Archive for the ‘Izzy Tech Talk’ Category

Challenges with hiring Android, BlackBerry, iPhone development resources – Whitepaper

Posted January 30th, 2011 by
Summary

At the ScreamingToaster consulting practice, I have been talking to small, mid, and large size businesses, in every imaginable vertical, for the last 3 years. The need for mobile initiative rollout was nonexistent for the last few years (since 2008). However, with 2011 everything has changed. IT and investment budgets are thawing and there is a huge market opportunity to leverage to make a lot of money in the smartphone software and services space. Hardware companies and telcos are leveraging this market and making a lot of money from it. Software on the other hand, is woefully outclassed and outpaced by hardware and infrastructure.

If you join us, with the simple solutions outlined above, we can turn this problem into an opportunity and reinvest out way out of this decade-old rut of web-complacency!

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

The future of mobile is multiplatform – Whitepaper

Posted December 27th, 2010 by
Summary

As the smartphone segment continues to grow, and more consumers become accustomed to the greater capabilities delivered by these cloud connected mobile platforms, your business has to evolve as well to meet these expectations. This not a question of technology. It is a question of keeping your business competitive, and leveraging the new revenue streams that are now possible, as tens of millions of smartphone users use their devices in their daily life, and spend a lot of time, energy and money on them and through them.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Why the “mobile web” is useless, aka, “how to spot the fake mobile web app” – Whitepaper

Posted November 8th, 2010 by
Summary

Introduction
The term mobile web is used interchangeably with the word app, but in reality they are not at all the same and these terms cannot be used interchangeably. They really aren’t mobile apps at all, they are just tiny webpages you view in your smartphone’s web browser. Mobile websites are a cheap and easy way to let people view some parts of your website on their smartphone, and they are inexpensive to build. However, these mobile websites cannot do very much, and usually only allow people to read static content and do not integrate with a smartphone’s native applications or functionality. They are VERY basic and very “one way” as in the content flows from the owner of the website, to the reader.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Zen Application Framework for Android, BlackBerry, desktop, web, multiplatform

Posted November 2nd, 2010 by
Summary

At ScreamingToaster, we built a lot of our apps using our Zen Application Framework, which helps us avoid the common pitfalls around mobile development. We built this framework in Jan 2010, based on our many years of development and consulting experience to radically simplify and scale mulitplatform mobile development. Zen drastically reduces development time & [...]

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Hype driving iPhone/smartphone app development

Posted October 15th, 2010 by
Summary

Building mobile apps is a hype-based decision, and Apple is the one generating this hype. It is not a business decision. Apple has made it super easy to make simplistic mobile apps, most of which are just mobile web views. Most iPhone apps on the App Store are simplistic, meaning they don’t really do anything interesting, and don’t take advantage of the iPhone’s capabilities. Companies are doing the least amount of work and build the simplest app they can, just to be part of the hype. The simplistic iPhone apps more companies make are just an attempt to be part of the cool crowd and the hype. They are not a commitment to mobile, and don’t involve any real risk, investment, or foresight. iPhone development is so easy that many web developers are able to create simple web view “mobile apps” and this is good enough for most companies because they just need something to show to be part of the crowd.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

How much should Android, BlackBerry, iPhone app development cost? – Whitepaper

Posted October 13th, 2010 by
Summary

My hope is that this article will help people get a more realistic sense of pricing for their next mobile/smartphone project and initiative. Smartphones are new. This space is constantly evolving. It is always expensive to create novelty. Smartphones are not even close to being a commodity yet, so don’t make the mistake of applying commodity pricing models to it.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Amazon will legitimize mobile application distribution

Posted September 29th, 2010 by
Summary

The problem with all the app stores today is that they suck as distribution channels. They do not allow their catalog to be easily discovered, leading to them invalidating their own existence. The whole point of the app store is not to promote the app store, but to promote apps in the app store. Eg, Newmans Own does not advertise. They leverage effective distribution networks (like grocery stores) to highlight and promote their products to retail consumers. This keeps the retail reseller in business, and the suppliers as well. With app stores/worlds, there is no such healthy ecosystem. The ego and self obsession with a vendor’s app store is what perpetuates the store but doesnt benefit consumers or ISVs that make software for consumers.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Update of the smartphone market (Android, BlackBerry, iPhone) – Whitepaper

Posted August 16th, 2010 by
Summary

The smartphone market is still in its infancy right now. While there is a lot of buzz around smartphones, it’s important to keep in mind how small this market really is. The number of smartphone units sold annually in the US are measured in the order of 10’s of millions. Of the 350M or so US citizens, around 30M have smartphones (that’s less than 9%). In contrast, feature phone sales are measured in the order of 1000’s of millions of units sold worldwide. Laptop sales are in the order of 1000’s of millions of units worldwide, as well. So, this is still an emerging market. Not to say that it is not growing rapidly, and faster and stronger than anyone would expect, given the recent global economic crisis, and US economic meltdown.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

3 Steps to avoid failure with your first attempt at smartphone app development on Android, iPhone, and BlackBerry – Whitepaper

Posted June 5th, 2010 by
Summary

The first step is for you to select the right mobile platform for your mobile initiatives. The following table outlines the major differences between the major platforms and can act as rough guidelines to help you match your requirements to the right platform for you.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |  

Introducing Zen Application Framework for BlackBerry – Whitepaper

Posted May 27th, 2010 by
Summary

We use the Zen Application Framework exclusively to build our mobile applications, and so can you. Zen is free for all ScreamingToaster Consulting clients, and its source code comes as part of the deliverables at the end of every consulting project. Zen training courses are available upon request to consulting clients only. ScreamingToaster has a commitment to open source software (OSS) and democratizing knowledge for the good of the developer community, and humanity as a whole, which is why we give Zen away for free to our consulting clients. Our clients can make changes or additions to the applications we build them, and they can also use Zen to build applications in-house after taking our BlackBerry developer training courses.

Click here to read this tutorial...   |