Audiokit Bluetooth MIDI button broken? - bluetooth

The Bluetooth MIDI connect button had been working on AudioKit 5.0 Beta, but when I installed 5.3.2 the button does not have any action or message. I was also using Xcode13 beta and now use Xcode13 release version. I tried a very simple program with just a button that goes to this line:
#IBOutlet weak var bluetoothButton: BluetoothMIDIButton!
and it still does not work when run. Other programs that use BLE MIDI on the same IPAD work fine, and all permissions (Bluetooth always, peripheral usage) seem to be set correctly. If I connect first with another app, then all the other MIDIsend/receive functions work properly in my app. Is there some new requirement that I am missing?

Related

Foxit-reader shows annoying message when I connect iPhone to iMac

I use foxit-reader in my iMac computer. I noticed that whenever I connect my iphone to my iMac with USB connector, and if foxit-reader is open then I get annoying message popup like below
Is there any way to stop this message? I am using latest version of foxit-reader and iOS.
Any pointer will be very helpful.

Running a Windows Phone 8.0 application in the background/after minimized

I have made a Windows Phone 8.0 application with Visual Studio 2012 that listens to a clap from the microphone and it pauses the current playing song. It is working very fine. But I want to open the app and click the button to start listening and when I go to another app the functionality does not work.
What I need is to make my application run in the background like even in home screen when I sound a clap it should pause the song. How can I achieve this ?
Short answer: Not possible to listen to microphone with a background agent
check this link:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsphone/develop/hh202962(v=vs.105).aspx
Unsupported APIs:
System.Windows.Media A/V Capture
Microsoft.Xna.*

