Posts Tagged ‘developer’

MIR Developer Networking Events in London & Paris

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

That’s right!

I’ve been on to DeviceAnywhere and asked if they’d agree to cover the cost of producing a Mobile Industry Review mobile developer networking event both in London and in Paris. Based on good response we’ll aim to do this as part of our European Tour and take the events to other cities across the region.

The concept? I want to meet developers. And I want to put a huge big spotlight on them and their work. What’s more, I’ve decided to take it a bit further with these events. I’m aiming to profile every single attendee and put up a screenshot/overview of at least one of their applications with associated links and background. I think it’s doable.

So if you’re a mobile developer and you can get to London or Paris, you’re invited to feature.

BUT — and this is a key point — because I want to meet everyone personally (not just a handshake at the front door a la MIR Unlimited Drinks), I’m going to limit the number to 15 people. Possibly 20 if you’re going to bring a friend.

The deal I’ve done with DeviceAnywhere to cover the cost of hosting the events also includes a free time-limited account extended beyond the normal one they offer, for every developer. It took some wangling but I’m pleased — the service is shit hot, especially if you’re trying to develop on international devices that you don’t want to purchase. (Read my DeviceAnywhere overview here).

There’s no limit to your size. If you’re a one-man developer, or a 500+ organisation of mobile geniuses, no problem.

We’re aiming for the London event to take place toward the end of this month, with Paris in early February before the Mobile World Cup Congress.

So here’s the value proposition:

I want to profile mobile developers. I’d like to meet 15 or so in London and another 15 from the burgeoning Parisian mobile scene. 15 is the upper number I reckon I can handle as I need to write a profile on each for the site.

It will involve about 2 hours of your time in a centrally located hotel bar or club. I’m thinking of holding the London one at private members’ club, One Alfred Place, just off Tottenham Court Road in the West End. Nice and relaxed there. I could use some suggestions for Paris.

It will involve:

* Meeting and chatting with the Mobile Industry Review team including me, Dan Lane, Ben Smith and quite possibly the uber-effervescent James Whatley. We might even be able to get Jonathan Jensen along depending on schedules.

* Drinks on the house. Or, more accurately, drinks on my pocket. And a bit of food.

* Meeting with other mobile developers. Bring some cards.

* The opportunity to knock about with DeviceAnywhere and actually play with the service.

* A one-to-one with me on camera, telling us what you do. Each interview should take about 5 minutes.

We’ll then publish the videos and overviews here on Mobile Industry Review during the proceeding week after the event.

So if you’d like to come along, drop me an email with the subject ‘MIR Developer Event’ and we’ll get you on the list.

LG Mobile Developer Network: Look how complicated this is!

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Yup, you read that right.

YES there is an LG Mobile Developer Network. Finally. Excellent.

Unfortunately it is stuck in the year 1997.

Yes indeed! If you’d like to get your application on to LG handsets, it’s as simple as:

1. Spend AGES writing a sodding proposal. (Ok so it’s only two pages…)

2. Formally submit the proposal to LG. (They do have an online system for this).

3. Submit a proposal and wait for fooking AGES. (I’m assuming)

4. The LG Business Proposal team spent AGES looking through your proposal. (I’m assuming)

5. Keep waiting for AGES. (I’m assuming)

6. If you are successful — that’s a big IF — you and LG’s Business Proposal team create a contract together.

7. Insert another few months of arsing about. (I’m assuming)

8. If you are LUCKY you will be able to distribute your software on the LG Mobile Developer Network, LG Mobile.com and MAYBE even get it pre-loaded.

Well that’s easy then.

Don’t hold your breath.

It looks rather complicated.

Has anyone you know been successful? If so, I’d like to know so we can shine some light on the process.

Just how rubbish is Blackberry’s Developer Programme?

Friday, November 21st, 2008

Have a read of this comment posted on today’s article about the 400,000 downloads of the MySpace for Blackberry application.

If you thought the Blackberry Developer’s Programme was a bit… rubbish, congratulations. You appear to have been correct:

When we launched Palringo on the Blackberry in May, we saw an equally impressive increase in downloads. But, developing applications for the Blackberry is really hard work. So we thought it would be advantageous to join the RIM Developer or Alliance Programme. Although they charge £1,200 to join, we thought this would be worthwhile, since it might help us deal with some of the technical issues in a more streamlined way and have access to some of the their less accessible API’s.

Believe it or not, we have found it extremely difficult to get RIM to generate an invoice. We have an account manager, but as of yet no contact from RIM.

