>From the little bit of info I have gathered, In order to access photos
taken by the camera (from the default camera app) from an a Custom
App, you must go through the ContentProvider API's.
What I haven't seen is an example of using the ContentProvider apps to
do this.
Is there such a example/tu
Not clear: Do you want to simply be able to query the data different
ways, or do you want to be able to rearrange the order of the data and
save that?
If you know all the different ways that the data might be queried,
it's a simple matter to build static side tables for them. If you
want to be a
The usual problem on Android and other phones is not the program heap
but rather the heap (often separate) used for images. In particular
on Android this is a problem that requires some special programming
techniques if you're using a lot of images.
In Java, local variables "go out of scope" when
This is done some in our shop (not by me personally), but I don't
think that there are any formulae one can use.
Basically, it's a rewrite, of course. The logic at the very least
must be transliterated from Objective C to Java. Thankfully there is
a lot of similarity between the two (though it m
I would guess that, if XML parsing is faster than JSON parsing, it's
largely because the XML parsers are more highly optimized (due to it
being a more mature technology). From a purely mechanical standpoint
the amount of work that either needs to do is pretty much equivalent
on a per-byte basis.
Open a command window and type "java". (Well, you'll probably have to
navigate to the correct directory and do a "javac" first, but it's not
much more complicated than that.)
On Jun 1, 5:45 pm, Spooky wrote:
> Ok, maybe that didn't make sense What I'm looking for, *IF* it
> exists for Andro
more or less to use plain Sockets at the end. But as
> said, just wanted to hear your opinion. SOAP is something I never really took
> the trouble to learn it and understand its possibilities. So hey, keep up the
> good work and hope to catch you here more frequently.
>
> On May
Note that it's perfectly feasible to do "pull parsing" with JSON, and
I believe there are packages to do that. It's not done very often,
though, since the "in-core" representation of JSON is generally
several times more compact than the equivalent representation of XML,
so there's no need for it.
Thanks for your reply, Spiral.
One more question. How to make voice command to search in my app? I don't
know speech recognizability that cans help to make voice command?
For example:
I have many tabs: tab1, tab2,...tabn. I want to make voice command to
navigate to tab that i need. And make voice c
Of course, if you're only going to read a small part of an XML
representation from a REST query, why did you have the unwanted info
transmitted in the first place??
On May 30, 8:28 pm, Streets Of Boston wrote:
> I would make this argument instead: REST or SOAP?
>
> A big part of creating a seamle
My "9 out of 10" comment was more with regard to XML -- there are
occasions where the ability to have tag attributes in XML makes for a
neater, more coherent interface than using JSON.
On May 30, 8:29 am, "Jonas Petersson" wrote:
> On 2011-05-30 15:16, DanH wrote:
&g
and SOAP much better than I do,
> I'm wondering is there really need for both? I mean JSON was very
> flexible and easy to use. Only thing I can come up with is the lack of
> binary data transferring, otherwise I preferred JSON for database
> queries.
>
> --
> H
>
>
Some web services may give you the choice between "SOAP" and "JSON"
remote APIs. In such a case, whereas SOAP defines much of the
structure of requests and responses, and the conceptual protocols
involved, JSON (by itself) does not (it only defines the basic data
format), so additional info is req
It writes on every commit. Unless you explicitly start/end
transactions, a commit occurs after each insert/update.
On May 29, 12:24 pm, Andrew Pamment wrote:
> Hi
>
> I'm writing a game that uses SQLite storage to keep the game objects
> persistent through restarts etc. I'm wondering how frequen
he message correctly
> or deliberately marketing it with empty promises, has the risk to
> backfire and maybe it's not worth taking that risk. Software
> development cannot be 100% automated. Period.
>
> -Ali
>
> On May 29, 6:07 am, DanH wrote:
>
> > Yeah, Bob, I
ways, and you will always learn more, be worth more, and have more
> fun.
>
> I only meant to illustrate the that there can be a trade-off between
> work-for-hire and your own work, in terms of how freely you can innovate.
>
> On Saturday, May 28, 2011 9:07:57 PM UTC-7, DanH wro
Static and instance variables are two different things. A static
variable "lives" for the lifetime of the loaded class (which may be
shorter than the lifetime of the JVM). An instance variable "lives"
for the lifetime of the object (instance of the class) that contains
it.
