I updated my android SDK as I am now on eclipse Helios 3.6 and I wanted to make a few updates to the estrip publisher app since seeing it on the nook tablet.
I discovered they do have their own nook SDK which is nice but on the shitty side it only works with their nook emulator so far. This is cool if you don't have a nook but not so cool if you do. I remember from the estrip app. Testing on the Nexus One was so much better than on the stupid emulator. Its just not the same trying to get a feel for it. Luckily, a rooted nook will let me put apps on it for testing but its annoying and a hack.
I wish so bad that B&N would just allow the regular android store. Having it on my rooted nook is incredible. It makes the device so damn useful that I can't put it down. In fact I love typing on it with the new gingerbread keyboard I downloaded.
I mean, I get why they don't want it. I am sure they are terrified of people using the kindle app on it and buying book from amazon instead. They shouldn't have too much to worry about because the reading experience on the native nook app is so much better than with the Kindle app. For example, kindle won't let me pinch and zoom on my books. Plus the notetaking and sharing quotes, lending feature, etc.
I can't wait for them to open up whatever market they are going to open. I would love to get in on it but it seems like they are really playing up to the big company devs more than the small guy. Reading through the forum this is pissing off a lot of developers who feel they if they are going to be treated as second class devs, they might as well develop for the ipad's larger market.
Well, anyways, here is hoping that whatever it is I end up developing finds its way into the store when its done and they I stay dedicated to working on it without knowing for sure if it will. Its just so hard to be motivated for something that might just turned down at the last stage. That's exactly why I never developed the estrip app for iphone.
I love ham as well but only high quality hams... I thought the ham milkshake thing was for real and I kinda threw up in my mouth a bit/ thought maybe it sounded good...
There's probably some odd place in Japan that serves up hammy milkshakes...
It looks/tastes like it is smoked/roasted. It is then spiral cut. I like to take the slices off and freeze the left overs. Then we make soup from the bone which goes down the center.
Knowing your wild late-night combo dinner plates... that dessert seemed pretty real. ;-)
So that pink chunk is actually precooked. Is it steamed/roasted? How does it maintain that pink colour? I have often wondered about other sandwich meats as well. I think they are precooked... but how? Do you know?
I was not serious about that part. I was just checking to see if anyone was really reading it, lol. I guess you were.
Ya but 20lbs of meat is a freakin huge amount. You could feed a whole family ham for weeks, and if you compared that to the price of a restaurant meal its even more priceworthy. Its pre-cooked and carved so there is really no other work besides heat and serve.
~~ Example daily ham diet ~~
Now!! Exclusively on estrip!
Ham and vanilla ice cream
Ew? What is that?! How do you make it?
I think 1.99/lb makes it nearly $40 for 20lb.