

- QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC PORTABLE
- QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC SOFTWARE
- QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC CODE
- QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC PROFESSIONAL
- QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC DOWNLOAD
€¢ Sharpen your ears & frequency recognition skills Quiztones uses tones and frequency-altered noise and musical loops to train your ears and help develop more acute listening and frequency recognition skills so you can mix, record and produce like a pro.
QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC PROFESSIONAL
QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC CODE
Porting meant that I had to create a native Android UI as well as getting the ‘cross-platform’ common code to work via JNI (some tech details here).

NodeBeat was written in C++ using openFrameworks. I was up for the challenge and it was the first time for me to be exposed to the complicated side of Android development. Late 2011 I started freelancing via Epic Windmill and one of my friends ( Seth Sandler) asked me if I could help porting over one of his successful iOS apps to Android. I still remember he offered me to come to the Google Mountain View campus but unfortunately I was there only for about a week and the schedule didn’t allow for it.
QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC SOFTWARE
San is a great guy, even though I was just starting out as a software developer, we had a great chat and geeked out a bit over the G1. San saw the message and said that we should meet up! We actually did end up meeting in person… (what was I thinking? meeting up with a stranger from the internet?). As I had never been in the area before (and it was my first trip to the US by myself), I was asking for some ideas on IRC in #android-chat on things to do in the SF area (as I knew a bunch of them where SF locals). In the spring of 2009, I was still doing research work on multi-touch tech and was invited to come to the Interactive Displays Conference in San Jose. At one point he yelled “WILL YOU MORONS SPEAK ENGLISH?” and that’s how a new IRC topic was born. As fIRC was gaining traction, at some point there was so much talk in different languages going on that it became hard to follow any conversations. The old version started with great ratings and high number of downloads… until it didn’t work so well on newer Android devices as I had a lot of layout things hardcoded for landscape use ?♂️įunny enough, fIRC was also the reason I got in touch with, San Mehat, one of the Android engineers who used to idle in the chatroom too (I think most Android engineers were on #android on Freenode back then). By default it would drop users in #android-chat on Freenode which became very popular and often time had hilarious chatter going on.
QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC DOWNLOAD
I never expected so many people would download and use it. That’s when I started to work on fIRC which was released just before Christmas of 2008. Running Space Invaders (via emulation) on my G1Īt that time I was still active on EFnet and Freenode chat servers, I thought it would be cool to have an IRC client to check in every now and then from my phone. I was so excited that the code ran and I was able to play it with the hardware keyboard! When I ported it to Java using Eclipse (yep before Android Studio was a thing), the first game I tried was Space Invaders. The first app that I wrote wasn’t going to be “Hello World”, nah, I needed a bigger challenge so I tried porting a Chip 8 emulator that I had written for Windows sometime earlier. Back then they didn’t like it when you would try to just buy the device without service, but with a bit of patience they eventually sold one to me. After the conference was over, I went to a T-Mobile store and tried to purchase a G1. Fortunately, for work at that time, I was going to be in Austin, TX in Nov 2008 for SuperComputing 2008 to demo a multi-touch device.
QUIZTONES FOR ANDROID PC PORTABLE
I was intrigued by what it was, a smartphone or really a portable tiny computer. When the team announced their Android device, I wasn’t living in the US (yet) and they weren’t selling it in the Netherlands yet. I’ve been coding for Android since November 2008, which means almost 13 years! The projects that I’ve worked on have been very… diverse. The team that created Android didn’t just create a new mobile OS they also created a new career path for software engineers like me. If you are a mobile developer and haven’t read Chet Haase’s latest book “ Androids: The team that built the Android operating system” go read it now! It’s a delightful read and a wonderful trip into Android’s history!