I have no idea what yo
ean quicker
> time-to-market, faster feedback, etc.
>
> For a number of reasons, it isn't my primary career. There are a lot of my
> skills it does not leverage, and going the solo route or small company route
> doesn't meet my needs for things like health insurance, which n
Offhand it looks like some sort of system bug, but hard to tell where
-- Map source code, interface method resolution, heap management --
could be anywhere.
(But one thing to beware of is multithreading -- Only HashTable is
thread-safe, and HashMap/HashSet can be tied in a knot if modified
asynchr
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/database/sqlite/SQLiteOpenHelper.html#onUpgrade%28android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase,%20int,%20int%29
Every tutorial I've seen on Android SQLite has mentioned this.
On May 27, 5:32 am, Pranav wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have created a database file(m
> "Agile development" just means not complaining when the specs change.
>
> It's a mind game managers play with developers to keep them thinking
> moving targets are "normal" and "good" when in practice they are not.
There's some truth to that. But basically any development methodology
can be cor
erry/"Probably more to come" does not guarantee you to establish
> your own business and become rich.
>
> On May 26, 9:09 pm, DanH wrote:
>
> > Yeah, that's more or less what I said first, and the "legs" comment
> > was just an aside. To be successf
Yeah, that's more or less what I said first, and the "legs" comment
was just an aside. To be successful as an independent developer,
selling your own stuff (even if you have Android and Amazon markets)
it a one in a million shot (literally). To put food on the table and
the kids through college y
> Iterative approach to software
> development might seem as lack of "good initial design" to some
> people, but I'm not aware of a better alternative.
Actually, "iterative approach", as typically practiced, is a
misunderstanding of "agile". Agile is "incremental", where each step
builds on the p
It doesn't have to live for 30 years, but 5-10 would be nice. One
might invest 2 years in developing and enhancing a complex
application, by which time, if the platform is weak, it may no longer
be runnable, or there may no longer be any customers. Not every
application is a game knocked out in a
> This apporach of initially designing everyhting, trying to think of
> every little detail, forecasting in the future etc. is dead in
> software development. It works in some classical industries like
> avionics, but in consumer electronics, forget it, you cannot build any
> decent product with th
r
emulation), are able to advance their platforms while still
maintaining compatibility with apps that are 30 years old. But I
don't see the basis for either in Android.
On May 25, 10:17 am, Chris Stratton wrote:
> On Tuesday, May 24, 2011 11:29:03 AM UTC-4, DanH wrote:
>
> A
You don't believe everyone else is talking religion? Look how people
jumped on me.
On May 24, 9:55 pm, Ady Y wrote:
> So it is clear then that your reasons are religious and not technical, as
> you tried to had people think.
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
One bit of wisdom you pick up after that long is that there's no point
in arguing religion.
On May 24, 8:06 pm, Greg Donald wrote:
> On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 7:39 PM, DanH wrote:
> > No ulterior motive, just my judgment based on 40+ years in the
> > industry.
>
> Gi
No ulterior motive, just my judgment based on 40+ years in the
industry.
On May 24, 6:42 pm, Zsolt Vasvari wrote:
> I suspect an ulterior motive. Whether Android, as is, suitable for
> every kind of application, is debatable. But the statement that it
> doesn't have "legs" has already been prov
I figured you would, and I'm not interested in getting into a p***ing
match, so I'm not going to elaborate.
On May 24, 11:09 am, Dianne Hackborn wrote:
> On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 8:29 AM, DanH wrote:
> > Additionally, Android, as it's currently designed, does not have
The basic problem is that you've got millions of high school students
and college dropouts who fancy themselves programmers, and they're all
writing Android apps, hoping to come up with the next big hit. A very
small number will develop into decent programmers, and an even smaller
(microscopic) nu
Secure socket layer.
On May 20, 1:49 am, Viswanath wrote:
> I created an android app which consumes web service, which passes
> string(kind of authentication) to the webservice it authenticates and
> returns its validity.
>
> Now my concern is, how to make this secured . i mean to say, i want
> t
Assuming the server is legitimate, you basically see this problem
because the certificate presented by the HTTPS server doesn't have a
certificate chain that can be verified against one of the root
certificates on the phone. It may be possible to download and install
a new (additional) root author
Probably the blank after "C:".
