Endquote is Josh Santangelo, an interface developer and former man-about-town in Seattle. Lately, he talks a lot about Silverlight, Surface, and Stimulant.

email: josh[a]endquote[.]com
work: stimulant.io


Photo

Mar 17, 2010
@ 1:21 pm
Permalink

Yesterday at MIX10, a project I’ve been working on for the last little while was announced. It’s a port of the news, weather, and stocks functionality from the Bing Toolbar to Silverlight running on Nokia S60 smartphones.
A beta version of the runtime and information on how to build Silverlight apps for S60 has been posted, and there’s an overview of the project over on the Stimulant site as well.
You can run the app on your regular desktop browser or on the device, though the proper fonts and layout will only appear on the device.

Yesterday at MIX10, a project I’ve been working on for the last little while was announced. It’s a port of the news, weather, and stocks functionality from the Bing Toolbar to Silverlight running on Nokia S60 smartphones.

A beta version of the runtime and information on how to build Silverlight apps for S60 has been posted, and there’s an overview of the project over on the Stimulant site as well.

You can run the app on your regular desktop browser or on the device, though the proper fonts and layout will only appear on the device.


Video

Mar 16, 2010
@ 5:09 pm
Permalink

A video of me talking about TouchTones with Eric Havir from Surface. TouchTones is the first application to be “Certified for Surface”, and is also the first freeware application for Surface. You can download it now from our newly launched site.


Photo

Mar 10, 2010
@ 3:42 pm
Permalink

I’m be attending MIX for the first time this year, representing Stimulant. We launched the company there two years ago, so it’s a bit of a tradition for us. We’ll have a few announcements to make over the coming week as well.
Also: I have an extra ticket for MIX available at a discounted rate. Get in touch if you’re interested.

I’m be attending MIX for the first time this year, representing Stimulant. We launched the company there two years ago, so it’s a bit of a tradition for us. We’ll have a few announcements to make over the coming week as well.

Also: I have an extra ticket for MIX available at a discounted rate. Get in touch if you’re interested.


Text

Mar 1, 2010
@ 10:56 am
Permalink

Long Time No Blog

I haven’t been doing so well on the updates lately, but lots of things have been up. Wind finished up a while ago. We had a Surface app at TED. I just wrapped up a Silverlight mobile project for MIX. I’ve been to SF twice in the past two weeks to attend some pretty exciting meetings with new clients. I’ll (probably) be at MIX myself. We’re taking delivery of some new and interesting hardware here in the Seattle office. I started an open source project that I’ll tell you more about later. We’re launching a new website very soon.

So, yeah, lots going on, and more to report soon.


Video

Mar 1, 2010
@ 10:45 am
Permalink

Our official video and post for the Wind Mobile app is up. We’ve been so busy with project work that we’ve fallen behind with keeping our own site up to date, but we’ll make up for it soon with a whole new site launching shortly.


Video

Jan 21, 2010
@ 10:50 pm
Permalink

Another video of the Wind Mobile app, which really shows all of the features. At the front-end is the game-like attract mode, at the end is the super-secret admin console. Well, not so secret anymore. Wind’s press release on the topic is also up. Stimulant’s will come soon…


Video

Dec 31, 2009
@ 2:34 pm
Permalink

A short video of our Wind Mobile app. It still doesn’t quite show all the awesome, but we’ll have an official video up probably in the latter half of January.


Photo

Dec 21, 2009
@ 9:51 pm
Permalink

A sneak peek of the Surface app we made for Wind Mobile. Shown here is just a fraction of its coolness. Expect more details in Jan.

A sneak peek of the Surface app we made for Wind Mobile. Shown here is just a fraction of its coolness. Expect more details in Jan.


Text

Oct 13, 2009
@ 8:07 pm
Permalink

Project Tuva Updated

We released a new version of Project Tuva (previously) last week. There isn’t really a news feed for the project, so I’ll have to tell you about it here.

Project Tuva was designed for use by students, and one of the big learning features is the ability to take notes on a video. These notes are synced to the video timeline, and restored when you come back to the app. However they’re only available from the browser they were entered on. This release has improved the situation a bit.

Now, you can export any notes you’ve entered to a plain text file and use it for later study. Better, you can import those notes back into Tuva on another computer. Even better, you can import them in the context of a commentary track for the video. This means that students can share notes with each other, and professors can create their own commentary tracks for their students.

Some other improvements:

  • The app now targets Silverlight 3, which is required for file exports.
  • Uses the not-quite-released SmoothStreamingMediaElement control, for even smoother video playback.
  • Video playback is now hardware-accelerated. (Always on Windows, only in full-screen on OS X.)

Most of the development work on this was performed by Joel Pryde, with a little support from me.


Video

Oct 8, 2009
@ 4:32 pm
Permalink

Darren talks about the Surface version of the Local Impact Map. Lots of plaid is worn.