I want to share an app to control number of cores running. I am not the developer of this just found on net and found it useful.Full credit to its developers.
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SpeedBooster 2.0
Product Overview:
An innovative product from Teksoft, Speedbooster helps you get maximum performance out of your mobile device. We've designed it to be completely safe for your hardware, and easy to use. The built in Benchmark module will easily show your performance gain.
SpeedBooster 2.0 is composed of 6 parts, built to work together to make your device faster and more powerful. In simple terms, we could say that SpeedBooster is "SAFE overclocking", since it allows you to focus the CPU power to various programs running on your device, without stressing the hardware. Besides this, a large number of tweaks have been added to control the functionality and performance of the Memory, Video and Storage!
Best practices list:
Speedbooster can help you distribute the resources of your mobile device to certain tasks, more important to you in a given time moment. Eg.: a user interface, a GPS program, a system component, etc.
You cannot use Speedbooster to gain more hardware power then your device already has, but you can use it successfully to make the important apps run faster at the cost of less important applications.
Here's a Best practices list to help you get started:
# Speed up only 1-2 tasks at a time
# Set lower non-zero priorities for the processes you don't need/use
# Give high priority to your GPS software/Multimedia player/Favorite interface
# To increase the system performance, "boost" gwes.exe, filesys.exe, devices.exe, etc
# Use the Benchmark to see the Hardware performance of your device, but keep in mind that boosting non-system tasks will not change the results.
# Explore, research and tweak various processes according to the configuration of your device for maximum performance!
U can get it here : http://www.teksoftco.com/index.php?section=speedbooster
Remember it s not a free program
there is a demo if u like it purchase it
i m already ...
I have a nice idea for an app; something that can link to the Wii Balance Board via Bluetooth in order to make the board usable as a simple set of scales. The app could include a history and chart/graph feature so you can monitor your weight over time. CSV would be a nice format to use.
The protocol is fully documented already (by the GlovePie project I think), but no-one has written a mobile implementation. I think it'd be really good. Something a bit different at least.
Thanks
About the app
This is a plug-in for Locale and Tasker that extends them with NFC-functionality. It works by reading the UID (Unique Identifier) of a tag. Actions can then be associated with this UID and will be executed when the tag is scanned.
This allows you to reuse old discarded NFC-tags/cards that you might have lying around. Maybe you have some old access-cards or commuter-cards that you can use. It currently supports all NFC-standards that are supported by the Android system.
How to use it
Add a new situation
Add a new condition
Choose Locale NFC Plugin
Scan the tag
Add settings of your choice
You have now registered the tag with the phone and associated it with the desired actions. The next time you scan the tag the actions will be executed.
How do I get the app?
Please note that it's only a plug-in so you MUST have Locale or Tasker already installed on your device for it to work!
Follow the link to Google Play Store
Or scan the QR-code with your phone.
I'm happy to answer any questions that you might have.
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I was under the impression tasker already had this functionality built in?
Evostance said:
I was under the impression tasker already had this functionality built in?
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What I know Tasker dosen't have this functionality built in. At least I haven't been able to find it. However I do believe that NFC Task Launcher + Tasker makes a similar combination.
The difference between Locale NFC Plugin + Tasker and NFC Task Launcher + Tasker would be that, with NFC Task Launcher you will have to write to the tag what it is that the phone should do once the tag is scanned. This means that you will have to buy tags that you can write to.
With Locale NFC Plugin you won't have to write anything to the tag. Hence you can reuse old NFC-tags/cards that you might have lying around.
Edit: strike the following as it's now showing as compatible (now purchased!). Not sure what happened but it's all good now.
Market / Play Store says it's not compatible with my device - a GSM GNex running AOKP (4.0.4 / build 32) and Franco kernel #135. I'm guessing your plug-in appears for devices that haven't been messed around with quite so much? It sounds very handy!