If someone from RIM is reading this, PLEASE get in touch with us. We would really like to enhance Palringo functionality on the Blackberry. And, we really want to join your developer programme.

regards
Kerry

Kerry Ritz
CEO
Palringo
www.palringo.com

That’s absolutely ridiculous Kerry.

I’ve heard similar remarks from other mobile application developers talking about Blackberry.

Oh dear.

AQL launches developer competition - £3,000 up for grabs

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Voice and messaging provider, AQL, are staging a developer competition to both celebrate their 10th anniversary and to stimulate development across the industry. Always good news.

Dr Adam Beaumont, top chap at AQL, comments:

We’re seeing a host of applications crop up start to use our interfaces, from twitter-like applications and facebook plug-ins through to integration with legal software and CRM systems

Aye. There’s actually a lot of innovation going on in the marketplace — but it’s always useful to stimulate it. So if you think you’ve got a good idea that could make use of multiple APIs (e.g. SMS, MMS, Voice, Fax and Email), then you really should give a bit of attention to the AQL Developer Competition.

Stuart, their Biz Dev chap explains:

We’re specifically looking for clever use of multiple APIs together so any combination of SMS/MMS/Voice/Fax/Email. These can be either “self-contained” applications or websites, or they can be interfaces which “enable” third party applications (such as facebook) access to aql functionality. The winners will be notified on the 15th of November. It only remains for me to wish you all the best of luck and if you have any questions please don’t hesitate to send me a private message [via the AQL developer forum].

The developer rules are right here.

I’m going to be judging along with Dr Mike Short of o2, Jay Daley (CTO of Nominet), Victor Keegan of The Guardian and Dr Adam himself.

I’m thinking of a few applications already. You’ve got a lot to play with there. Lots of APIs and possibilities. Conveniently, AQL will also provide text-in numbers free of charge to developers for the duration of the competition.

Video: Mark Tynan of ShopQwik

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

I’m delighted to bring you the first in the DeviceAnywhere Developer Roadshow series. You can find background on the roadshow here.

Our first featured developer is Mark Tynan of mobile travel experts, ShopQwik. The application is nothing short of a piece of genius and allows you to book a flight and/or hotel, anywhere on the planet, within about 60-90 seconds, direct from your mobile. What’s more, if you’re American (true paperless ticketing at just about every US airport), then the service really comes into it’s own. You don’t need to bother printing out nonsense. Just click, click and you’re done. You can get all your details at the touch of a button via the ShopQwik application.

In the video below, Mark talks about evolving ShopQwik along with the challenges they face developing for hundreds of handsets — and gives a perspective on how useful DeviceAnywhere would be in that process.


DeviceAnywhere Developer Roadshow: ShopQwik from Ewan MacLeod on Vimeo.

If you’d like to feature in the DeviceAnywhere Developer Roadshow, drop me a note. Provided you’re in the UK, we’ll do our best to try and feature you. That means a visit from me, bearing gifts in the form of an extended DeviceAnywhere trial. We’ll aim to profile your company and get your viewpoints on the DeviceAnywhere service.

The roadshow is kindly supported by DeviceAnywhere.

Get me a flight to New York, stat!

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

I’ve just spent an hour or so pointing a camera in the face of a very patient and highly animated Mark Tynan, founder of mobile travel geniuses, ShopQwik. With their service, you can book a flight or a hotel, anywhere in the world, in 60 seconds, from your handset.

I was interviewing Mark for the DeviceAnywhere Developer Roadshow we’re doing here at SMS Text News. I tell you, it’s just brilliant. Brilliant. I’m thoroughly enjoying being able to show DeviceAnywhere to top quality developer/entrepreneurs like Mark.

I sat him down and flipped open the DeviceAnywhere Studio (check out the walk-through) and brought up a few devices.

“Awww, look at that!” he said, as I opened up a few handsets, “It’s like having the handset there in your hand!”

Mark went on to explain that he’s spent about 20,000 pounds or more on handsets over the last three years (including contracts). With burgeoning demand for ShopQwik on a whole load of different platforms, testing is a key issue for him — he reckons he’ll be able to get some excellent benefits from using DeviceAnywhere, although I’ll leave the specifics ’til the video.

We’ll have it cut and online next week.

Meantime I’m off now to catch my flight to Dublin for Unlimited Drinks tonight!

