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Paperback Building Tablet PC Applications [With CDROM] Book

ISBN: 0735617236

ISBN13: 9780735617230

Building Tablet PC Applications [With CDROM]

Many pen-based software platforms have been introduced in the last decade, but only recently has the introduction of faster processors and hardware enabled mainstream introduction of tablet-sized... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Brilliant. Beautiful. Buy it

Hello, Ink Collector, indeed. This gem, categorized as a mere computer book, was full of great wisdom for our day. It poses eternal questions like "life, the universe-what does it all mean?" Questions that I thought about for days, long after I had written several Ink Enabled Applications.I devoured this book in a few hours, stopping every few minutes to think and write about what I was reading, and then forced it on my best friend the next day. This is a brilliant and amazing book, Rob is one of my literary heroes.This clever and inventive tale works on three levels: as an intriguing science fiction concept, a realistic character study and a touching love story. I laughed, I cried, I wrote code, but most of all, I was inspired. It was so "Chock-full of HID-y Goodness" I couldn't help it.Thanks Rob, you've changed my life!! You are indeed one of the greatest geniuses of our time.

The only book on an important subject

Well, I can't say it's the only book on Tablet PC development, but it's by far the most thorough and well documented. Rob does a really great job on this one, and my only gripe about it is that it starts out kind of slow and can be a bit dry at times. However, that's more a function of the subject matter than any fault of the writer, and I would say this book is a definite 5, and a must have for any Tablet PC developer.A lot of Tablet PC developement is identical to what one does on a traditional desktop app. The main difference being Ink. If you are buying a Tablet PC book, this is probably the main thing you are interested in and it does a great job of discussing it. It takes a few chapters for the rubber to start hitting the road as far as Inking, but I that would be the case in any book that covered Tab Development in depth.And once the book gets going...the discussion and analysis is pure gold. I found it very relevant and by and large pretty interesting. It's technical content is as good as it gets. All the code samples worked, the samples got to the point and were well explained and nothing critical was left out in order to get the examples running.This is the first 'real' book on Tablet Development that I've come across and it's never easy being the first to write on such a technology. I think the author shows a great deal of empathy toward the reader and definitely goes out of his way to help you along.Sure, I had my little gripe that I mentioned above, but this book is unquestionably one of the finer computer books I've come across recently (and there are a lot of great ones these days) and the author is to be commended on the professional and quality job he did on it.If you are going to write professional Tablet Apps, or if you are just developer looking at recreationally developing Tablet Apps, this book is a must have.

Must-have if you want to write .NET Tablet PC Apps

This is an excellent book for everyone who wants to start programming Tablet PC applications using C#. (Or even any other .NET language as the examples really aren't that hard to translate...). The book is well organized and readable and guides the reader through all the aspects of writing the typical Tablet PC application.Of course, this whole subject is extensive, and the book can not discuss it all. For advanced topics such as writing ink recognizers from scratch, you will have to find another source. But I really wouldn't expect a book like this to cover all the advanced topics.Note that this book does NOT cover COM-based or non-managed (non .NET) APIs. If you want to write your Tablet PC app with VB6, you will get some good fundamental information here, but no specifics. Again, I wouldn't hold this against the author, but it is good to know.

Must have

I developed one of the Tablet PC power toys that shipped at launch and I wish I'd had this book a few months earlier. I spent many months figuring things out that are detailed in this book.They cover a lot more detail than the SDK docs and do a great job providing examples and the answering the all important question: 'why?'. Since I was already familiar with the SDK, I found the book easy to follow - I can't speak for developers approaching Tablet PC development for the first time but I'm sure it would be fine. Granted, there aren't exactly a lot of titles to choose from at the moment but I can't imagine having a better reference for C# Tablet PC development.

I want my Tablet PC!

The most frustrating part about this book is that I got it two months ago, and I won't get my Tablet PC until next week (this week if I'm REALLY lucky). This book makes programming the Tablet PC so clear and simple, I'm eager to get started. (The book does note that you can use the Tablet PC SDK with a regular Window XP machine and a range of digitizing tablets, but warns that there will be things that don't work well. I'll wait.) The code examples are clear, readable, and easy to comprehend (if a bit repetitive, since they include code for creating and populating a WinForm every single time). Normally, I just skim over code examples, since they're usually wordy and cluttered, and the key points are usually summarized in the main text. Well, these examples ARE summarized in the main text, which is always good; but the examples are very simple to follow (especially if you skip the WinForm stuff).There are only two things I wish this book had covered:* Speech. A Tablet PC is supposed to be fully speech-enabled, but no one's talking about that right now (so to speak). (Sorry for the double pun.) The ink management itself is such a large topic, no one seems to have time for the speech features. And this book is no better. It's just too large as it is, so I understand; but I hope someone soon does a similar book about the Speech API.* Custom Recognizers. Now for this oversight, I do fault the authors and MS Press. The authors claim this is a large, obscure topic, and they refer you to the SDK. Well, I agree that it's large; but I don't think it's obscure at all. Most of the Killer App ideas I have for the Tablet PC will require custom recognizers. (I can use the built-in recognizers, but the results won't be perfect in a couple of areas.)But those are small quibbles. This book has been great fun to read, and I'm counting the days until I can apply it.
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