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I am a newbie in this field and I want to create a Windows Mobile application for my Motorola MC70 device.
My problem is that I am trying to download EMDK but I can't find it on internet.
I found various links on Google:-
http://support.symbol.com/
https://portal.motorolasolutions.com/Support/US-EN
but all in vain.....
Can anyone give me the exact link to download EMDK for Windows Mobile???
Thanks in Advance...
You will find the handheld's Smybol/Motorola/Zebra SDK (currently named EMDK) at 'current' the owner site of the device's brand (as of this writing this is Zebra). Follow the current site's navigation and look for support or download and then the device model. You will then probably find the 'SDK'.
Reminder: internet and sites will always change and so any provided link may no longer work. Then use the site's navigation or contact support.
[Links deleted as no longer valid, no new links as these may change at any time]
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is it even possible to make a bot in C# (windows forms), that would work like when Supreme release new items, the bot would instantly buy them? If anyone has any ideas please share them, thanks!
The answer is - yes, it surely is possible.
First of all you have to think about logging in on the site
Afterwards you have to have a link on where these drops appear and pass it to the code
Finally you need to just implement a automatic checkout system.
It will require a bit of work and time to do it.
There are already some projects made for this kind of websites.
You can check this link: https://github.com/jg-fisher/supreme-bot
It has an automatic checkout (providing personal details in the checkout form).
Also some bigger project of chrome extension - https://github.com/Paulowarren31/Supreme-Bot
I advise you to get suggestions from there and build your own program.
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I have a specific requirement of being able to select arbitrary rectangular regions from a source video and to save that region (for a specific time span) to a separate file.
Ideally, the API would support C#/.NET but we're prepared to do it in C++ if that would yield a better end product.
This software will need to run on Windows machines.
I've looked into Direct Show Editing Services and Media Foundation. I've found conflicting information that says DSES is deprecated, but then to use DSES over MF because MF doesn't focus on video editing that much.
Are there are any other APIs that I should look into?
Can you recommend either of the mentioned APIs for the task at hand?
Thanks in advance!
For video editing in Windows desktop apps, DirectShow remains really the only Windows API for this scenario. See Migrating from DirectShow to Media Foundation
For C#, take a look at DirectShow.NET.
DirectShow is not supported for Windows Store, universal Windows apps, Xbox One, or Windows phone 8.
Also keep in mind that DirectShow is impacted by the "N" editions of Windows. See "Who moved my [Windows Media] Cheese"?
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I am looking for an open source instant messenger based on .Net technologies (C# on Windows), and an open source project which has a small code base is appreciated, since I only need basic text message exchange function. Better authentication by a remote web services.
thanks in advance,
George
The XMPP Standards Foundation links to several .NET SDK libraries for those who wish to build their own IM.
Here's one link:
http://www.ag-software.de/agsxmpp-sdk/
There's also a CodeProject link that shows how easily you can be up and running using agsXMPP:
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/IP/JabberClient.aspx
Hopefully you find these to be good reading!
Here is C#, SIP instant messenger:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/officesip/
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I have a collection of mp3, wma's etc that may or may not have the correct song information.
Is there a service or an API that I can use in .NET to find the correct song title / artist for each file?
I know of Last.fm Fingerprint API. That should help you.
You could call their client app from within a C# app to automate the whole process of going through your media library and storing the returned results. You can even change your mp3 metadata on the fly.
More links to the stack:
25 Music APIs
Windows Media Player (WMP) is pretty good at downloading album art and titles and such when you rip a CD, but it's far from perfect. If such an API existed in any location, let alone the highly public and well-used .NET platform, WMP would have a better track record.
Therefore it is logical to conclude that the answer is quite simply, "No."
I doubt such an API exists in any form, but if it might, it would likely be a web service.
freedb.org has what you need. I used it some years ago and it worked out great.
Download the file 'freedb howto v1.07' to get the details of how to implement this into your program.
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I built a GIS application around Twitter and now its getting some interest.
But one of the requirements is that they don't want any outside dependencies.
So I'll need to mimic Twitters functions.
Anyone know of any open source Twitter projects?
Laconica?
http://laconi.ca/trac/
Identica demos it nicely:
http://identi.ca/
Jaiku is a microblogging service very similar to Twitter. Google bought Jaiku a few years ago and made its engine open source. You can find it here:
http://code.google.com/p/jaikuengine/
If you're looking for a .NET alternative. There is Yonkly. Is an open source Twitter clone written using ASP.NET MVC. You can find the source here:
http://www.codeplex.com/yonkly
I have used laconi.ca in the past, it is easy to figure out and highly customizable (for how young it is).