Remote Control WinCE 6.0 device from Windows 7

I am trying to find out a tool to remote control a Motorola MC3190 device running Windows CE 6.0 from a Windows 7 machine.
I have already used Mymobiler with Intermec CN3 device so I tried the answers in this question but I am unable to get it to work.
I have tried both remote.exe.40 and remote.exe.50 in the Mymobiler folder
Using Task Manager on CodeProject mentioned in a question on superuser it seems remote.exe completes execution very quickly (or is crashing silently).
My Start/Programs menu has a MyMobiler entry, so somewhere along the line something seems to have got installed
But when I run Mymobiler on desktop it cannot connect, its icon in system trey remains gray and on mouse hover says Not Connected/
In Proof MyMobiler works for WinCE video the processor is ARM920T-PXA270M while my device has a Marevell, PXA32X-P (link to image) processor could that be the reason?
I have also tried ActiveSync Remote Display from Windows Mobile Developer Power Toys. It installs but at start up it shows an error box with message "The OS or CPU of this device is unknown to this application"
How do I get MyMobiler to work with Motorola MC3190 device running Windows CE 6.0?
Is there any other tool, preferably free, to remote control this device?
EDIT: I came across EveryWAN and found an installer. It works out of box, but it is not available for commercial use and the web-site seems defunct.
PS: I realize the tags are not accurate but I wanted to use something that will attract attention of experts in these similar tags.
I want to clarify one answer to the above which is correct. When using the Microsoft PowerToy activesync remote display, there must be an application on both sides - host(the phone) and remote (the pc). The same is true for MyMobiler.
Install the powertoy on the pc.
For the original Poster: This is what your error message means:
In the case of Activecync Remote display, for newer devices (anything above ARM4 cpus - which means, 2008 and up, or over 200mhz cpus - as a very general guide), the display software cannot detect what type of device you have (it's too new, and not in the list).
For the motorola mc3190, your cpu is arm5 compatible,
and should work with software that has arm4 compliant components. ARD does have arm 4 options. see here...
To Fix it:
You must use file explorer on your pc, and navigate into the application folder: c\Programs...\Windows Mobile Developer...\ActiveSync...\Devices\wce400\armv4t and copy the two files.
While still on the pc, you must then navigate to the Windows folder of the device (with activesync running, OR the phone configured to be seen as a hard disc), use explorer on the PC to navigate to the device.
Vaguely, it will look like this:
Explorer. > Device (such as HTC Phone:)
Or, X:\ , where x is a drive letter.
The first subfolder your select should be Windows. Paste the two files there.
The two files are now copied onto the phone.
At that point, you must, using the phone, load it's file explorer and navigate to that Windows folder on internal memory and manually run cerdisp2.exe that you have now copied there.
With activesync running, and the phone connected to the pc,
You can now run the powertoy active remote display on the pc, and it will communicate with the exe that is running on the phone.
ActiveSync on Xp, or Windows Mobile Device Center on Windows Vista/7/8 must be running for this all to work.
Alternately, the app allows for a networking ip connection instead of activesync, but I have not used it.
When you are done using this app, you must run the kill.exe on the phone, in the windows folder (the second file you copied), to unload the dll that is running.
I can verify this setup works on Xp, Win7 and Win8 - with an Xscale ARM11 528mhz cpu phone.
For MyMobiler, visit their site and get the newest version.
It WILL fix connections that fail, if you have the older version. It's free. They don't support it anymore.
My Mobiler must have activesync running and showing the device connected.
My Mobiler is vastly superior to ActiveSyncRD.
* It will automatically install the pc side app, and push the remote app to the phone, via activesync.
*Further, when activesync is running and anytime you connect the phone, the MyMobiler app will autoload on the phone as well.
That way, whenever you run MyMobiler on the desktop, it will connect to the phone and load right up.
*My Mobiler allows full resolution display, while ARD is limited to 320x400 or similar. 640x800 looks much better.
*MyMobiler also allows full mouse gesture sends, and copy and paste. ARD offers very limited mouse gesture compatability.
MyMobiler also allows IP connections, but they indicate this is slower.
I am now using MyMobiler with Win8 and a touchpad w/ multitouch, and the mouse gestures send very well.
For Windows V/7/8, you might need to run compatability mode on the Mymobiler.exe file. Navigate to the MyMobiler folder, which might be on your desktop. Drill down til you find the exe. Right Click and chose properties. Compatability. Run Compatability Mode for this file, and select XP.
More Notes:
These apps are slow, because USB is slow.
If you enable Fast USB on the phone, it will help speed up any Remote Display noticeably - however Fast USB is unstable, and doesnt work on some configurations. For me, it doesnt work on XP, but does on Win8 - though slightly unstable at times.
On the device: Start> Settings Icon>Connections icon >USB to PC icon. Tick box to enable.
Also, MyMobiler on Win8 will sometimes refuse to connect. Fully unload mymobiler, disconnect the phone, reconnect the phone and watch for activesync to confirm connection. Then reload mymobiler. Sometimes full system reboots are needed, but that's rare.
Windows Mobile Remote Controller app on CodeProject - as linked above, looks excellent. It's for Windows Mobile 7 and 8 - which is fantastic. He provides a rapi enabler to allow use with WinMo 6 / 6.5 devices, which also looks promising.
I've never used MyMobiler, so I can't help there, but how about other options?
Did you look at the Windows Mobile Remote Controller app on CodeProject?
I've had good luck in the past with SOTI's Pocket Controller. It once was free, or had a free version anyway. Not sure if they still do.
Windows CE came with a tool called CERDISP (short for CE Remote Display), which could be built with Platform Builder. I've seen it available as a binary download (like here, for example) on the web before, so no need to actually build it yourself.
I've used MyMobiler (remote.exe.50) on my Windows Mobile 6.5 handheld. It sounds like you got it running. Did you run the MyMobiler client on your Windows 7 box and connect to your handheld by IP address? (Right click on the icon in the Notification Area on Windows 7 and choose "Connect IP...".)
It defaults to the ActiveSync address (169.254.2.1?), so if you're not docked and running ActiveSync, it will fail to connect initially (but manually connecting should work). Misread -- you were able to run the client, but not the server.
You can also elect to run a VNC server on your handheld and use a regular VNC client to connect to it. I've built this one for Windows Mobile 2003 without much of a hitch on Visual Studio 2008. You might have similar luck with Windows Mobile 6.5.
EDIT: If you get the message that reads:
'%s' is not a valid Pocket PC application.
when running the MyMobiler client, then that means that your CPU type (or OS) is incompatible with the application -- so I don't think your PXA32X-P is to blame; especially since the MC3190 appears to be able to run Windows Mobile 6.5 (i.e. the CPU should be "fairly" modern, with support for armv4i). But since you haven't mentioned an error that looks like that, I'd suspect that your build of Windows CE 6.0 doesn't contain all the required dependencies.
The first thing I'd check is if all of the dependencies of MyMobiler are present in your build of Windows CE 6. Windows CE is highly customizable; as such, not all software components will be the same across different builds of Windows CE. MyMobiler is built targeting Windows Mobile, not Windows CE, so there's a good chance that your build of Windows CE on the MC3190 doesn't have what's required, while the video you linked does.
With regards to the ActiveSync Remote Display Power Toy, the message that you received sounds like the desktop application didn't know what version to deploy to your device.
Per readme.txt in the ActiveSync Remote Display package:
If you see error message "The OS or CPU of this device is unknown to
this application", it usually means the CPU type of the current
device, typically a Windows CE device, is not recognized by this tool.
The workaround is
1. Find the CPU type of the device (from the manual or the manufacturer).
2. Copy \Devices\wce400\\cerdisp2.exe to the \windows folder of the device.
3. Run "cerhost2.exe -m" on the desktop/laptop.
4. Run cerdisp2.exe on the device.
5. When the remote display is no longer needed, terminate cerdisp2.exe on the device.
You should be able to choose the armv4t version; if not, use the armv4 version.

