Showing posts with label java. Show all posts
Showing posts with label java. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

WebRTC Firefox+Chrome

Lo puedes probar aquí webrtc.org/demo y caray, que raro (al menos así se siente) es que esto no haya ocurrido años atrás, en los días en que la red era más libre, y no ahora en que tiene ataques por todos lados, pero bueno, si lo vas a usar para llamar a tu tía de Pachuca, pues no creo que nadie te espíe.


Una maravilla eso de seguir estandares, esperemos que pronto Opera, IE, Safari y anexas sean capaces, ojalá no se vuelva esto un killer app y lo puedas usar en todos lados, las ventajas de las que se habla, es decir, cero plugins, instalado desde el inicio lo hacen una muy buena opción, aún para los que ya hemos hecho esa labor de llevar a nuestros padres a usar Skyoe y whatsapp.
Mozilla is excited to announce that we’ve achieved a major milestone in WebRTC development: WebRTC RTCPeerConnection interoperability between Firefox and Chrome. This effort was made possible because of the close collaboration between the open Web community and engineers from both Mozilla and Google.
Literalmente las guerras de SOs ya son ejercicios de futilidad, todo lo hacemos en la red, menos jugar.
To help celebrate this momentous milestone, we thought it would be fun to call up our friends at Google to discuss it with them. Check out this Firefox-Chrome demonstration call between Mozilla’s Chief Innovation Officer, Todd Simpson, and Google’s Director of Product Management, Hugh Finnan,

Monday, November 12, 2007

Android, los videos de los orgullosos padres




OPEN HANDSET ALLIANCE RELEASES ANDROID SDK

OPEN HANDSET ALLIANCE RELEASES ANDROID SDK

The Open Handset Alliance, a group of mobile and technology leaders, today announced the availability of the Android Software Development Kit (SDK). Available now as an early look, the Android SDK will enable developers to create innovative and compelling applications for the platform. The early look will also provide developers with the opportunity to participate in the evolution of the Android platform by providing feedback throughout the development process.

The Android platform was built from the ground up to enable developers to create new and innovative mobile applications that take full advantage of all the capabilities of a handset connected to the internet. It is a complete mobile platform built on the Linux 2.6 kernel that exposes a robust operating system, a comprehensive set of libraries, a rich multimedia user interface, and a complete set of phone applications. Android's innovative application model makes it easy for developers to extend, replace, and reuse existing software components to create rich and integrated mobile services for consumers. The Android platform also includes the Dalvik virtual machine to maximize application performance, portability, and security. The entire platform will be made available under the very liberal, developer-friendly Apache v2 open-source license in 2008.

Android Software Development Kit

The SDK contains a rich set of tools for developers to build applications for the Android platform. Included are advanced development and debugging tools, a rich set of libraries, a true device emulator, in-depth documentation, sample projects, tutorials, FAQs, and more. For developers looking for a seamless development experience, an Eclipse plugin is included to integrate these tools with the Eclipse integrated development environment. The site hosting the kit will also feature a blog and discussion groups, to make it easier for everyone contributing to the platform to interact and share knowledge.

Requirements

To begin building applications for Android, developers will need to download the Android SDK to an x86-based computer running Windows XP or Vista; Mac OS 10.4.8 or later; or Linux Ubuntu Dapper Drake or later (other modern distributions of Linux will also likely work but are not directly supported).

Developers will also need Eclipse 3.2 or later, with Java Development Tools and the Android SDK's plugin, or Java and Javac 1.5 or 1.6; Apache Ant; an integrated development environment; and Python 2.2 or later.

Downloading the SDK

For more information or to download the SDK, please visit http://www.openhandsetalliance.com/developers.html.