tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-663998076511109850.post349824980915123199..comments2023-11-05T04:33:11.265-08:00Comments on Maison Fleury: OpenRemote 2.0 and Android, first impressionsadt43wt342http://www.blogger.com/profile/07557608193924044365noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-663998076511109850.post-59755514977201358612010-11-04T10:15:08.906-07:002010-11-04T10:15:08.906-07:00I'm inclined to agree with identifying the dev...I'm inclined to agree with identifying the development environment as playing an important role in the speed of development.<br /><br />However, I would rate Eclipse to be only slightly better (for Android development) than XCode. I also typically only use Objective-C for OS interactions and then quickly call out to C or C++ code (but that's really just a comfort zone, I suppose).<br /><br />That said, Visual Studio 2010 is the bees knees. :)<br /><br />Nice post, Maison.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05343931320004045524noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-663998076511109850.post-89796663657765414432010-10-21T16:01:08.347-07:002010-10-21T16:01:08.347-07:00I think its more the environment than you're o...I think its more the environment than you're old or rusty.<br /><br />I did an iphone app a month ago. Hello world took me 2 days. The project I did took two weeks (it was a simple TOTP key generator). Objective-C is a bitch to get used to (ugh reference counting) and InterfaceBuilder is quirky.Bill Burkehttp://bill.burkecentral.comnoreply@blogger.com