Titanium Mobile Web Service Sample App

If you’re an aspiring iPhone Developer, have a web condition skill set, but don’t want to learn Objective-C in order to develop a native iPhone app, then Appcelerator’s Titanium Transportable is for you. In a nutshell, using HTML and JavaScript you can develop full-fledged iPhone SDK-based native apps (which assemble down to native code, not just HTML/JS hosted in a Web View Controller like PhoneGap).
Using TitaniumMobile, I’ve created a minor sample app which demonstrates taking user input, passing that data to a web service, then displaying the results to the purchaser, with a little bit of error trapping too. You can check it out on the Titanium Mobile SampleApplications page — it’s called “Web Help Call Tutorial.” Enjoy.
P.S. — An added benefit of Titanium Mobile is that it support pass over-deployment currently to iPhone and to Google Android.
Source: The General Theory of RIAtivity
How do gravitons fit into the general theory of relativity?
Jul 28, 2009 by Bear Cleveland | Posted in Physics
I am hearing more and more about gravitons, but cannot put my bean around them.
The general theory of relativity states that gravity is caused by the curving of space-time. If this is so, how can there be a particle that transfers dignity? How can a particle that has mass transfer gravity?
Is there something I am missing? Are gravitons part of a theory that considers relativity invalid? I'd like as much detail as possible. Thanks.
They are like two unalike ways of describing the same thing
it's easy to see what happens, but to come up with a mechanism that works with other ideas that you're active with is where the different ideas come from. Space time from a more geometry based background. Gravitons from the grain based backgrounds
which is "correct"? Who knows?! Neither? Both work depending how you look at it. You'll get the same predictions either way. You should if they describe the same article!
if you study it post-grad you may even find out how the two theories are the same
otherwise, don't worry too much!
Nobody | Jul 28, 2009
They are like two weird ways of describing the same thing
it's easy to see what happens, but to come up with a mechanism that works with other ideas that you're entangled with with is where the different ideas come from. Space time from a more geometry based background. Gravitons from the crumb based backgrounds
which is "correct"? Who knows?! Neither? Both work depending how you look at it. You'll get the same predictions either way. You should if they describe the same fetich!
if you study it post-grad you may even find out how the two theories are the same
otherwise, don't worry too much!
Nobody | Jul 28, 2009
What does that general theory of relativity say about the geometry of space-time 3?
Jan 13, 2007 by myyahoo! | Posted in Philosophy
What does that general theory of relativity say about the geometry of organize-time
1) That it is not constant throughout the universe, but instead varies in its structure from place to place.
2) That it is correspond to to the geometry of supper time.
3) That it is equivalent to the geometry that Euclid axiomatized over two thousand years ago.
4) That it is tried in its structure, but that it does not conform to the “intuitive” geometry that was axiomatized by Euclid over two thousand years ago.
4)
Next!
anthonypaullloyd | Jan 13, 2007