Top 10 future trends for mobile phones. With every major mobile phone release, users are treated to an ever-expanding list of advanced features. Some are more useful than others, but they represent an industry that is always on the move. The next big feature to make our lives easier is usually only an upgrade away but we've decided to gaze a little further into the future as we anticipate where manufacturers will go next with their products.
Here is our top 10 future smartphone features. Projection We don't have to look too far into the future for this one, with Samsung's Beam handset already offering projection, albeit in a fairly primitive form and more advanced Android based handsets on the horizon. Basic or not though, the Beam is a ground breaking device, and in projection we see a feature which we think will become a staple in future releases. Looking further into the future we should see mobile devices packing holographic projection. Advanced imaging. Flash 10 in Flex 3 (How to Install SDK for Eclipse) This is not anything new... many people have posted on this very topic. It just took me awhile to find the links so I'd like to put everything in one place that is easy to find. 1. Download the latest SDK (currently 3.2). 2. Create a new folder called "3.2" in the following directory: Program Files/Adobe/Flex Builder 3 Plug-in/sdks/ (Replace Flex Builder 3 Plug-in with whatever your Flex3 Folder is called) 3. 4. 5. 6.
Flex for Free: Setting Up the Flex 4 SDK with Eclipse IDE. I recently wrote about Adobe’s release of Flash Builder 4, ColdFusion Builder and the free Flex 4 SDK. While Flex Builder is a great IDE, as I’m sure are Flash Builder and ColdFusion Builder, most independent developers cannot afford the licenses that can cost hundreds of dollars. What is an aspiring or shoe-string budget Flash developer to do?
Fortunately, there is a legal and free method of developing and building Flash applications using the free Flex 4 SDK in combination with the open source Eclipse IDE. The first things you will need to do is grab the Flex 4 SDK and a version of the Eclipse IDE. Any version of Eclipse should do but I recommend using either Classic or the one for PHP Developers as I’m currently using. Â Install Eclipse to where ever you would like and extract the Flex 4 SDK files to any easily accessible folder.
Open up Eclipse and start a new project by clicking File -> New -> Project. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will call this project “Test Project.” BuiltWith - Website Analysis and SEO Optimization.