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I have ported the Windows version of the Battle.net Authenticator to Windows Mobile 6.5x.
(This is NOT an official Battle.net Authenticator app from Blizzard, nor a hash of the Java emulated version, but an open-source implementation in C#.)
You can use this to create a new authenticator and have it generate codes on your device and then add the serial into your account. It can also import the authenticator key from the Java BMA version if you had that installed.
You can read more about the Windows and Windows Mobile versions, as well as browse the source code, at:
http://code.google.com/p/winauth
Many thanks,
-c.
If you could post your device details if it is not working, or even if it is, that would really help.
Thanks..
-c.
Works fine on a Rhodium At least all the options seem to do what they're supposed to!
Might I suggest adding the ability to import an already installed Java B.net Authenticator? Dunno if it is possible but it will be much easier to test
akritikos said:
Might I suggest adding the ability to import an already installed Java B.net Authenticator? Dunno if it is possible but it will be much easier to test
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Thanks for feedback.
I have added an import for the Java key into the new 1.0.1030 release now up on Google code.
I'm just wondering, is it possible to port the WoW Armory onto Windows Mobile as well? I dreamt to have the WoW Armory app on my HTC HD2, shame there isn't one.
Neelix423 said:
I'm just wondering, is it possible to port the WoW Armory onto Windows Mobile as well? I dreamt to have the WoW Armory app on my HTC HD2, shame there isn't one.
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I'm sure it's possible since the data is available, even though there is no official API. However, I remember they closed down similar iPhone apps that were in competition with their own.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if they have one for Windows Mobile 7.
Works great on my Imagio running Energy's ROM. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Thank you very much for this great App.
It's a real shame that Blizzard does not care for Windows Mobile but prefers pushing the f%&$in Apple hype (WoW Armory and Authenticator available)...
At least they invented one for Android (probably most popular besides iOS) too, but too bad they don't give a damn for Windows Mobile
PS: works great on my HTC HD2!
Hey,
Just wondering if anyone else has tried it? I downloaded installed it today & it looks really impressive with lots of future potential it lets you load & run apk files and simulates the android UI on your desktop! It compared itself to the developers SDK tool but faster and user friendly. I can't post links but I'd be thankful if anyone else that finds it interesting to post a link
I can't see it mentioned in any threads yet? If this is the wrong place to post... please feel free to move it
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Mentioned on a German blogging site
I saw a blog on a German site mentioning this emulator. Below is the text translated using Google Translate.
Android Apps emulator for the PC (without SDK)
20. September 2010 - 15:18 | Mobile | terry
Meanwhile, there are a lot of apps for mobile devices, whether for iPhone or Android. In the case of Android devices and apps, there is the lovely advantage of it as apk simply sent anywhere, can be loaded and saved - and everyone could then install on their device.
But what if you have no products.These types, but would like to demonstrate Apps on a machine, and without the SDK? introduces you, you have built a cool app want to show that, but your Android can not connect to the projector, or you send out sales people who want to show the app, but no SDK on your machine?
Well, there is a great tool called YouWave. Easy to install on their computers and go apk Embed
It does come accross quite intriguingly... It would be interesting to know if anyone has tried it properly and what they make of it, I'm more interested in mods to my phone so development tools don't spark much excitement for me.... the potential here looks inspiring though
Thanks tina333 for your interest in YouWave. We are a startup, with a mission to serve Android community. In addition to what you have described, our latest software release supports state saving, wirelessly installing applications to rooted phone, etc. Many users, including app users, gamers and developers, are already using our product daily. Hopefully you have tried these features.
We are located in Silicon Valley, California. If you have other questions, drop us a line or post questions here or on our forum. We would be glad to answer them.
-YouWave
Disclaimer: We just like to answer a user's question here, with no interests in posting ads. If this post is not appropriate, please simply remove it.
Is it possible to load our data files from our phone to continue with saved progress in games, etc.?
Currently, it is not possible to sync data file from your phone to the apps running on YouWave. Such features are definitely under our consideration.
BTW, AndroidCentral today runs an article about us.
-YouWave
Whatsapp not working on Youwave?
Hi,
I have the trial version of Youwave. I downloaded Whatsapp but the program won't install: when I run the .apk file it says "application not installed".
Any suggestions?
If
anybody needs a serial key for youwave let me know my email is [email protected]
Yes YouWave is amazing Android Emulator software but not as good as Bluestacks, recently I downloaded YouWave program it's handy but still not best.
techmero said:
Yes YouWave is amazing Android Emulator software but not as good as Bluestacks, recently I downloaded YouWave program it's handy but still not best.
