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Wireless Software Development Kit Links |
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Wireless Tools for Linux |
The Linux Wireless Extension and the Wireless Tools. The Wireless Extension (WE) is a generic API allowing a driver to expose to the user space configuration and statistics specific to common Wireless LANs. The beauty of it is that a single set of tool can support all the
variations of Wireless LANs, regardless of their type (as long as the driver support Wireless Extension). Another advantage is these parameters may be changed on the fly without restarting the driver (or Linux). The Wireless Tools (WT)is a set of tools allowing to manipulate the Wireless Extensions. They use a textual interface and are rather crude, but aim to support the full Wireless Extension.
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| Sun JAVA Wireless Toolkit |
The Sun Java Wireless Toolkit (formerly known as Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME) Wireless Toolkit) is a state-of-the-art toolbox for developing wireless applications that are based on J2ME's Connected Limited Device Configuration (CLDC) and Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), and designed to run on cell phones, mainstream personal digital assistants, and other small mobile devices. The toolkit includes the emulation environments, performance optimization and tuning features, documentation, and examples that developers need to bring efficient and successful wireless applications to market quickly.
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BREW |
And with BREW, the development community helps grow and extend the wireless marketplace while participating in its success. The BREW Delivery System (BDS) connects developers with wireless service providers via a secure extranet connection, allowing you to post applications and directly negotiate pricing, while carriers can view, evaluate and acquire BREW applications. The BDS also enables developers and carriers to coordinate billing and payment
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Open Handset Alliance - Android |
The
Android platform is a software stack for mobile devices including an operating system, middleware and key applications. Developers can create applications for the platform using the Android SDK. Applications are written using the Java programming language and run on Dalvik, a custom virtual machine designed for embedded use, which runs on top of a Linux kernel. If you want to know how to develop applications for Android, you're in the
right place. This site provides a variety of documentation that will help you learn about Android and develop mobile applications for the platform. A beta version of the Android SDK is available for download. Along with the
Android framework and application libraries, it includes sample projects with source code, a device emulator, and development tools for monitoring and debugging your code and GUI layout.
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| IPhone SDK |
Become a Registered iPhone Developer and start creating your applications with the free iPhone SDK and the resources of the iPhone Dev Center.
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Windows Mobile Development |
Windows Mobile lets you reuse your existing Visual Studio and .NET development skills and server infrastructure to extend your applications to mobile devices and give users new experiences and solve new business problems.
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Blackberry SDK and Development Tools |
Developing applications for the BlackBerry® Browser allows you to use the standard web authoring tools you already know. Since developing BlackBerry Browser applications requires minimal client-side development, there are only two required development tools: The BlackBerry® Mobile Data System (BlackBerry® MDS) simulator - simulates network and server connectivity . The BlackBerry smartphone simulators - Several versions of the BlackBerry operating system combined with the look and feel of the various BlackBerry models.
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