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mobileMobile Web Platforms - Ready to Rumble in 2008Submitted by jeff on January 14, 2008 - 2:22pm.Paul Kedrosky on the under-appreciation of mobile web platforms:
At MobileCamp Vancouver I pushed just this point on the industry panel. I'm not sure the other telco folks on the panel were convinced. But - what I found after the panel among the broader development community there, was intense interest in targeting mobiles through web-based runtimes - be they web sites, widgets, Adobe AIR, Google gears, etc. There are really two issues to consider here.
Nominate EQO for The CrunchiesSubmitted by jeff on December 4, 2007 - 5:06pm.It's been quite a year in the world of mobile apps and we've had a ton of fun building out the EQO service at the front of the pack this year. There is a huge amount of pride among the team here at what we've accomplished both inside the company and among our community of EQO users. For all the users who have joined the EQO network and given feedback to the team and on the to improve the service - Thank You! To all the EQO users and fans out there, please take a moment to nominate us for one or more of the following awards ("The Crunchies") run by techcrunch.com. Thanks! Where is the iPhone's answer to Adobe AIR, or Google Gears?Submitted by jeff on October 3, 2007 - 4:45pm.
So what will Apple do if they are serious about the web development platform? First up, a JavaScript bridge into native device capabilities on the iPhone. Right now in terms of access to device functions via web technologies, the iPhone offers nothing beyond the microbrowsers on feature phones. Yes, the AJAX support enables a quantum leap in usability, but we need more. Top of the list - "the basics"
But beyond these now familiar mobile device capabilities, there is an opportunity for Apple to provide powerful APIs that would provide an unparalleled mobile development environment, web or otherwise:
Key to app usability is that these capabilities should be provided through a user consent system which does not take away the user's choice to make use of device features with a given application, a la the restrictions in many J2ME runtimes:
When can we expect such features? Who knows, but I would be very surprised if the first GPS-enabled iPhones, expected in Q1 2008, ship without at minimum a JavaScript bridge to location data following soon after. Gut check: For anyone with development experience on J2ME, can you imagine going back to the underachiever that is the J2ME RMS storage API after being provided with a local SQL store? The native app vs. web app argument is stale! Jeff » jeff's blog | 1 comment Mobile Operators Stumble on Billable Identities, Apple Swoops InSubmitted by jeff on September 21, 2007 - 5:05pm.
Now there is another mobile player with this capability. Apple. Not only does the new iTunes wifi store not deliver music over the operator network, the billing is not enabled by the operator. Oops. An enlightened move by Apple would be to break the lock the operators have on billable mobile identities permanently wide open by giving every iTunes account an associated OpenID, and publishing an open payment API around OpenID identifiers. This would cause a few things to happen: - a 100% uptake of OpenID within days by makers of iPhone apps Will it happen? Jeff Canadian cellphone class-action goes aheadSubmitted by jeff on September 20, 2007 - 2:15pm.
Any Canadians that would like to join the class action can do so here. (Roland, that means you!) Here is Michael Geist (Canada's answer to Lawrence Lessig) on System Access Fees:
Jeff The internet is global, the wireless internet is feudalSubmitted by jeff on September 12, 2007 - 3:33pm.
Sometimes it's helpful to point out the obvious, to take stock of where we are. The wired Internet is the real Internet. Geographic boundaries for nearly all purposes are irrelevant. The wireless Internet is the Internet stillborn. Geographic boundaries are very real and impact everything you do. It is a 1960s long distance plan, only for data.
Like other wireless users, I want to use cutting-edge, revolutionary apps and services on my phone. There are a few out there... but there could be so many more. The Internet is not a thing - it is an agreement. 3G will not bring the internet to your phone. Only a new system of agreements will. The wireless Internet is broken - it is the internet 15 years behind the real Internet. In fact in the absence of the agreements that make the Internet work, it is not the Internet at all. Jeff Killer Mobile appsSubmitted by chris on September 5, 2007 - 3:38pm.
Honorable Mentions:
Got any favorites I missed? I'd love to hear about them. Chris Steve Jobs to Operators: Bend OverSubmitted by jeff on September 5, 2007 - 11:07am.
What Apple has done is make the carrier networks look old and stale. They are saying, remember the iPhone? Of all the things you loved about it, none of them were enabled by your operator. Just the contract. Here's one without the contract. And reading between the lines: Oh, but you want voice? Stay tuned. Cellphone's dead indeed. Blast from the recent past: "When asked about a give-and-take leading to the Apple-Cingular partnership, [Cingular CEO] Lurie said, "I'm not sure we gave anything." Later, he commented, "I think they bent a lot." Jeff Gphone, FCC approval, worldwide launch - WTF?Submitted by jeff on August 24, 2007 - 10:30am.
Rediff reports that
Two weeks to complete FCC certification and do a multi-operator worldwide launch would be a daunting task. Could Google out-secret Apple in a worldwide launch more complex than the single operator launch of the iPhone? The is only one likely scenario in which a launch in 2 weeks makes sense - if the "gPhone" will launch as a device taken through FCC certification by some other manufacturer, with Google providing the software on the handset. Anybody out there up for trolling through FCC filing database for enigmas in the past two or three months? Jeff Mobile Newsreaders - Viigo is TopsSubmitted by jeff on August 13, 2007 - 11:32am.
I would highly recommend that Dennis try Viigo Personal. Having used it on the Blackberry Pearl for some time now I consider it the best mobile newsreader I've come across. On the desktop I'm a Newsfire user. Viigo is as usable on the mobile as Newfire is on the desktop, and that is saying a lot. Jeff |