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Hey I was also using youwave but after installing win 8.1 it gives me an error saying os not ready..
Can u help me with that.
Very nicw
It is really a super website !
I tried youwave but it is not as good as bluestacks
I tried youwave android emulators it also has lot of features to use and play android apps and games. But bluestacks [/U][/URL] is best when it comes to android emulators..
Saw this article on a Winu Newsletter the other day, if anyone is interested.
What if you want to go the other way around with emulation and run your favorite Android apps on your PC? Well, you can do that too. BlueStacks' App Player is a program that you install on XP, Vista or Windows 7 and then you can run Android apps on it. Over a million people downloaded and installed the alpha version, but the latest version (beta-1) runs many more apps and it's also a free download. Some major companies apparently see the potential for App Player to be a hit, as Qualcomm just recently joined Citrix, AMD and others as an investor in BlueStacks.
Check it out Here:
http://bluestacks.com/
This brings up an interesting idea. What if you ran windows arm on your tablet then used that to run this and used this to run windows arm again and so on. Appception?
Sent from my tf9001 with XDA XD.
Android apps are java apps so theoretically multi-OS. Some of them need some specific Linux libraries to run. That's probably the goal of this app.
Like Wine in Linux that converts windowsAPI calls in Linux API calls..
An emulator to play older windows games. There aren't many details about the app except that it can play older direct x games, which is a bit vague.
Check it out
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.postram.winulator
EDIT: I emailed the dev and the email got kicked back from the mail server. I'm not sure if this app is legit or not.
It is genuine and an awesome project. Based on wine. He will be releasing a Starcraft port soon. Hope it keeps coming with more games.
Here are links to several free online courses designed to help you learn mobile development. Reply here if you know of any good ones that I missed. If you have comments or experiences to share about any of these, please start a new thread to discuss.
“Computer Science 164: Mobile Software Engineering” is a Harvard University course using Javascript, HTML5, Objective-C, and PHP, and to teach you how to build mobile web apps (along with some native iOS development). The online course includes all video lectures, study sessions, slides, source code, etc. This is the follow-up to another Harvard class available online: “CS 50 – Introduction to Computer Science”.
“Computer Science E-76: Building Mobile Applications”, a Harvard University Extension course, covers Android and iOS, including writing native apps for Android using Eclipse and the Android SDK. Lecture 2 is a Java primer and lectures 3 – 6 cover aspects of Android development.
Google’s Android development training course includes ten modules covering everything from graphics and animation to security and monetization.
“Introduction to Programming in Java” is an MIT OpenCourseware class offering lecture notes and downloads of java programming assignments. You can see a full list of free MIT online comp sci courses here.
“Android Application Development” was taught at CalPoly in Summer 2010. Not as complete as some of the Harvard courses, the site offers basic instruction on building basic apps.
Neither Udacity or Coursera has a mobile-specific course yet, but both include amazing classes on web application development.
Codeacademy offers several courses on web and application (non-mobile) development. Topics include PHP, jQuery, JavaScript, Python, and Ruby.
"The Java Tutorials" on Oracle's site are about general Java development and are not Android-specific.
XDA’s “How to Build an Android App” series by Adam Outler.
Treehouse Library beginner courses teach you how to build simple apps.
For Android App development, I would strongly advise:
The New Boston - Android Tutorials
For Java basics:
The New Boston - Java Tutorials
The tutorials are done by Bucky and Travis and these guys are very good. They take you through the learning step by step.
Also. When you come across problems, the main Android Developers site is very good, but I've also found Stack Overflow very helpful.
I started using the tutorials with no Android or Java knowledge at all and I've used what I have learned to make a couple of basic soundboards so far and other bits and pieces, but what they teach you gives you the potential for a lot more.
You can see the apps I've made Here (Google Play) and Here.
This one's good for both C and C++
http://www.cprogramming.com/
And this one for C, pretty well explained and my favourite
http://www.howstuffworks.com/c.htm
How can I watch those Harvard lectures, they seems to be locked, are they free
Found this putzing around the internet at work. Very engaging lectures, never talks in monotone, and explains things in a simple to understand format.
From Stanford, almost all the material is provided (lectures, handouts, assignments, exams, etc), and all the videos are downloadable through iTunes or YouTube.
Not android specific, but gives a solid groundwork on the Java platform.
Best of all... FREE
http://see.stanford.edu/see/courseinfo.aspx?coll=824a47e1-135f-4508-a5aa-866adcae1111
I'm currently following Google’s Android development training course and came here looking for an ebook of these pages. I want to read these on my phone while I travel.
