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One of their best known products, PocketMac Pro was released in 2002. It was the first software developed that was able to sync Pocket PCs to Mac computers [1] In 2006, Research In Motion licensed PocketMac for BlackBerry and started offering it as a free download. This license remained in place until 2009.
From a technical standpoint, "Pocket PC" is a Microsoft specification that sets various hardware and software requirements for mobile devices bearing the "Pocket PC" label. For instance, any device which is to be classified as a Pocket PC must: Run Microsoft's Windows Mobile, Pocket PC edition; Come bundled with a specific suite of applications ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Pocket PC software" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 ...
Call of Duty 2 Pocket PC Edition - Aspyr (2007) Caribbean Poker - Midas Interactive Entertainment (2003) Constructo Combat - Concrete Software, Inc. (2006) Craps - Midas Interactive Entertainment (2003) Cubis - Astraware (2003)
The first iPAQ Pocket PC was the H3600 series, released in 2000. [1] It ran Microsoft's Pocket PC 2000 operating system, and featured a 240 x 320 pixel 4096-color LCD, 32 MB of RAM, and 16 MB of ROM. [2] [3] Compaq released a similarly-designed H3100 series Pocket PC in January, 2001. [4]
To make an APK file, a program for Android is first compiled using a tool such as Android Studio [3] or Visual Studio and then all of its parts are packaged into one container file. An APK file contains all of a program's code (such as .dex files), resources, assets, certificates, and manifest file. As is the case with many file formats, APK ...
DMDE (DM Disk Editor and Data Recovery Software) is a data recovery and disk editing tool for hard drives and other storage media. It can work with physical devices, logical disks, disk images, as well as RAID-arrays and recovers files that have been accidentally deleted or lost due to other incidents.
Only the Casio E-115, E-125 and EM-500 were Pocket PCs. All others were using the older "Palm-sized PC" operating system except for the BE-300, which ran a stripped-down version of Windows CE 3.0 and would not run any Pocket PC software and many applications written for Windows CE itself.