Acrovision
Development partners wanted to support iPhone application development.We are among a number of iPhone application development projects and we will ask our partners to develop appropriate work.
iPhone
We are among a number of iPhone application development projects and we will ask our partners to develop appropriate work.
We have many clients, small and large projects, the partners will be asked to demonstrate your ability to issue more fully and we will also support development.
You're welcome and form contract with us. We will respond contract for bulk orders as well as lab contracts.
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Touchscreen. (Discuss) This article is about stylus pens used in computing. For other uses, see Stylus. In computing, a stylus (or stylus pen) is a small pen-shaped instrument that is used to input commands to a computer screen, mobile device or graphics tablet. With touchscreen devices a user places a stylus on the surface of the screen to draw or make selections by tapping the stylus on the screen.[1] Pen-like input devices which are larger than a stylus, and offer increased functionality such as programmable buttons, pressure sensitivity and electronic erasers, are often known as digital pens.[1] The stylus is the primary input device for personal digital assistants.[1] It is also used on the Nintendo DS game console.[2] Some smartphones, such as Windows phones, require a stylus for accurate input.[3] However, devices featuring multi-touch finger-input are becoming more popular than stylus-driven devices in the smartphone market.[4] Graphics tablets use styli containing circuitry (powered by battery or operating passively by change of inductance), to allow multi-function buttons on the barrel of the pen or stylus to transmit user actions to the tablet. Some (probably most) tablets detect varying degrees of pressure sensitivity, e.g. for use in a drawing program to vary line thickness or color density. The first use of a stylus pen in a computing device was the Styalator, demonstrated by Tom Dimond in 1957.[5]

Company overview
| Company name | Acrovision Limited Liability Company (English notation - Acrovision LLC) ⇒Limited Liability Company Means |
| Head Office | Ikebukuro Centor Building 11F 1-35-3 Higashi Ikebukuro Toshima-ku Tokyo 170-0013 ⇒Map |
| Capital | 10 million yen |
| Sales | As of fiscal year 2009(Feb-2009) 120 milion yen As of fiscal year 2010(Feb-2009) 190 million yen As of fiscal year 2011(Feb-2010) 250 million yen ※Consecutively sales and profit increases second time |
| Number of Employees | 53 (as of Feb 2011) |
| URL | Website : http://www.acrovision.jp/ |
| Contact information | Tel:+81 3 6661 0912 (03-6661-0912) Fax:+81 3 6661 0913 (03-6661-0913) |
| Skype ID | acrovision |
| Specific labor dispatch business number:特13-307809 Permanent Placement license number:13-ユ-303263 |
Nearest Station:JR Line - Ikebukuro Station(5 minutes walk)
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