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programming for battery saving

Tony Thijs

7/15/2005 4:16:00 AM

Hi,

Are there any backgrounders available about best practices where it comes to
saving power -and the battery while programming with Visual Studio 2005, the
CF 2.0 beta and the Mobile 5.0 SDK?

Kind regards,

Tony Thijs


6 Answers

Chung

7/29/2005 1:50:00 AM

0

MSDN has an article about how to programming for battery saving


"Tony Thijs" <tonyspamboeboepamthijs@wanadoo.nl> ¼¶¼g©ó¶l¥ó·s»D:%23f0YaPPiFHA.3476@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
> Hi,
>
> Are there any backgrounders available about best practices where it comes
> to saving power -and the battery while programming with Visual Studio
> 2005, the CF 2.0 beta and the Mobile 5.0 SDK?
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Tony Thijs
>
>


Chuck Norris

7/24/2011 9:41:00 PM

0

On Sun, 24 Jul 2011 13:03:37 -0700 (PDT), Salty Stan
<wsjames123@gmail.com> wrote:

>On Jul 24, 3:23?pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:
>> Salty Stan ?<wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> >On Jul 23, 1:33?pm, liberal <liberalh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >> What he's pointing out, and what you're too stupid to grasp, is that
>> >> conditions in inner cities schools are a breeding ground for activism,
>> >> be it terroristic or revolutionary.
>>
>> >If that's true, then what an excellent argument in favor of a voucher
>> >system.
>>
>> So that more taxpayer money can be funnelled
>
>funneled

(From http://www.thefreedictionary.... :
"v. fun?neled or fun?nelled, fun?nel?ing or fun?nel?ling, fun?nels "

I just love pretentious nit-twits <sic> <lol> who get on the
intertubes and not only hoist themselves on their own petards but who
seem to actually enjoy having them stuck up their asses!)

>> into revolutionary
>> training camps.
>
>I'm guessing you are the product of our public educational system. Am
>I right?

============================================================
From: Salty Stan <wsjames123@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 19 Jul 2011 09:47:55 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID:
<d50ddcbc-21e9-4538-a5b9-fa721fc6a3d3@u28g2000yqf.googlegroups.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 173.226.90.51

On Jul 17, 3:26=A0pm, Salty Stan <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jul 16, 4:15=A0pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:

> >I don't do fake precision.
>
> > You're a dumbass. =A0You don't even know what I mean by "fake precision=
".

No I don't.

Unless you're trying to incinerate "false precision", which is the
term that engineers actually use.
=====================================================================

What are you trying to "incinerate", that you are somehow
intellectually superior to Fischer?

http://www.thefreedictionary.com...

ROTFLMAO. Epic FAIL, dood!

And, since you and Slackjaw are two of my favorite gibbering monkeys,
here's a bonus nose-rub:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False...

"False precision (also called overprecision, fake precision, misplaced
precision and spurious accuracy) occurs..."

<lol>

>>
>>[Signed]
>> Idiot.
>>
>> --
>> Ray Fischer ? ? ? ? | ?Mendocracy (n.) government by lying
>> rfisc...@sonic.net ?| ? ?The new GOP ideal
>
>No, Ray, we want to stop pouring money into our failed public school
>system and into private schools that work.
>
>Why do you think Democrat politicians send their own kids into private
>schools?

I'm guessing you are the product of a private school somewhere
waaaaaaaaaay back in the Ozarks. Am I right? <lol>

P.S. I'll be sure to bring your gaffes to Lochner's attention the next
time he posts. He's a liberal shithead but I _do_ love the way he
makes you whine!



Slackjaw

7/25/2011 2:17:00 AM

0

On Jul 24, 5:24 pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:
> Salty Stan  <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
....
>
> >> >If that's true, then what an excellent argument in favor of a voucher
> >> >system.
>
> >> So that more taxpayer money can be funnelled
> >> into revolutionary
> >> training camps.
>
> >I'm guessing you are the product of our public educational system.
>
> he rightard runs away yet again.  No matter how many times they're
> shown to be destructive, corrupt, and stupid, they just keep
> rejecting all facts and logic.
>
> It is a form of cult insanity.