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Optimimo is an all inclusive A/B testing platform for mobile apps. It helps analyze the user behaviour and boost your inapp conversions. You can run unlimited experiments per app and up to 10 variations per experiment. It supports adjustable multivariate testing to suit every developer’s needs.. It is easy to integrate and very inexpensive. A must in the check list of every mobile app developer who wants to increase his app sales.
link
Kyra Lexis said:
Optimimo is an all inclusive A/B testing platform for mobile apps. It helps analyze the user behaviour and boost your inapp conversions. You can run unlimited experiments per app and up to 10 variations per experiment. It supports adjustable multivariate testing to suit every developer’s needs.. It is easy to integrate and very inexpensive. A must in the check list of every mobile app developer who wants to increase his app sales.
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can you share the link
With the rise of mobile devices, companies have even greater incentive to streamline and scale their agile processes through the use of enterprise test management software.
Agile methodologies have put countless software makers in position to move quickly on demanding projects, through a combination of rigorous testing regimens and close collaboration between developers and operations teams. With the rise of mobile devices, companies have even greater incentive to streamline and scale their agile processes through the use of QA management tools, which support manual and automated testing and coordination of development across multiple project groups.
Mobile app development and the need for automated testing
Last quarter, more Internet traffic originated from mobile phones than desktop PCs. Plus, most of that activity – 80 percent – came from native apps rather than Web browsers, underscoring key changes in what end-users expect from software, namely speed, reliability and usability. According to Appurify CEO Jay Srinivasan, a 2013 uSamp study found that more than 70 percent of respondents will delete a mobile app after it crashes, even if it’s the first such incident.
Certainly, the challenges of creating high-quality, stable mobile apps can become a money sink for some shops. There are many platforms to address, each with its own nuances, and development costs can easily run past six figures. How can developers and QA analysts keep up with the growing demands and pressures of the current mobile app environment?
For starters, it’s worth reexamining what kinds of tools are currently being used and if and how they ensure that quality standards are being met. Some teams may limit themselves to crash analytics and manual tests, but such an approach is increasingly unsuited for development schedules that require software to be pushed out rapidly to substantial - and growing - user bases. The maturity of the mobile hardware ecosystem also means that numerous devices have to be accounted for in each testing cycle.
“Another issue we see is that developers have an over reliance on manual testing methods,” observed Srinivasan for BetaNews. “With device fragmentation resulting in more than 30 device and OS combinations for iOS, and an order of magnitude more for Android, manual testing is not a scalable approach for mobile developers. To ensure performance and functionality of your app prelaunch, across all selected device and OS combinations, developers should add test automation to their mobile testing tool kit.”
Mobile devices are also subject to myriad volatile conditions such as mobile data connection strength and limited memory allotments. Performing diligent testing requires the definition, reuse and analysis of complex test scenarios. Fortunately, organizations can use test management systems to overhaul and scale their testing process for current market realities.
Does agile development enable the right level of testing?
Automated testing is a key enabler of agile and test-driven development, methodologies that have allowed enterprises to “produce higher-quality software within swifter release cycles that is more in tune with user needs,” in the words of Skytap executive Sumit Mehrotra. With more devices to manage and applications becoming fundamental to consumer and business workflows (it’s perhaps telling that Bank of America now does more development than Microsoft), it seems that organizations could never perform too much manual and automated testing, considering the stakes.
“The standard explanation for why we create automated tests is that by having them, we can know that our system continues to work properly even while adding new functionality or refactoring existing code,” wrote Mark Balbes for Application Development Trends on agile testing practices. “Test-driven and behavior-driven development takes this a step further by using automated tests to drive software design.”
However, there has been some recent debate about the place of test-driven development and automation and whether they have caused teams to actually implement excessive levels of testing. Balbes himself takes up this point in his article, pointing out that such practice could increase the difficulty of refactoring down the line.
The key may be developing a knack for knowing when to perform unit and integration tests on given types of objects, which may take time - and is ultimately more of an art than a science. But for organizations committed to agile development, tools such as agile test management platforms provide the foundation for setting up testing processes that are tailored to their respective needs. Both manual and automated tests are supported, and progress can be easily tracked so that measures can be refined over time.