Software architect working in Symbian/S60 area since 2000 and still being enthusiastic about mobility. Please visit my introduction page on Forum Nokia Champions web page.
tote_b5 | 19 June, 2008 01:10
I've read the following analysis from ARCchart
with great interest. I'm already familiar with the idea of writing
applications for mobile browsers and that it can be considered as a
real alternative for mobile software development. WidSets and Widgets are all around us, not to mention Flash Lite, Silverlight, two cross-platform solutions used for delivering (multimedia) content to more and more people.
The
main point of ARCchart's article was to point out that the whole
problem of fragmented mobile development could be solved by developing
to a single run-time environment: the browser. The browser, which is
today's most widely used applications on desktop and mobile computing
devices alike.
What is this fragmentation thing, one could ask?
Well, let's have a quick look at various mobile platforms, development
environments:
Sorcery-ltd | 19/06/2008, 10:21
Hi Tote,
Not much to comment really as I pretty much agree 100% with what you say. I think Flash Lite is very promising since you can also download and run standalone applications and Adobe are doing a great job of getting the player into most platforms.
Purely browser based applications for all use cases is a very long way off (or may never happen) on the grounds of performance and more importantly battery life - download for every run?! Interpreted scripting languages? Phones aren't plugged into the mains you know! :)
Mark
coultonp | 19/06/2008, 10:41
Tote
I think your analysis is right the browser will help but its not the complete solution. Its interesting that the browser doesn’t address one of the fundamental problems which is distribution of applications. This is why I tend to favor Widsets at the moment as there is a good model there and it allows the users to effectively manage the content through ratings.
antonypr | 19/06/2008, 18:12
Michael Mace has put his bet on web applications (http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2008/02/mobile-applications-rip.html). Personally, I agree that web and native applications will be complement each other.
wmseto | 22/06/2008, 10:11
We will need C/C++/Java to build better browsers too! :)
Software architect working in Symbian/S60 area since 2000 and still being enthusiastic about mobility. Please visit my introduction page on Forum Nokia Champions web page.
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Re: Browser as an application platform
biskero | 19/06/2008, 02:55
Ciao Tote,
agree with you, is another platform to choose from.
Regarding FL we are keeping track of versioning on various devices using WURFL, it's an ongoing process!!
Alessandro