I'll take that for a "yes".

I'll add this point to my arsenal - Ray Fischer is an example of what
happens if we don't implement a school voucher system.


>
> --
> Ray Fischer         |  Mendocracy (n.) government by lying
> rfisc...@sonic.net  |    The new GOP ideal

Slackjaw

7/25/2011 2:23:00 AM

0

On Jul 24, 5:40 pm, Chuck Norris <bustyour...@racketmail.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 24 Jul 2011 13:03:37 -0700 (PDT), Salty Stan
>
> <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >On Jul 24, 3:23 pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:
> >> Salty Stan  <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >> >On Jul 23, 1:33 pm, liberal <liberalh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> >> What he's pointing out, and what you're too stupid to grasp, is that
> >> >> conditions in inner cities schools are a breeding ground for activism,
> >> >> be it terroristic or revolutionary.
>
> >> >If that's true, then what an excellent argument in favor of a voucher
> >> >system.
>
> >> So that more taxpayer money can be funnelled
>
> >funneled
>
> (Fromhttp://www.thefreedictionary....:
> "v. fun·neled or fun·nelled, fun·nel·ing or fun·nel·ling, fun·nels "
>
> I just love pretentious nit-twits <sic> <lol> who get on the
> intertubes and not only hoist themselves on their own petards but who
> seem to actually enjoy having them stuck up their asses!)
>
> >> into revolutionary
> >> training camps.
>
> >I'm guessing you are the product of our public educational system. Am
> >I right?
>
> ============================================================
> From: Salty Stan <wsjames...@gmail.com>
> Date: Tue, 19 Jul 2011 09:47:55 -0700 (PDT)
> Message-ID:
> <d50ddcbc-21e9-4538-a5b9-fa721fc6a...@u28g2000yqf.googlegroups.com>
> NNTP-Posting-Host: 173.226.90.51
>
> On Jul 17, 3:26=A0pm, Salty Stan <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Jul 16, 4:15=A0pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:
> > >I don't do fake precision.
>
> > > You're a dumbass. =A0You don't even know what I mean by "fake precision=
>
> ".
>
> No I don't.
>
> Unless you're trying to incinerate "false precision", which is the
> term that engineers actually use.
> =====================================================================
>
> What are you trying to "incinerate", that you are somehow
> intellectually superior to Fischer?
>
> http://www.thefreedictionary.com...
>
> ROTFLMAO. Epic FAIL, dood!
>
> And, since you and Slackjaw are two of my favorite gibbering monkeys,
> here's a bonus nose-rub:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False...
>
> "False precision (also called overprecision, fake precision, misplaced
> precision and spurious accuracy) occurs..."
>
> <lol>
>
>
>
> >>[Signed]
> >> Idiot.
>
> >> --
> >> Ray Fischer         |  Mendocracy (n.) government by lying
> >> rfisc...@sonic.net  |    The new GOP ideal
>
> >No, Ray, we want to stop pouring money into our failed public school
> >system and into private schools that work.
>
> >Why do you think Democrat politicians send their own kids into private
> >schools?
>
> I'm guessing you are the product of a private school somewhere
> waaaaaaaaaay back in the Ozarks. Am I right? <lol>
>
> P.S. I'll be sure to bring your gaffes to Lochner's attention the next
> time he posts. He's a liberal shithead but I _do_ love the way he
> makes you whine!

Well hi Kurt - posting under a new nym now, are you? What's was wrong
with "Man of mind"?

Slackjaw

7/25/2011 2:25:00 AM

0

On Jul 24, 4:03 pm, Salty Stan <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
....
>
> Why do you think Democrat politicians send their own kids into private
> schools?

