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AppSwing gets iPhone Support

November 13th, 2007

AppSwing have today announced support for the Apple iPhone allowing access to corporate applications from the browser. This means that back office applications can be accessed on the move, something that wasn’t previously possible due to the closed nature of the device.

We have put together a micro-site with further details and a superb video put together by Magic Bullet. You can see a smaller version of the video below or visit the site at www.iphone4apps.com and register to access the demo applications on your own device.

Upgrade your Flash Player to version 8 to view this video! (Click here for the download)

FogBugz world tour reaches London

November 9th, 2007

I am currently sat in the British Library waiting for the start of the London stop of the FogBugz world tour. In theory this is an opportunity to see the latest version of FogBugz but in practice I suspect that many people will be here simply to hear development guru Joel Spolsky speak.

I would like to say that the audience were a real mixed bunch but they are not. It is 99.9% Mac touting male geeks wearing jeans and trainers. If anyone wants to find the stereotypical developer this would be the place. So I guess, by extension, that unless I fill that 0.01% I am a geek too. Not necessairly. Spolsky too runs a small but successful development company and publishes an equally successful blog on the business of running a development company. His views very much align with my own and how I would like to shape AppSwing. So this is an opportunity to further tap into that success and help me find new ways of accelerating my own business.

Post seminar note: I was very impressed by FogBugz and the thinking behind it and this it could really help accelerate the development practices here at AppSwing. I will be taking a closer look with the team at how we might moved from our current collection of tools to FogBugz.

Mobile devices to get standard chargers

November 9th, 2007

The Open Mobile Terminal Platform have announced plans to standardise the charging method for mobile devices. In future you will be able to charge your device with any miniUSB charger or cable. The only thing I couldn’t find details of when we might begin to see this charging nirvana.

Is this the Ideal Mobile Working Device?

November 5th, 2007

Asus EeePC 701Speaking to a number of prospects one thing that routinely comes up is whether you can carry out a job function on a small screen mobile device and wouldn’t a laptop be better? There are normally a number of good reasons why it isn’t practical for example: the time it takes to start-up, ability to operate with one hand, ability to run full applications over a GPRS/3G connections and, finally, how conspicuous you look working on a laptop in a street. Clearly not all these points apply to all job functions and so may not be appropriate but are usually limiting factors for laptops. However, Asus have come up with a cost effective device that may be suitable for some situations.

The EEE PC 701 comes with solid state memory (2gb - 16gb) and costs only £200. It runs a variant of Linux and starts up in around 15 seconds. It has wifi inbuilt and a3G card will be available shortly. Software includes a full version of Firefox and OpenOffice allowing docs to be updated on the go.

The screen is still too small to comfortably run full desktop applications but the inclusion of a full browser will allow for web-based applications to be run be they corporate applications behind the firewall, AppSwing enabled back-office Windows and Java apps, or third party solutions such as salesforce.com or even Google Docs.

I am currently waiting to get my hands on a device so that I can test it out but on paper at least it looks like being a good candidate for an ideal mobile working companion.

Review of AppSwing on Datamonitor Computerwire

November 2nd, 2007

Gave an interview to a journalist from Computerwire yesterday which has resulted in a good write-up which drew the following analogy: “This approach to app delivery to unwired devices, be they cellular or on WiFi, is complementary to what Citrix does to remote PCs, laptops, and thin clients.”.

Article here…

Ballmer on Mobile

November 2nd, 2007

Microsoft’s Chief executive Steve Ballmer has been speaking about his companies approach to mobile with some interesting thoughts. In particular the usefulness of a browser to business users although he was less than forthcoming on how Microsoft were going to address that.

Full article here…

Mobilise, not miniaturise

October 25th, 2007

One point that was reiterated by Cameron Moll in his book Mobile Web Design was that it is important not to treat the mobile device as a miniature PC and therefore treat it as an extension of such. He states:

” Perhaps the most common blunder committed by newcommers to mobile development is to replicate the PC web experience. This blunder might be referred to as “PC nearsightedness”, wherein a developer’s interpretation of web content is limited to that which is most familar and closest within view: The desktop PC”

I believe that this can also be applied to people who are wanting to gain mobile access to their back-office applications. There is a view that in order to be truly mobile you need to have the whole application with you on your mobile device. Slavishly following this will not give you productivity gains of being mobile. You must concentrate on the process that you want to deliver and then only deliver what is required to achieve that process. Otherwise you might as well lug round a laptop and enjoy all the constraints that brings with it…

Mobile web design

October 23rd, 2007

I received this morning my copy of Mobile Web Design by Cameron Moll. Having flicked through it I am looking forward to having a proper read when I am on a flight to Edinburgh tomorrow.
While there are many books on the subject of UI design there are relatively few on the designing for a mobile interface. I guess that is because there are so many different UIs to work towards based on the different operating systems, device and whether you have an installed client or use the browser.

Here we are just beginning to put together our own standards to use for the work we do for our clients based on a few years of customer projects and this has to take into account the relative capabilities of the various browsers available from the basic BlackBerry browser to Safari on the iPhone. Once there is something more meaningful I will post some details of what we have found.

The other interesting thing about the Moll book was that initially it was available as a PDF only version but you can now get a print version from the print on demand specialists Lulu.  I was impressed with the quality achieved for such a low print run (i.e. one copy) while still keeping a relatively low price. I’m not sure that I really have a novel in me but if I did this is perhaps the way to get it published.

AppSwing Design Studio

October 20th, 2007

We are getting close to the launch date of the next version of the AppSwing Enterprise Suite which includes support for our new tool: AppSwing Design Studio. This will allow suitably trained partners to create mobile applications from Windows and Java applications for any mobile device. The short video below shows how simple the process can be. You can also see a full screen version of the video here.

Mobile statistics

October 19th, 2007

If you are looking for statistics on mobile uptake worldwide then this is the site for you: MobileActive.org. According to their website that are “a global network of people (and their tools, projects, and resources) focused on the use of mobile phones in civil society”. Makes for interesting reading particularly when comparing take up between countries.


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