On May 22, 10:45 am, J Handal wrote:
> Hi
>
> After installing 3.1 and updated tools,clean is delating gen file .
>
> I tried changing gen-property-derivated uncheck.
>
> And clean don't delete gen file,so far OK.
>
> At launching time project error stops the show.
ng that the person who posted the question
> > agreed that an answer solved their problem. Not all people who ask
> > questions accept answers, so the percentage of questions getting
> > correct answers is probably somewhere in the 50-60% range, if I had to
> > guess.
>
>
You post your questions. Use the right keywords, the right title,
explain yourself well, and you'll get some reasonable responses.
On May 20, 9:27 pm, Julius Spencer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> After attending IO and talking to the engineers, I was told to put questions
> on stack overflow. I was wonderi
Did you, perhaps, put a quote symbol into one of the configuration
fields when you were setting things up?
On May 19, 5:11 pm, Daniel Mack wrote:
> I'm following the basic instructions for setting up an Android
> application with Eclipse and just after creating a new project,
> without modifying
It sounds like you have a corrupted zip file.
On May 19, 2:18 am, Sundi wrote:
> Hi I am trying create a new android project frm an existing (working
> demo), as soon as I import there comes an error
> "[2011-05-19 12:45:59 -
> com.android.ide.eclipse.adt.internal.project.AndroidManifestHelper]
>
Windoze as far as the eye can see.
On May 16, 8:44 pm, alvinli wrote:
> what's the mean of "one os everywhere"?
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Well, you can just ask the user to remember his scores. Or you can
use a database. Or you can write some other sort of file.
[Please help save electrons -- don't read this post unless absolutely
necessary.]
On May 17, 9:57 pm, surya tej wrote:
> Dear All ,
>
> is there a alternative way instea
is in the wrong place. If present it must be the very first thing in
the file.
On May 16, 11:07 pm, Mobility Android
wrote:
> http://ws.apache.org/axis2";>
>
>
> 1
> 11
> Soap
>
me file. But that's only if it's small.
>
> > If it's larger, probably stream de-serialize the file, look for the tag and
> > append the node there. (and don't store to memory any tags you don't care
> > about.)
>
> > Obviously any de
Also, I'm assuming that whatever you're using to print the string is
supplying the "\" escape characters, and they don't actually exist in
the string.
On May 15, 3:50 pm, Patrick Cornish wrote:
> I have a test web MVC web service that is returning JSON data. I am
> not able to deserialze the da
Well, it's not clear what you're trying to do or how you're feeding
the data to the JSON parser. The first example should work (based on
very brief examination) if the starting/ending quotes you display have
been supplied in printing the string and don't actually exist IN the
string. Otherwise, w
Yeah, the concept of "this" is fundamental to object-oriented
programming, and pretty much all OO languages will have something
similar. It means the object whose instance method is currently
executing. It's called "this" in Java and C++, "self" in Objective C,
and probably a few other terms in o
ogramming?
Help me.
:-(
Thanx
On May 15, 9:41 pm, Spooky wrote:
> On May 15, 2:17 pm, DanH wrote:
>
> > If you look around, about half those posting here (and on other forums
> > for other platforms) are kids who have essentially no programmer
> > training but have mana
It's one thing to be a kid at 15, playing around with programming.
It's entirely another to be a college student (or dropout) at 22 who
believes that he's going to "strike it rich" with apps. Programming
is HARD WORK, and you don't learn how to do it well without
considerable effort (and practice)
I'm sorry to tell you that Android development is not a "career
path". Android, as you know it, probably won't exist in 10 years, and
likely will be headed downhill in 5. And even if it does survive it
will be a "dead end job".
If you want a job in software development (and not in management or
The better programmers have an engineering background, IMO (or at
least an "engineering way of thinking").
On May 15, 2:43 pm, Harri Smått wrote:
> On May 15, 2011, at 10:17 PM, DanH wrote:
>
> > If you look around, about half those posting here (and on other forums
> &
Another alternative is a journaled approach. Write the updates to a
journal, then merge them with the main file from time to time in a
"batch" processing step.