Any of you liberals want to voice an opinion on this?

treadleson

7/25/2011 2:52:00 AM

0

On Jul 24, 3:42 pm, The PHANTOM <hoofhearte...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Jul 24, 2:23 pm, rfisc...@sonic.net (Ray Fischer) wrote:
>
>
>
> > Salty Stan  <wsjames...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > >On Jul 23, 1:33 pm, liberal <liberalh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >> What he's pointing out, and what you're too stupid to grasp, is that
> > >> conditions in inner cities schools are a breeding ground for activism,
> > >> be it terroristic or revolutionary.
>
> > >If that's true, then what an excellent argument in favor of a voucher
> > >system.
>
> > So that more taxpayer money can be funnelled into revolutionary
> > training camps.
>
> > Idiot.
>
> > --
> > Ray Fischer         |  Mendocracy (n.) government by lying
> > rfisc...@sonic.net  |    The new GOP ideal
>
> Here's your "revolutionary training camps" you brainwashed,OboBagging
> fuckslop:
>
> Bill Ayers: Or how I learned to stop bombing and destroy the system
> from within
>
> By the mid-1960s, all hell had broken loose in the American education
> system, most obviously in the universities that were at the center of
> the Vietnam War protest movement, but more subtly in the public
> school
> system as well.
>
> And since the universities that were exploding with radical
> ideologies
> in the 1960s were also the furnace in which future educators were
> forged — there was an inevitable long-term effect on what teachers
> taught their students about American traditions, values and beliefs.
> The anti-American fervor on college campuses during the Vietnam era
> was the fuel that led teachers to give up their traditional role as
> the builders of culture and turned them instead into termites that
> ate
> away at the foundations of our society.
>
> That disconnect between American idealism and American youth may
> ultimately be how progressive education was able to shift the
> paradigm
> in America, and no better poster boy exists for the transformation of
> American education from a cultivator of good citizens into an
> incubator of radicalism than Bill Ayers.
>
> You may remember Ayers from his tangential role in the 2008
> presidential election. It turns out that he was an early supporter of
> Barack Obama and had helped the future president get jobs on two
> boards that divvied up millions of dollars in education and anti-
> poverty grants.
>
> That wouldn’t have been a problem except for the fact that Ayers is
> best known for blowing things up. As a founding member of the Weather
> Underground, he turned to violence in the late 1960s as an approved
> tactic for bringing about social change.
>
> That may have been the most dangerous thing Bill Ayers did in the
> turbulent Sixties, but it is certainly not the most effective
> technique he found for changing America from a capitalist nation to a
> communistic one.
>
> For that you need to look at where Ayers spent his time both before
> and after his bomb-throwing period — namely at schools and
> universities — and on those boards doling out big bucks to effect
> social change through education.
>
> Ayers was at the University of Michigan when Students for a
> Democratic
> Society was founded in 1966, and he participated directly in the
> radicalization of SDS that led to the violent revolutionary group
> known as the Weather Underground. Ayers and his cohorts bombed the
> Pentagon, inspired riots in the streets, and encouraged violent
> uprising in order to bring about a new socialist world order.
>
> You can get a taste for Ayers’ style of politics from a January 1970
> report by syndicated columnists Robert Allen and John Goldsmith on a
> four-day meeting of the national council of the Weatherman faction of
> SDS which took place in Flint, Mich.
>
> After his now-wife Bernardine Dohrn had worked up the crowd by
> bashing
> them as “wimpy on armed struggle” and reminding the assembled
> revolutionaries that “violence is our aim and motto,” Ayers got his
> turn to go macho, giving karate lessons that were “accompanied with
> such encouraging remarks as ‘It is necessary to take up arms and
> resort to violence in order to fight and destroy the pigs” (namely
> the
> police and establishment leaders).
>
> Probably no one reading this column today would condone or accept
> such
> rhetoric, unless they were themselves avowed revolutionaries. But
> make
> no mistake about it, that rhetoric was standard fare on the campuses
