A Porting experience
iPhone to Android
I just ported several of our applications from iPhone to Android. Today's blog entry is about the harrowing adventure of accomplishing such a task. Before I delve into the details, here is a summary of my experience:
Old School Tech
Most of my time is spent at the keyboard. Be it on my laptop (both Apple and PC), or one of the many "smart" phones I have collected over the years. My life is about what's new. But sometimes, forward is backwards. On that premise, today's post has nothing to do with modern technology.
For years, I fought through shaving. Experimenting with everything from electric razors, to the latest 2, 5 and 100 blade gizmo I could get my hands on. Each and every one did a job, but none of them did the right job. Every new gadget left behind rough skin, tiny annoying cuts, or just didn't shave at all. It was too much aggravation for the result.
At least I did until a small store in our local mall taught me how to to look back. Stainless steel, double edged razor, and as my wife describes it -- her great-grandpa's razor. The up-swing of such an old piece of grooming tech: it took 1 week of retraining myself how to shave, an extra 60 seconds a day because with an open blade you just wanna be careful, and my skin has never looked better. I shave every day, and never a stubble left behind. The old is new, and never worked better. Now if we could just go back to DOS and get such positive results.
Double-edged safety razors
"Until the early 1970s, most safety razors were manufactured to accept a single, disposable razor blade. These blades were manufactured with either one or two sharpened edges, depending upon the design of the razor. This style of razor is no longer manufactured in the United States and is instead made by a number of companies such as Merkur of Germany, Treet of Pakistan, Weishi of China, and Parker of India. The blades are still being made today in a wide variety of countries including the USA, Israel, Russia, Korea, Japan, and Egypt. Some of the brand names include Merkur, Feather, Racer, Bigben, Lord, Treet and Bic."
More Patent Sense
Not that anyone cares, since progress in technology and economics is a square second to fighting over who thought of what first (or at least who made it to the patent office first), but here is an interesting article about how the patent mess called America is killing the next wave of cell phone innovation. You should note that America is already years behind of other coutries in mobile technology because our rule set lets content providers and carriers essentially shut the consumer out of -- basically everything.