On May 15, 4:57 pm, Bob Kerns wrote:
> Simple, yes, but it performs as O(n^2). As your file gets longer and longer,
> your application w
If you look around, about half those posting here (and on other forums
for other platforms) are kids who have essentially no programmer
training but have managed to modify a few example projects to do
interesting (to them) things and hence consider themselves to be
programmers. They all believe th
airly easily write a program to translate between
them for "business logic". The harder part is the environment/OS and,
to a lesser extent, the UI.
On May 15, 10:56 am, Harri Smått wrote:
> On May 15, 2011, at 3:09 PM, DanH wrote:
>
> > A skilled programmer with no Android e
For several years our JVM (IBM Series i) held the worldwide
performance record.
On May 15, 8:04 am, Kostya Vasilyev wrote:
> 15.05.2011 16:12, DanH пишет:
>
> > I started with Java 1.0.x -- writing a virtual machine for it.
>
> I did start with Java 1.0 as well, integrating
One hint. Look around locally for a business that could use some sort
of business-specific app. Eg, an inventory tool of some sort -- like
one that will help a warehouseman find a specific item int the
warehouse. Negotiate whatever deal you can to do an app for them (eg,
first two installs free,
I started with Java 1.0.x -- writing a virtual machine for it.
On May 13, 11:25 pm, Brill Pappin wrote:
> haha, particularly since 25 years ago, hardly anyone knew java (if it was
> even released).
> I have something between 15 or 16 years of experience with java now now
> (exact numbers are fuzz
A smart hiring manager knows that programming skill is far more
important than being "up" on a specific technology. A skilled
programmer with no Android experience will take about 2 weeks to begin
earning his keep, and a month or two to become comfortable with the
technology. A wet-behind-the-ear
I got laid off with 35 years of programming experience, got hired at
1/4 the salary by a small phone app outfit, and drew the short straw
to do some Android work.
On May 13, 5:24 am, "Knutsford Software" wrote:
> How did people on this list get from learning about Android to getting paid
> work
Can't be done. (Well, could be done, but would require some file
calisthenics. You'd need to scan through the file to find the closing
tag, figure out what record that begins with -- it might actually span
records -- then write your new tags in place of the closing tag and
restore the closing tag
System.arraycopy?
On May 14, 12:39 am, Big Al wrote:
> I need help with my programme. I am creating an epandable list from an
> xml file that contains data that can change at anytime. My question is
> the data in the xml file is stored in a string-array and I need to
> transfer it to a multi dime
return env->NewStringUTF((const char*)digest);
expects a null-terminated string. Any non-text data could have
embedded nulls and isn't guaranteed to be terminated by a null, so the
function could walk off the end of the string or stop short.
More to the point, though, you can't convert arbitrary
choose your iteration count
> accordingly, and you will limit the attacker to 10 attempts per second per
> CPU, which certainly beats 1000 attempts per second per CPU.
>
> On Tuesday, May 10, 2011 8:35:00 PM UTC-7, DanH wrote:
>
> > Of course, hashing a password, per s
Of course, hashing a password, per se, doesn't really make it any
stronger. And doing things like using a salt don't do much if the
concern is simple trial-and-error cracking of a single encrypted
message (unless you're relying on "security by obscurity"). Salting
does help prevent known plaintex
For your purposes any standard hash algorithm that produces the
desired number of bits should be fine. The "weakness" of hash
algorithms has to do mostly with the ability to "counterfeit" data
that produces a given hash value -- this is an important consideration
when the hash is being used in a "
> how can i use this with my for loop.
>
> can anybody help me?
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/database/sqlite/SQLiteDatabase.html#beginTransaction%28%29
On May 9, 10:29 am, Hitendrasinh Gohil
wrote:
> hi,
>
> currently i am using below to add data to table but it takes too much
Well, you can't close any of those since you don't have their
addresses in the catch block.
If you declared the variables outside of the try (be sure to assign
null to them) then you could test each for null in the catch block and
close those that were non-null.
On May 5, 5:20 am, a a wrote:
> D
The most common reason for NoClassDefFoundError is a exception in the
static initializer for the class.
On May 5, 6:57 am, ragupathi ragupathi wrote:
> hi im developing google application it focus some problem like
> noclassdeffounderror exception. Any one knows post the solutions. when
> this pr
Thread safety would be outside the purview of the FIPS.