> of the 1960s. For at least a decade, it was common college wisdom
> that
> America was evil and that you couldn’t “trust anyone over 30.”
>
> Well, a lot of those folks over 30 were what we today call “the
> greatest generation,” the American men and women who sacrificed life,
> limb and our national treasure in order to preserve liberty for their
> children. It would no doubt take a major psychological study in order
> to ascertain what factors came into play in the post-war years to
> explain how the “greatest generation” allowed their children to rip
> apart everything they themselves had worked so hard to secure.
>
> But for now we can simply surmise that the generation which had given
> up so much in order to ensure that their children would enjoy
> liberty’s bounty was also somehow psychologically circumscribed from
> imposing ANY significant restrictions on that precious liberty, and
> thus created a generation characterized by an overwhelming sense of
> entitlement, narcissism, and ultimately ingratitude. For lack of a
> better name, call it the Bill Ayers Generation.
>
> The “older generation” no doubt didn’t understand the Bill Ayers
> Generation, and that probably went for Ayers’ own father, too. Thomas
> G. Ayers was president and later chairman and CEO of Commonwealth
> Edison. In other words, he was a major industrialist, and part of the
> system of capital and wealth creation that his son and the Weather
> Underground sought to topple. Again, the psychological implications
> are enormous, and the story of the Ayers family was no doubt
> duplicated in millions of other Baby Boomer families across the
> nation.
>
> By letting their children do whatever they wanted instead of
> grounding
> them in the same wholesome principles with which they themselves had
> been raised, the “greatest generation” was engendering a generation
> of
> experimentation, rebellion and decay. The children and grandchildren
> of that generation are the ones left holding the bag these 50 years
> later, and the bag is empty rhetoric. “Hope and change” has replaced
> “blood, sweat and tears.”
>
> Of course, the people who have been selling hope and change for the
> past 50 years, in one form or another, are hopeful that you will not
> notice the gap between reality and rhetoric.
>
> They are also no doubt hopeful you will not follow the trail of
> evidence that links progressive education, revolutionary politics and
> the decline of America, but it’s all laid out in plain sight — often
> in the words of Bill Ayers himself.
>
> Ayers was a key author of “Prairie Fire: The Politics of
> Revolutionary
> Imperialism,” which was distributed while he was a fugitive from
> federal charges in 1974.
>
> There is much to learn in this book, which candidly describes the
> plan
> for revolution in America, but let’s just close with what the book
> tells us about education, the field which Ayers entered in 1966 and
> in
> which he later became a distinguished professor with a wide influence
> on contemporary pedagogic thinking.
>
> Here, in a discussion of “busing” students to achieve racial
> “equality,” Ayers and his co-authors give away the game:
>
> “The real question is: Who will control the schools? The design of
> the
> state is control of the child’s education, whether in the integrated
> or segregated school.”
>
> That was the real question, and it still is: “Who will control the
> schools?”
>
> Bill Ayers tried and failed at violent revolution, but he never lost
> sight of his goal — he just changed tactics. In an assessment of the
> Cuban Revolution in “Prairie Fire,” the authors noted that, “The
> revolution has launched an offensive to transform education and
> culture into powerful revolutionary tools.”
>
> In future columns, we will explore just how Ayers and his colleagues
> launched an offensive in the 1960s and beyond to “transform education
> and culture into powerful revolutionary tools” right here in America,
> and how they succeeded.

This is all basically right except you don't have to go to someone as
extreme as Ayers to see the lasting damage done on public (and private
to a lesser extent) education by sixties political radicalism as it
unfolded in the universities. A lot of the ideas came from German '30s
immigrants who got jobs in the American universities, the European
Marxist types out of the "Frankfurt School" of critical theory. I mean
people like Marcuse (Columbia, Brandeis, Harvard) and Erich Fromm
(Michigan State, Columbia, NYU). And many others.

You see the sketchy results.

>
> .