Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

Aaah! WANT! :) BOXX electric bike: two wheels, four corners, all-electric transport for one (via Engadget)

Has bicycle design reached its pinnacle? Or are electric bike manufacturers just not trying hard enough? The YikeBike begs to differ, and here joining it is BOXX Corporation's diminutive BOXX. Coming in at just under a meter (or 36-inch inches) long, the 120 pound aluminum "bike" has a top speed of 35 miles per hour and can even haul up to 300 pounds of heft. Yet, despite that compact footprint, the company hasn't skimped on tech, as it boasts traction control, anti-lock brakes and yes, even LED lights. Available in one of ten colors, $3,995 nets you a base 40-mile range model, which can optionally be doubled to 80 by ticking the $599 CORE 2 box. And for those willing to spruce even further, there's a $149 heated seat and $349 1-hour charger on offer. Ready to literally hunker down on electric mobility? Go on, peep the source links below -- do it, we've even linked the configurator.

Thinking About Developer Events: No Mix Conference in 2012 (via The Official Microsoft Blog)

As part of that reflection, we have decided to merge MIX, our spring web conference for developers and designers, into our next major developer conference, which we will host sometime in the coming year. I know a number of folks were wondering about MIX, given the time of year, so we wanted to make sure there’s no ambiguity, and be very clear… there will be no MIX 2012.

Visual Studio Achievements: Earn Achievements for good Coding and get to know Visual Studio even better!

Check out the just released Visual Studio Achievements Extension that have just been announced on Channel 9.

 

Image001

 

 

Why do you get rewarded for good gameplay on the Xbox, but not for your great coding? And besides being a lot of fun, this is the perfect way to Learn More About Visual Studio and its tons of features, many of which you may not even know about. Earning some of the badges may result in learning about features you didn’t even know existed! 

 

Download it today from the Visual Studio Gallery 

 

With the Visual Studio Achievements Extension, achievements are unlocked based on your activity. Your code is analyzed on a background thread each time you compile. In addition, the extension listens for certain events and actions that you may perform in Visual Studio, reporting progress on these events to the server. 

 

When you unlock an achievement, Visual Studio lets you know visually with a pop-up:

 

 

In addition, your Channel 9 profile is updated with any achievements you earn, recalculating your position on the leaderboard:

 

Image011
 

 

Some examples of individual achievements include Regional Manager (have more than 10 regions in a single class), Close To The Metal (use 5 preprocessor directives), Stubby (generate method stubs 10 times) or Interrupting Cow (have 10 breakpoints in a file). All in all, there are 32 achievements awaiting to be unlocked, all of which are listed here.  

 

 

Each time you earn a badge, a unique page is created with your profile picture, the badge and a description. So share them on the social network or your choice!:

 

Image012

 

The blog While True, whose blog post What If Visual Studio Had Achievements inspired us to go build this. That post spawned a reddit post that is the thread which started it all!

We're just getting started with Visual Studio Achievements and are hoping to release more in the future. If you have ideas for additional achievements, we'd love to hear about them. Please use the Q&A section of the achievements extension to make suggestions for future achievements. And if you have suggestions, concerns, issues or problems, again, use the Q&A section of the achievements gallery page. Give a read to the FAQ as well as your question may already be answered.

Wanna make money on apps? Give them away! (via CNET News Mobile)

The app business is increasingly banking on the notion that virtual currency in a game could be worth real money--and a lot of it.

Freemium apps are the way to go if you want to make money.

(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)

In-app purchases, which include virtual cash, weapons, levels, or extra features, are poised to dominate app revenue in the coming years, according to research firm IHS. In-app purchases already accounted for $970 million in sales last year, or 39 percent of the market. By 2015, that figure will grow to $5.6 billion, or 64 percent of the market.

Another interesting take on the freemium model.
Make sure to check out the full article at http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-57360083-94/wanna-make-money-on-apps-give-th...