
Ever wanted to build and design your own Android apps? It’s cheaper and easier than you think with the supreme Android Coding & Design Bundle, which is now just $39.99 — down from $377 — for a limited time.

Ever wanted to build and design your own Android apps? It’s cheaper and easier than you think with the supreme Android Coding & Design Bundle, which is now just $39.99 — down from $377 — for a limited time.

With Android currently topping the list of global smartphones platforms, keeping up to speed with the latest operating system releases is nothing if not advantageous.
This comprehensive Android programming course includes of 30 hours of video instruction, plus 10+ app-building exercises to help hammer the material home, and thanks to Cult of Android Deals, you can get it with 82% off its regular price for a limited time.

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Buy these courses separately and they’ll cost you over $500, but grab them all at once through Cult of Android Deals and you’ll pay just $39 — that’s an incredible 92% off! But you’ll need to act fast, because this deal ends later today.
Samsung has set its sights on acquiring some of Nokia’s share in emerging markets with a new handset range called “REX.” Based on the company’s TouchWiz interface, but not actually powered by Android, the devices are being described as “smart featurephones,” and they’re going to be competing with Nokia’s hugely popular Asha range in markets such as India.
After a weekend deliberation, a federal jury in San Francisco handed Oracle a partial victory by finding Google guilty of copyright infringement yet remaining deadlocked on whether Google’s use of the Java APIs fell under “fair use.” The jury found that Google infringed a minimal amount of Java source code with Judge William Alsup indicating that Oracle would only be entitled to statutory damages as a result. This certainly wasn’t what Oracle was hoping for and when Oracle’s lawyer seemed to suggest they were entitled to more than just statutory damages, Judge William Alsup quickly put the kibosh on that notion based on the minimal amount of code infringed, stating what they’re seeking as “bordering on the ridiculous.”