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Basic Sensors in iOS: Programming the Accelerometer, Gyroscope, and More

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What really sets the iPhone apart from laptops and PCs is its use of onboard sensors, including those that are location-enabled. This concise book takes experienced iPhone and Mac developers on a detailed tour of iPhone and iPad hardware by explaining how these sensors work, and what they're capable of doing. With this book, you'll build sample applications for each sensor, and learn hands-on how to take advantage of the data each sensor produces. You'll gain valuable experience that you can immediately put to work inside your own iOS applications for the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. This book helps you focus

104 pages, Paperback

First published July 22, 2011

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About the author

Alasdair Allan

21 books2 followers
Alasdair Allan is a British scientist, author, hacker, maker, and journalist. An expert on the Internet of Things and sensor systems, he’s famous for hacking hotel radios, deploying a 500-node mesh sensor network at Google I/O, and for revealing, back in 2011, that Apple’s iPhone was tracking user location constantly. He has written for Make: Magazine, VICE/Motherboard, Hackster.io, Hackaday, and to the O’Reilly Radar. A former academic, he also built a peer-to-peer autonomous telescope network that detected what was, at the time, the most distant object ever discovered.

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Profile Image for Matt Heavner.
1,114 reviews14 followers
September 8, 2013
I find most of these "mini" O'Reilly books are not worth the money -- this was ~$20 for less detail than I can find online.. A good O'Reilly book is better (or a more useful reference) than what is online. This one isn't.
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