Building .Net Applications for Mobile Devices

[Andy Wigley, Peter Roxburgh] ☆ Building .Net Applications for Mobile Devices ☆ Download Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. Building .Net Applications for Mobile Devices It demonstrates how to use the Microsoft .NET Framework and Visual Studio.Net to create applications for phones, Pocket PCs, and other portable devices. Master mobile programming with this title. Focusing on ASP.NET and the .NET Mobile Web SDK, it shows how to deliver appropriately formatted content for diverse hand held clients from a single ASP.NET page.]

Building .Net Applications for Mobile Devices

Author :
Rating : 4.89 (708 Votes)
Asin : 0735615322
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 606 Pages
Publish Date : 2014-10-19
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

It demonstrates how to use the Microsoft .NET Framework and Visual Studio.Net to create applications for phones, Pocket PCs, and other portable devices. Master mobile programming with this title. Focusing on ASP.NET and the .NET Mobile Web SDK, it shows how to deliver appropriately formatted content for diverse hand held clients from a single ASP.NET page.

coolXterior Harsha Vardhan Although the title says .Net "Applications", it fails tomention they are "Web" applications, meaning ASP.Net & WML Pages! Good thing I got this book from my U's library ratherthan wasting my money on it. I was looking for "apps" that runon mobile platforms, not "apps that run in a IE window"on mobile platforms! Although, it has good descriptionsof resources like the various dev toolkits from different cellphone vendors, there's not much else.. Don't Need the Marketing Speak To tell the truth, I didn't read the whole book. I was turned off by the market speak right off the bat in chapter one. There's too many other books out there to explore, so please don't waste my time telling me how good .Net technology is; tell me how to use it. If your looking for a good book on Pocket PC programming, check out "Pocket PC, Handheld PC Developer's Guide with Microsoft Embedded Visual Basic". There's a lot of good, concise info in that book. As a side note, I'm not a Microsoft basher. I make my bread and butter working with their products. I'm just sick of getting sales pitches ev

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