DeviceAnywhere — a walk through of the developer’s godsend

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

I still meet people who either haven’t heard of DeviceAnywhere’s services or don’t quite ‘get’ what they offer. It’s a constant irritation. Ever since I got a demonstration of it about 9 months ago, I’ve been telling everyone and anyone about it. I’m also proper-made-up, as they say in some parts of the North of Britain, that they agreed to chip in and support my on-going quest for folk to get a grip and use these types of services.

I decided we needed to do a roadshow a few months ago. Spread the word. The mobile industry is difficult enough (as per my piece on Monday) without adding even more arse in the form of development and testing woes.

(If, by the way, I was aware of any competitors with such a comprehensive offering, I’d also be including them too.)

I’ve already covered the basic proposition of DeviceAnywhere in a previous post so here’s a quick primer before we jump in:

You want to test your applications and services on hundreds of different devices on different networks, right? Don’t buy them all yourself, just log on to DeviceAnywhere’s site and, bish-bash-bosh, you’ll be using a real, live unit, remotely. Don’t mess around testing easily repeatable actions on a ton of different devices, DeviceAnywhere’ll do that.

Right.

I logged into DeviceAnywhere and added a few packages to my account. First off I chose 3UK. This really is a piece of genius, this service. With the 3UK package, you get to play with a total of 39 live devices. That is, 39 devices that you can remotely mess around with — each with it’s own sim card and account on 3UK. A quick glance down the list shows handsets from 3’s key suppliers — LG, Motorola, Nokia and Sony Ericsson. They have, ready for me to play with (amongst others) the U-300 and U970 from LG, a horrifying RAZR 3x from Motorola, a veritable cacophony of Nokias (6000 series, E61, E65, N70, N73, N95) and a big showing of Sonys (K530 all the way up to the K850 and W950s).

I want a bit of variety with my testing.

I decided to add AT&T! Woo! I can actually check out American devices — all 158 of them!

And that’s only the first of four pages worth of devices, standing by for testing.

What about the Vodafone and o2 range of test units? Here’s Voda’s first page:

And o2’s first page:

(Interesting to see the “Helio Cocoon” — for a moment I thought that was referring to the US MVNO…)

Right, let’s have a play with one of the devices.

It’s quite simple. At the top of the DeviceAnywhere page, there’s a toolbar:

See the big orange button? Click it and then this pops up:

DeviceAnywhere’s Studio is java-based so it’ll work on whatever you’re using, provided you’ve got Java support (sometimes I use it via my Apple, other times via a nearby PC).

Here’s the login box via my Apple:

You need to allow the app to load it’s various datasets — perhaps a 2-3 minutes — and then you’re up and running.

Now, before we go there. I’ve actually uploaded Anthony Pranata’s brilliant ‘Screenshot’ application to my DeviceAnywhere library — the concept being that I’m pretending I’ve just made it and I’m going to demonstrate it working for you with DeviceAnywhere Studio. I thought it’d be neat to publish a screenshot I took on a remote device in this manner (Although you can take snapshots and video from the Studio easily).

Right! Let’s get the Studio up…

deviceanywhere

There’s my package — it’s defaulted to Vodafone UK. Scroll down and I can choose to visit and play about with any one of the devices that’s available. Sometimes you’ll see someone’s already working on one and it’ll be marked with a little no-entry sign. You can choose to hop on to it the moment they’ve finished work.

Let’s swap to my AT&T package:

deviceanywhere

Ok. Let’s have a look at the E61…

deviceanywhere

Click, click… woosh. It’s mine for the moment! See the locked icon?

deviceanywhere

Right. Let’s have a play!

It’s startling when the device pops up on your screen like this:

deviceanywhere

I’m hesitant for a moment then I decided to click about on the E61’s keypad…

The device wake’s up from standby:

deviceanywhere

Right, let’s get on the net, eh?

deviceanywhere

Before I know it I’m surfing AT&T’s homepage and trying to search for Anthony’s site:

deviceanywhere

I typed the URL incorrectly! So I thought I’d then try out a Nokia N95 from Vodafone:

deviceanywhere

See how you can run devices next to each other? Wicked! I typed in Anthony’s site URL and woosh:

deviceanywhere

A quick glance into the N95’s applications folder confirms the app installed:

deviceanywhere

.. and here it is running!

deviceanywhere

Then I installed Nimbuzz. Worked like a charm… and then I decided it was time to play with the iPhone! I wanted to give that a go…

deviceanywhere

I’m without my iPhone at the moment as I’ve given it to my other half… so let’s have a look at SMS Text News on the iPhone’s Safari browser:

deviceanywhere

Nice! Ok. Right. Now I want to add a bookmark on to the front screen… (I’m simply dragging my mouse over the iPhone as though I was tapping it with my finger)

deviceanywhere

deviceanywhere

And let’s see if the icon is there…

deviceanywhere

Ah, brilliant! There it is.

