven Job's (Mr. anti-establishment...
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