In general there's nothing special about a software encryption
algorithm that would make it not thread-safe, so long as the user did
not attempt to invalidly share the objects involved or some such.
On May 3, 7:14 am, pasamblue1 wrote:
> Hi
In general, you try to figure out what the code was doing, and what
objects that you directly or indirectly defined/created/modified that
it might be referencing. Then study the code that creates/modifies
those objects to see if you can intuit which values might be set to
null when they shouldn't
Simple -- just up the voltage. The more voltage the faster the
electrons move.
On Apr 30, 10:02 am, Fadil Kamal wrote:
> how to accelerate the performance of my phone?
> sometimes my phone lags even force close
> how to fix it?
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Do you want it to be legal for export from the US, et al, or are you
just doing this for your own amusement?
To be legal to export from the US (and possibly some European
countries) you unfortunately can't use your own self-compiled version
of OpenSSL. (At least not without jumping through some h
You don't have to call flush for every write. You don't have to call
flush at all. You do need to close the output stream, though.
On Apr 28, 9:23 am, Daniel Drozdzewski
wrote:
> Hitendrasinh,
>
> you have to call FileOutputStream.flush() after every write, but
> before you get there, you have
Don't forget to close the output stream.
On Apr 28, 11:29 pm, Vishwas Undre wrote:
> Hi,
>
> use next code
>
> FileOutputStream fileOutput = new FileOutputStream(filepath);
>
> InputStream inputStream = urlConnection.getInputStream();
>
> int[] key = {123,456};
> int totalRead = 0;
> int read
Base your response on the class of the message
(e.getClass().getName(), or e instanceof SomeClass).
On Apr 26, 2:56 pm, Guilherme Matsumoto
wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Here is an example of my problem:
>
> try {
> // code that throws an exception} catch (Exception e) {
>
> Toast.makeText(ge
Have you tried simply running the same string through the same
algorithm on the same platform more than once? It appears to me that
you're calculating a new key every time, so obviously the results
would be different.
On Apr 26, 10:58 pm, me mine wrote:
> Hi all,
> I use encryption method like a
One does need to keep in mind that naively loading, say, an 8
megapixel image will take about 16mb of storage. And on some
platforms (not sure about Android) simply having 6mb of heap available
does not mean that there's 6mb CONTIGUOUS, as would be needed for a
large object.
On Apr 27, 1:24 pm, d
I did some timings on a different platform, and encryption (AES-256 in
that case) was virtually immeasurable in most cases -- swamped by I/
O. I don't see why it would be much different on Android.
On Apr 27, 5:23 am, Hitendrasinh Gohil
wrote:
> hi,
>
> can anyone tell me which the fast encrypti
You can always encrypt/decrypt the DB file each time you end/start the
application. But if the app dies suddenly the file is left
unencrypted.
You could compile your own version of SqlCipher (I've done it twice
for other platforms -- not exactly rocket science, but it is jet
engine science). Yo
There are also extensions to SQLite to do full text search:
http://www.sqlite.org/fts3.html
But these would presumably require you to C compile and load the
extensions.
On Apr 26, 7:56 am, Brad Stintson wrote:
> How to make a database field searchable?
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http://www.sqlite.org/lang_expr.html#like
On Apr 26, 7:56 am, Brad Stintson wrote:
> How to make a database field searchable?
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e input, output, expected behaviour etc and one can
> focus on the Java itself while coding it.
>
> Best regards,
> Filip Havlicek
>
> 2011/4/23 DanH
>
> > I'd suggest you get a decent book on Java and play around with it a
> > bit before tackling Android. Shouldn
I'd suggest you get a decent book on Java and play around with it a
bit before tackling Android. Shouldn't take a lot with your
background, but a few days doing that would be time well spent.
(Trying to think of an application to implement, but nothing coming to
mind at present. Maybe someone el
Also, if one will be doing a lot of repeated compares of the same
String values, String.intern() can be used to get a pointer that can
be compared to other pointers to interned Strings.
Some Strings (I'm thinking all String literals in a program) are
defined to be already interned. So, eg, if Cla
Convert the floats to "int bits" before storing them, then convert
back from "int bits" when you read them. Store the numbers as either
hex or decimal integers.