External Accessory Framework EAAccessoryManager connectedAccessories returns only 1 accessory on iOS 4.2 when there should be more

Calling the connectedAccessories method on the EAAccessoryManager returns a list with only a single accessory (seemly randomly chosen from the available connected accessories in the Bluetooth screen) when running on iOS 4.2 using an iPhone 3GS.
In retrospect - on iOS 5.0 on an iPhone 4 the method returns the correct list of accessories (currently tested up to 2). According to the documentation iOS 4.0 should return a list of accessories however it fails to mention if this can contain more than one item. (Apparently in iOS 3.0 only one device WAS supported).
The EAAccessoryDidConnectNotification notification is also only fired once for the randomly chosen accessory when running on iOS 4.0; Disabling the accessory results in the appropriate EAAccessoryDidDisconnectNotificiation for that accessory. Re enabling the accessory doesn't result in any further notifications without returning to the bluetooth settings menu and re connecting the device (but that's another annoying issue). Visiting the bluetooth connection screen reveals the originally connected accessory no disconnected and my second accessory connected but further calls to the "connectedAccessories" method still returns an empty list.
Viewing the console logs from the phone I can see the bluetooth system connecting and monitoring both devices but somewhere along the line this isn't been presented via the External Accessory Framework.
If anyone has any helpful info on this issue that'd be great -- it seems there's only a small number of iOS developers that have even worked with this framework so finding anything other than copies of the original apple documentation is rather difficult :-D.
To summarise:
Is it possible to detect multiple accessories from iOS and connect and open sessions for multiple devices. I've found this is possible in iOS 5.0 on iPhone 4.
Many thanks,
Chris

Midlet doesnt respond to touch in older touch screen phone

I am very new to j2me. I have developed a basic SMS Banking app. My app works in most phones which are touch and non touch devices (Samsung duos, Monte, Nokia 6120c …, Sony Ericson w300). But when I installed it in a Samsung SGH-D980 it installs and starts fine. But the list element which is the first screen after my loading splash screen does not respond to the touch. I have developed the app using Net beans 7.0.1 and uses CLDC 1.0 and MIDP 2.0. I have tried the defaultfxtouchphone emulator and works fine on it too. My problem is why does it work on some touch phones but not in the above mentioned touch phone. thank you,
The fact that touch events are available to MIDlet at any other phones means nothing in your case.
MIDP specification (JSR 118) does not force implementation to make touch (pointer) events available to MIDlets even for touch device. According to data provided at club-java page, this is exactly the case for SGH-D980:
Touch screen or mouse (hasPointerEvents()) No
Stylus motion events (HasPointerMotionEvents()) No
As soon as device allows to work with your list in non-touch fashion (you wrote nothing that says it ain't so), there is no problem - you just have to live with that.
of course not passing touch events to MIDlets when these are available natively means that MIDP implementation on this device sucks. But that's a different story

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