On Sun, Dec 03, 2006 at 04:20:10AM +0100, EdorFaus wrote:
> On 11/30/06, Tin Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > If you are keeping a copy of the current versions locally then diffing and
> > sending only the diffs would be easy... but to my knowledge svn only keeps
> > the diffs between version
On 11/30/06, Tin Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you are keeping a copy of the current versions locally then diffing and
> sending only the diffs would be easy... but to my knowledge svn only keeps
> the diffs between versions at the repository. Someone who knowns please
As far as I know,
On 11/30/06, Robert Michel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A little bit the same with normal files. How do you think that a file
will make a diff with itself (the modification) before it is modificated
and save the modicated version + all diffs since last replication with
the server.
Wouldn't rsync
On 11/30/06, Selem Delul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Nokia did it. (http://wiki.opensource.nokia.com/projects/Mobile_Web_Server
)
So yeah, it is possible. They are using a gateway to translate an url
to your phone's web server (and i guess they are using it to
communicate with the phone which is
So here is a document talking about some of the things we have mentioned...
From the link to nokia...
http://research.nokia.com/tr/NRC-TR-2006-005.pdf
Interesting, they have thought of quite a bit of this already.
--Tim.
On 11/29/06, Jeff Andros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 11/29/06, Ti
On 11/29/06, Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Web services are XML data transfer. The problem with xml is that it is
wordy for data (size) but good for parsing. What I mean by that is that its
not the most efficient way to transfer data ( ok thats obvious) but its a
defined format and eas
Web services are XML data transfer. The problem with xml is that it is
wordy for data (size) but good for parsing. What I mean by that is that its
not the most efficient way to transfer data ( ok thats obvious) but its a
defined format and easy to parse just about anywhere.. just slow.
If you a
Without thougths like that you will have an incredible GPRS traffic =
costs.
> ICS is really simple so
> we could host that from the device as well. If Apache isn't small
enough,
> even stripped down, there are several server apps that are optimised for
> this kind of environment
I don't d
Salve Jeff,*!
When it will be only adresses, todo, memo - syncML is build to do
this. But please via a secure network - Siemens offer this unencrypted.
*help*help*help*help*
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006, Jeff Andros wrote:
> >> for uploading sets of data they could be implelented in almost any
> >lauguag
Nokia did it. (http://wiki.opensource.nokia.com/projects/Mobile_Web_Server)
So yeah, it is possible. They are using a gateway to translate an url
to your phone's web server (and i guess they are using it to
communicate with the phone which is behind the operator's proxy)
On 11/30/06, Jeff Andros
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006, Tim Newsom wrote:
Yeah. But more specifically I am defining the type of api as web services or
web methods (they are the same thing usually).
Basically, the web method is a standard used to define the remote method
calls, their required parameters and types of acceptabl
Right.. For peer to peer or requests directly to the phone that's true.
There is no reason we could not build a community shared server to be
the intermedary between the phones however...
Something that doesn't store the data longer than necessary for another
phone to retreive the information
Yeah. But more specifically I am defining the type of api as web
services or web methods (they are the same thing usually).
Basically, the web method is a standard used to define the remote method
calls, their required parameters and types of acceptable data from
within a program. Any progra
Use web services... Web methods or whatever you call it. If you build an
api
> for uploading sets of data they could be implelented in almost any
lauguage
> and used natively like normal objects.
> Perl, php, python, java, c# can all do that and it means the backend
does not
> have to be rewri
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006, Tim Newsom wrote:
I love this idea and I would like to suggest a method of handeling a portions
of it...
Use web services... Web methods or whatever you call it. If you build an api
for uploading sets of data they could be implelented in almost any lauguage
and used
I love this idea and I would like to suggest a method of handeling a
portions of it...
Use web services... Web methods or whatever you call it. If you build
an api for uploading sets of data they could be implelented in almost
any lauguage and used natively like normal objects.
Perl, php, pyt
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006, Redvers Davies wrote:
On Wed, 2006-11-29 at 13:42 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here's another idea, this one less than half-baked, but I trust this community
to help identify the flaws, seek the gems, and see if anything remains that is
useful.
This will be the first
On Wed, 2006-11-29 at 13:42 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Here's another idea, this one less than half-baked, but I trust this community
> to help identify the flaws, seek the gems, and see if anything remains that is
> useful.
This will be the first application I will develop. I love it - Th
This isn't really half baked at all, all you need is a webserver on the
device small enough to run 1-2 clients and https... It's even better than
the danger since everything runs on your phone... you have control of
security, and we could even make a monitor app that displays when someone's
access
Here's another idea, this one less than half-baked, but I trust this community
to help identify the flaws, seek the gems, and see if anything remains that is
useful.
My current phone is the Danger Sidekick II. One of its features that I really
like is the web page that Danger provides that duplic
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