On Apr 14, 11:01 am, Paul wrote:
> I've got a bit of code in an app that reads XML String input (from the
> SD Card), and creates Andro
There's no real need for Android support for Facebook, since the
interface is so simple:
http://developers.facebook.com/docs/guides/mobile/#android
On Apr 16, 5:16 pm, Kristopher Micinski
wrote:
> No. You can try to look for a facebook library, but there's no built in
> Android support for it.
>
I would guess that you screwed up somewhere. Check your code for
bugs.
On Apr 13, 11:24 am, Gustavo Costa wrote:
> In my app I inserted a row since a button in main screen and recover
> this row in a Service process. But, when I clicked in the button that
> execute the SQLiteDatabase.insert, the
As I understand it, OpenSSL is a part of the standard build for
Android phones. Is there any way for an NDK app to access the OpenSSL
encryption interfaces?
I understand that one could simply compile a separate copy of OpenSSL
with the app, but, in addition to being stupid from a storage point of
They need to be customized for the device file system and encryption
facilities.
On Apr 7, 2:06 pm, lbendlin wrote:
> Not sure I understand. You include them in your source and use them. This
> has nothing to do with Android.
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I don't see where any of those have been ported to Android.
On Apr 7, 11:04 am, Kostya Vasilyev wrote:
> A couple more:
>
> http://www.sqlite-encrypt.com/
>
> http://sqlite-crypt.com/
>
> Both of these are commercial.
>
> -- Kostya
>
> 07.04.2011 19:42, lbendlin пишет:
>
> > Have you looked at th
Has anyone done this? Is there a commercial version available?
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android-d
The problem is that when you "hold the cursor open" the database is
locked. That feature is not really applicable to a multi-threaded SQL
environment.
On Apr 7, 1:01 am, Evgeny Nacu wrote:
> Hi again!
>
> DanH, I use thread synchronization. It works well.
> But, as I
A content provider won't provide any function over what you have now
-- it's just a different way to accomplish the same synchronization.
With SQLite you basically can't have two transactions going on at the
same time, so you must either use semaphores or some such to prevent
"collisions" or use a
Obviously, you need to support the operation. I'd suggest duct tape.
On Mar 28, 5:22 am, amfine wrote:
> Hello
> please help me .the trouble is:
> java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException
> at android.graphics.Path.addRoundRect(Path.java:514)
> at
> android.graphics.drawable.shape
I've only been programming in Java for about 15 years, so I'm a bit of
a novice. So please someone tell me what the heck this means:
byte [] plainText ss.getBytes = ();
On Mar 29, 9:20 am, jaafar zbeiba
wrote:
> hello I tried encryption of any errors I ecplise but the problem when
> I run the e
By causing it to miss interrupts.
On Mar 26, 9:26 am, Marcin Orlowski wrote:
> > How to check the usage of CPU?
>
> https://market.android.com/details?id=com.eolwral.osmonitor
> or read /proc/loadavg
>
> > 2011/3/26 DanH
>
> >> If your app is running 100%
There are random number generators in Java (java.util.Random) and in
the crypto support. Or you can dig up a reference and write your
own. Or you can use the millisecond bits of the system clock.
If you use a good pseudo-random generator (and I assume that
java.util.Random is reasonably good) th
I see a bunch of errors reported, but none with "the exception
code" (whatever that means).
If you want people to look at your problem you've got to adequately
describe it.
On Mar 26, 7:30 am, jaafar zbeiba
wrote:
> which ?
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There is a solution.
On Mar 26, 6:30 am, jaafar zbeiba
wrote:
> hello I tried this code but I have a problem with the exception
> code
> import java.security.*;
> import javax.crypto.*;
>
> //
> // encrypt and decrypt using the DES private key algorithm
>
> public class PrivateExample {
>
> pu
If your app is running 100% CPU (ie, looking rather than waiting for
events) it's conceivable that it would affect the clock.
On Mar 25, 9:47 pm, San Zhang wrote:
> I found a strange problem. On my Nexus One, since upgrading to Android
> 2.3.3, the system clock would be slowed about one or two mi
4 encode the image bytestream
> and store it in xml, alternatively one could store the image files
> themselves and just store their path in the xml file.
>
> Jonathan
>
> On Mar 23, 3:59 am, DanH wrote:
>
> > Well, you can't put images in XML.
>
> > If this is
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