So that ends the walk-through.

If you’re a developer charged with making your service available to as many people as possible across this mobile industry of ours, I defy you not to get value from DeviceAnywhere. If you’d like a trial, you can get a few hours free with no commitments from their site at www.deviceanywhere.com with immediate activation. If you’d like a bit more time, drop me a mail (ewan@smstextnews.com) and I’ll get you double the time to play with. Once you’re out of trial, the cost starts at around $100/month per package (depending on promotions) and then around $16 an hour.

Interestingly, there’s a feature on the DeviceAnywhere site under your account that lists the most popular devices and operators being tested that day, by package. The winner today form the 3UK package? The E61. And the AT&T package? The Apple iPhone. No surprise, eh?

Back to the roadshow. We’re visiting ShopQwik soon and then Palringo. Standby!

SMS Text News launches DeviceAnywhere Developer Roadshow

Friday, June 20th, 2008

I first met the Chief Executive and Chief Marketing Officer of DeviceAnywhere (formerly known as MobileComplete) in a briefing late last year. I’d heard of the company quite a few times. It’s a name that comes up regularly whenever I’m talking to developers. At the briefing, I had a chance to check out the DeviceAnywhere service in detail and it blew my socks off.

If you’ve come across DeviceAnywhere before, then, you know what I’m talking about and can nod sagely with me.

If you haven’t, then just wait ’til you see it. It’s pure genius.

When I arrived at the briefing, I saw, on the table, a pizza-box-sized server — one of those that you’re used to seeing in a rack, in a data centre. Although this wasn’t just any 1U server. No, sir. There was a Blackberry inside it. Literally. I could see the Blackberry’s screen flashing away — the phone had been disassembled a little and plugged into the circuitry of the server. As though The Borg had interfaced with it.

I nodded to the DeviceAnywhere chaps, “So, you can actually control that?” I said, pointing to the Blackberry screen, “From here?” I said, pointing to the laptop they’d setup next to it.

“Yup!”

Wow. The implications of such a facility hit home immediately. If you’re a developer and you’d like immediate access to a Blackberry, a Nokia, an iPhone… I am not talking simulation or emulation — in fact, a whole range of mobile handsets (500+), working on veritable array of international networks, you can have it remotely over the internet. One or two clicks with the Mobile Complete client software and within seconds, you’re using a real device on, a live network of choice.

Want to upload an application? Go ahead. Want to send a text message? Sure. Go for it. Each phone has it’s own account on a mobile network (you pick what you want, e.g. Blackberry on Vodafone) and you can rent the phone exclusively or for a few hours to test with. You can do absolutely anything you want to the device — when your testing/tinkering session is finished, it’ll be reset to factory default. What’s more, the pricing is eminently affordable, whether you’re developing in your bedroom or a multi-national.

They don’t just offer easy access to a whole range of mobile devices — they also offer automation, scripting and monitoring: Absolutely invaluable for most developers. Just as an example, if you’re working away testing an application on a device and it freezes, well… not only is it a bit of an arse, you also want to know *what happened* to cause the freeze, e.g. a memory overload or the like. That’s where DeviceAnywhere really comes into its own. Plus, the automation tools can save you hours and hours of time — think, for example, trying to test out performance at peak network congestion times in different time zones (when you actually want to be asleep).

It’s a really, really useful offering, DeviceAnywhere. It’s exactly what developers need when they’re developing for international markets (and, let’s face it, if you’re not, there’s a problem). It’s all very well having a Sony handset on each domestic mobile network. That’s useful. But when you get an enquiry from someone using a Nokia N95 8GB wondering why your service isn’t working, device-specific bugs can be a real annoyance.

Clearly, anyone who’s doing any sort of mobile development or marketing needs access to DeviceAnywhere.

Which is why, when I talked to DeviceAnywhere again recently, I suggested they support a Mobile Complete roadshow here at SMS Text News. I was delighted when they readily agreed.

So where’s what we’re going to do. I’d like to spread the word about the service. Over the next few weeks, we’re going to four different mobile developers in the UK — large and small. We’re going to their offices (or, in some cases, they’ll be coming to SMS Text News towers) and we’re going to give them a demo DeviceAnywhere account and see what they make of the service. We’ll write each company up and do some videos too.

Standby! The first roadshow entry will be online shortly!


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