The Pocket PC is now the fastest growing platform
for building handheld-based enterprise applications. Free from
the memory limitations and underpowered processors of other
handheld platforms, Pocket Access and eMbedded Visual Basic are
providing the Pocket PC with the same one-two punch that
Microsoft Access and Visual Basic gave Windows application
development in the early 90's.
As the first RAD development tool
for the Pocket PC, eMbedded Visual Basic increases developer
productivity and allows for the creation of a wide range of
database applications to empower an increasingly mobile
workforce.
This
is the first book on the market to focus on Pocket PC
development using Microsoft's free eMbedded Visual Basic 3.
Pocket PC Database Development with eMbedded Visual Basic is
designed to get software developers up to speed building Pocket
Access database applications using eMbedded Visual Basic on the
Pocket PC.
Rob Tiffany has put his own Visual Basic background
to work in developing advanced Pocket PC applications for large
energy companies. It's from this perspective that he guides
professional Visual Basic and Access programmers into the world
of Pocket PC software development.
Tiffany's
book ramps up the reader's skills in fast-paced, but pragmatic
fashion. After describing the "must know" subset of
the SQL language Pocket PC developers need to know, he guides
the reader through Microsoft's ADOCE and ActiveSync technologies
- and with no nonsense examples.
Tiffany effectively shares his
"been there, done that" experience to help programmers
avoid the shoals can sink efforts to build Pocket PC
applications that communicate with either local Pocket Access
databases or remote SQL Server databases.
In
the aftermath of the dot-com fallout, Directors and Managers of
business units in corporations all around the world are looking
for solutions to the problems that affect their bottom line.
They no longer buy into all the hype that's been thrusted upon
them over the last few years by "e-solution" companies
offering the services of a bunch of "web guys."
Deploying Pocket PC's with wireless networking capabilities to a
corporate workforce costs less than deploying laptops and saves
time because they're always connected to the corporate LAN so
actions taken by people in the field are instantly transmitted
back to the home office.
A new generation of embedded developers
is needed to build these small, distributed applications and tie
them into existing enterprise computing systems.
Tiffany's book
proposes to take the 3 million Visual Basic developers and
leverage their existing skills to make them eMbedded Visual
Basic developers in much the same way that Active Server Pages
made them web developers.
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Paperback:
288 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.73 x 9.25 x 7.43
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Publisher:
APress; 1 edition (July 30, 2001)
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ISBN:
1893115658
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