Is there any demand for a Windows Mobile render manager? It would be cool to be able to check on and control your computer(s) from events as diverse as a business meeting and a night out at the pub.
By the way, if there is demand, don't expect anything soon - I'm just coming up with ideas for useful stuff I can do at uni over the next few years. Developing for Windows mobile is fun (I've made some very basic stuff before) and it will force me to use languages that I'm not yet proficient in - and it will enable me to make good use of the free software that Microsoft is giving out to students these days...
something I'd be very interested in. The ability to start, stop, re-order renders on a remote system is somethin I've been wanting to do for a while.
good luck
richard
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Hmmm...I may well do it just for the experience. That graphical-calculator-type-thing is amazing! 3D graphs and derivatives...I really shouldn't use it (yet) though, otherwise I won't bother learning calculus properly. Just out of interest, does it do hyperbolic functions or polar/intrinsic graphs, or is that asking too much?
I hate the way that the hyperbolic identities are so similar to the trig identities - they'd be easier to learn if they were completely different...
Anyway, I'm getting sidetracked here. Is there any more demand?
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Now that's much better than my graphical calculator. :P
I'll pass on the power/memory meter add-in though - I have a HTC Touch (original, not enhanced), which is pretty poor for memory so I try to use as little extra software as possible (hopefully the WM6.1 update, which is due soon, will make more efficient use of memory).
Does anyone think that HTC is looking a little (http://www.htcclassaction.org/) Sendo-ish (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/06/30/motorola_sendo_takeover/) at the moment?
Patent it now, if you don't I guarantee that microsoft will nick it, it happened with sat nav, this guy who worked with guns came up with the idea for sat nav, patented it for a couple of years but couldn't afford to keep it, so he let it expire, then Ford bought it and developed it. He's still working at that gun factory.