Tour de Flex _ Helps you learn Flex, in English!
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Oh! You’d better get some AIR before you do that!
Archive for March, 2009
Get your copy of Tour de Flex and jump start your Flex experience. Learn with easy examples. Anyway, its better than looking at your boring HTML help!
Oh! You’d better get some AIR before you do that!

Appcelerator’s Titanium is an open source alternative to Adobe AIR to help you build your rich internet apps easily. We first saw Titanium hit the racks of the internet around December. Its three months down the line and at least we think they haven’t made the noise they ought to have generated.
But we haven’t seen as much of Titanium as we should be? There are a few easy things which Appcelerator hasn’t done yet. And correct us if we’re wrong.
The Titanium App is open source and cross platform. Preview release 2 is now out and adds support to Linux as well. We think open source is the way to go and Titanium is a step in the right direction.
Download the Titanium SDK here and start making your own apps.
Show your support to Titanium by downloading Tweetanium
Follow them here
Do you disagree with the statement that Titanium has branded itself the way it was supposed to? Do you think Titanium has already got its share of fame for the period of time it has been around? Would you be willing to give up on AIR and go open source? Leave your comments!
What’s SDK?
A software development kit (SDK) is typically a set of development tools that allows a software engineer to create applications for a certain software package, software framework, hardware platform, computer system, video game console, operating system, or similar platform. And in many cases includes the IDE for the development
What’s an IDE?
An integrated development environment (IDE) also known as integrated design environment or integrated debugging environment is a software application that provides comprehensive facilities to computer programmers for software development. An IDE normally consists of a:
1. Source code editor
2. Compiler and/or interpreter
3. Build automation tools
4. Debugger
An IDE is actually used to write and test programs.
Eg.: Microsoft Visual Studio, Turbo C++ professional
An SDK adds functionality, lets you include the sample code, documentation.
Eg.: Eclipse SDK(it comes with the IDE)
Therefore, SDK > IDE! Hmmm…whatever…
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