The ACS Android Library was built to support the use of various ACS readers with Android devices. The ACS Android Library is a collection of methods and functions allowing application developers to build smartcard based application in the Android platform.
Find web applications that enable users to experience the functionalities of ACS smart cards and smart card readers. These demo applications are offered free of charge. Applications require that a user have the smart card or smart card reader being demonstrated.
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As a fitter and as a player I have two views on these clubs which I'll explain.
Firstly as a fitter, I adore the SIM and the Maverik for varying reasons. Taylormade really did a great job with the SIM and Max especially for the mid speed "fairway finder" with a sleek design that customers fawn over. The options to go adjust with standard SIM or just got with the Max or Max-D for simplicity's sake was a smart choice. Callaway once again for the 4th year in a row has created a driver that will make some of the most devoted brand loyalists look into their buddies bag on the range and go "Could I hit that?". Callaway expertly knew which demographic was interested (Mid to low handicappers willing to swallow pride for a few extra yards) by going to the darkside and having a mixed bag. Callaway realizing people either struggle with 1 or more of the 4 horse men of golf, "Banana slice", "Worm burner", spin rates off the tee that'd make "Phil blush around the greens", and the "I just hit it straight not far" was enough for Callaway to capitalize. Each model helps one or more, but lacked some of the adjustability I loved with the Flash because of the swing weight. Tittielst, Tittielst, Tittielst how far the mighty have fallen but the TS3 is pulling people back, but only those who left after the worst disappointment since my birth... The 917. As the youngins would say, they "fumbled the bag" and have been living with consequences. Like a an ex who constantly makes you think "what if" but better judgment kicking in before you entertain the idea too seriously. Tittielst is still in its own shadow and is even starting to lose its stranglehold on the wedge market.
As a player personally testing these clubs my opinions are wholey my own and should taken as my feelings and thoughts when I HIT THE CLUBS MYSELF. Taylormade, the SIM feels like a brick attached to a telephone poll. I understand the speed foam hasn't had all the kinks ironed out but the "Notch of Nike vapor" notch is the only thing I think about when looking at it on the shelf. I understand I'm not the target audience because of what I'm looking for in a driver "Low launch, lower sweet spot, low spinning" so I don't have to call airtraffic control before every tee shot and worry about 5k rpms of backspin leading to my drive spinning backwards in the fairway. [If you want proof I'll be happy to give I witness testimony]. But my l.o.f.t. Issues (Lack of f*$%ING! talent) is my burden to bare. The Maverik color scheme is ugly, like that middle school teacher who sometimes dresses with style and then other days wears two different colors of shoes. For the life of me I don't understand why they'd back track on the movable heel weight which is why I loved the flash subzero for the broad range of utility. The face issues relating to consistency in the jailbreak across the face was needed and it's noticeable. Noticeable to mid-low handicappers who struggle with spin and distance, meaning we don't get the freak 310 off the toe dead left into your neighbors house, or the straight shot to Mars that'd have Elon musk asking for advice. This being said you can buy a better Maverik with better performance, adjustability and better color scheme (in my opinion) and for cheaper. No, you don't have to sign a deal with the devil or play a non usga conforming driver.... Cobra has came onto the scene and for all its previous years of just being the "Rickie Fowler" brand it's a driver that is putting 500 dollars drivers to shame. Cobra is making waves, not just by flashy color schemes (which they have in spades) but by beating brands in price, looks, and performance. Just as Wilson did with the D7 iron, the Speedzone is a knockout punch no one expected. Now, full disclosure the tittielst 915 d3 with a diamana white board is my favorite driver of all time. When I was playing in high school practicing every day and playing in tournaments. Some mental and physical health issues later, growing to be 6'1 gaining up to 255lbs and shrinking down to 170 over 2 years the driver wasn't working. Actually it'd be more accurate to say taking off 3 to 4 months without touching a club isn't quite as easy as remembering how to ride a bike. I swing about as fast if not faster but my toxic habits of extremely premature hand release or "flipping" causes me to launch a ball into low orbit and hardly go forward. My l.o.f.t problem as previously mentioned. Now that I'm playing and fitting along with occasionally teaching myself (consistently working a grip change to force me back into proper positioning) has seen my distance come back and spin and launch lower. Now the one person reading this novel of a comment might be wondering "Why does that matter", well it matters because of this fact. I used to be a fantastic ball striker, still am but dynamic loft and I are well acquainted, this is to say I now no longer need or can afford to game a tittielst driver. They ruined a lot of good faith, now Acushnet still has plenty of people addicted to scotty's and vokey wedges which I adore. However, the 917 showed players that all the other brands have similar if not better drivers and irons. It forced players out of brand loyalty and I think they deserve a thank you card from every brand for making the playing field even by tittielst crapping the bed. The TS3 and the TS series is leaps and bounds better than the 917, but I sense tittielst is going through an identity crisis. Not like a middle aged man buying a fast car, but more along the lines of a teenage girl claiming she's "different" but looks, dresses, and acts like every other girl that claims she's "different". Tittielst, the only way to recover is to go back to the roots and not cater to the majority of golfers who desperately need forgiveness and enough models to make customers go "What's the difference" requiring fitters to bluster about trampoline effect, MIO, and physics like they had a PhD. D2, D3 that's all you gotta do. You have to commit to being the club that's hard to hit, sees amazing shots when struck perfectly, but soul crushingly punishing when missed because the aura of "He's playing a D3, can he actually play it" or the "I wish I was consistent enough to play it" is all the advertising you needed for a majority of the early 2000's. In short the TS3 is a good driver for any other brand, but woefully underwhelming because of the past products.