Does anyone know of such an ebook on Google books or any other 3rd party website?
Also, a tool that can convert these webpages into a static ebook will also do. I just need them to be available for offline reading.
Thank You
Guys try Barbara hecker on YouTube .excellent latest university level courses on android. Total 15 hours I guess.
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Kaiyes said:
Guys try Barbara hecker on YouTube .excellent latest university level courses on android. Total 15 hours I guess.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta
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+1 for Barbara Hecker's ITU lecture series all posted on YouTube. Its about 25 1hr lectures in Android Development all posted within the last few months so very current. Easily the best Android learning tool I've found so far on the web.
The new boston video series is good but way too out of date (2009). Android has come a long way in 3 years.
Ya that's the most recent I could find. The proprietary screen casts like Lynda.com, tutsplus, video2brain and others are also worth looking into. I certainly learned a lot from them. Also, its worth looking into phonegap. It let's us use javascript-css-html to create apps for all platform like iOS, android, blackberry and so on.
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please share links for
Minimum skills / sources required before writing android apps
Understanding android operating system
how to code some easiest android applications to boost confidence amongst new persons.
Thanks
Use jquery mobile and phonegap. You can make apps within 1 hour or even less. Just get some video tutorial from youtube or lynda.com or someplace similiar. There are a ton of them. Youtube jquery mobile , phonegap.
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Kaiyes said:
Use jquery mobile and phonegap. You can make apps within 1 hour or even less. Just get some video tutorial from youtube or lynda.com or someplace similiar. There are a ton of them. Youtube jquery mobile , phonegap.
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is it important to understand how operating system works ?
Kaiyes said:
Use jquery mobile and phonegap. You can make apps within 1 hour or even less. Just get some video tutorial from youtube or lynda.com or someplace similiar. There are a ton of them. Youtube jquery mobile , phonegap.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta
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that fine for basic apps but if you want to add any complexity you really need to know android programming (java/eclipse etc). i dont think sending people down this easy path is going to help them become android developers.
Coursera does now have a course for Android Programming. It uses the Processing 'language' and teaches fundamentals such as the accelorometer, basics of a physics engine ( BoxWrap2d) and image and sound manipulation. I have almost finished this run of the course, and its a good starter for people who are interested in learning how to develop for Android.
The downside to the course though, if you don't have any knowledge of programming at all, I think you might struggle a little bit. (Just my opinion.)
Search for 'Creative Programming for Digital Media & Mobile Apps'
Like i said, its good for simple informative type apps for most of the major platforms at once. But its not for complicated apps like games/kernel. However i do think there is a big untapped market for sector specific informative type apps. Take medical sector, most of the apps doctors need gotta help them remember & docs will buy em. I saw simple jquery mobile type apps selling for £15. Also, if you are good at JavaScript, then you can basically carry your "app" over to all platforms. That's the catchy bit I guess. Its also easier for web devs to hack at mobile software market without having to learn a whole new language. Having said all that, Java is still one of the top languages there.
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great android app developement youtube tutorial series
This guy is awesome!
His rapid for style allows us to learn more in a shorter amount of time, without dieing of boredom.
The tutorials were designed to familiarize us with the basics in the beginning, then to help us gain and retain a better understanding of how to develope apps.
You may feel overwhelmed by all of the information being shot of at you at such a rapid fire rate, but rest assured that as you progress through the series, things will make more and more sense to you.
I highly recommend that anybody that is new to developing Android apps, or that anyone who wants a refresher course, that doesn't feel like being bored out of their mind by long, drawn out, agonizing courses, check this out.!
Here's the link to the entire Android app developement tutorials.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boj0f_O3i88&list=PLGLfVvz_LVvQUjiCc8lUT9aO0GsWA4uNe
Enjoy!
The New Boston.
On youtube Runs a Channel.
Provides 200 tutorials in android app development and also Other Valueable Sequel Tutorials. ...
----------Signature---------
Need Some Cool Guides Visit Hmpshah Guides
These Android tutorials by Vogella are also good.
http://www.vogella.com/android.html
As far as I get it, if you know Java well enough that you rate yourself > 6 out of 10 as a Java programmer, Android app development should be easy for you.
The ice is broken. On Coursera on 21-th January starts "Programming Mobile Applications for Android Handheld Systems".
Game Development Days
If you like game programming, I have started a guide a while ago:
Game Development Days
The guide walks you through the development of a 2D game engine, and covers side information around it.
Thought it could be useful here