| | |
Write Once, Run on Most Mobiles. Really?
Please support our C++ advertiser: Intel Parallel Studio Home
Can't decide whether to develop for Android, BlackBerry, iPhone, or Symbian? You may not have to, if the latest "write once, run anywhere" claim from Recursion Software bears fruit. The company today unveiled Voyager 7.2 Pervasive Software Platform, and says that developers can use the tool to target those platforms as well as Windows Mobile and LiMo and Maemo Linux-based devices with a single code base.
Apps built with the platform can execute on smartphones, netbooks and PCs and share contacts and other personal information, location data and media files," the company said, opening the door to simpler collaboration, data collection and fleet and asset management and other mobile application development. According to 2Q 2009 stats from market researcher Canalys, the top three mobile platform makers (Symbian, RIM and Apple) account for 85 percent of the market. Add in Microsoft and Google and you're at better than 96 percent.
Helping to do its magic is a location-aware messaging system that Recursive says enables peer-to-peer collaboration without the need for a host PC, server or cloud. The system can communicate and form decentralized groups over "any Telco or WiFi network," it reported. The messaging is part of an abstraction layer that also encompasses C/C++, Java, .NET and numerous other platforms. News of the updated platform came from the 2009 CTIA Wireless IT and Entertainment conference, running now through Friday at the San Diego Convention Center.
The cost? Well, you can download a 30-day evaluation version for free (registration required).
Apps built with the platform can execute on smartphones, netbooks and PCs and share contacts and other personal information, location data and media files," the company said, opening the door to simpler collaboration, data collection and fleet and asset management and other mobile application development. According to 2Q 2009 stats from market researcher Canalys, the top three mobile platform makers (Symbian, RIM and Apple) account for 85 percent of the market. Add in Microsoft and Google and you're at better than 96 percent.
Helping to do its magic is a location-aware messaging system that Recursive says enables peer-to-peer collaboration without the need for a host PC, server or cloud. The system can communicate and form decentralized groups over "any Telco or WiFi network," it reported. The messaging is part of an abstraction layer that also encompasses C/C++, Java, .NET and numerous other platforms. News of the updated platform came from the 2009 CTIA Wireless IT and Entertainment conference, running now through Friday at the San Diego Convention Center.
The cost? Well, you can download a 30-day evaluation version for free (registration required).
-7
•
•
•
•
That's what C language was supposed to do too, but it doesn't because programs like to interface with the operating systems and the hardware. That makes them os/hardware specific which require program changes when porting from one os/hardware configuration to another. I would expect Voyager 7.2 Pervasive Software Platform to have the same problem.
Similar Threads
- News Story: VMware: REAL Write Once, Run Anywhere (Linux Servers and Apache)
- Where to run this ASP? (ASP)
- Can't run c++ programs in kdevelop (C++)
- How do i run perl on windows 98 (Perl)
- load a script if its a only if its certain time and day (JavaScript / DHTML / AJAX)
- Don't save in NTFS and FAT partition (Getting Started and Choosing a Distro)
- Hi DaniWeb (Community Introductions)
- Portable Java (Java)
- Calling other programs which take and return variables (C)
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Tag cloud for compatible, deploy, migrate, mobile, multiple, port
3gs adult android apple appstore battery blackberry bluetooth browser build cell cellphone clone compatible content crime data database dataloss deploy development europe free gadget google graphics handsets hardware homework internet iphone iphone3g ipod java keywords laptop law linux livemesh lowpower mcafee microsoft migrate mobile multiple music mysql news newyear nokia o2 openness opensource opera oracle os palm phone phones php port portable power privacy research review rim ruby search security serial smartphone smartphones sms software softwaredevelopment solar sony spam survey symbian t-mobile tables tcp technology telephony texasinstruments text trademark uk updates vb.net virus vista web webservice windows wireless wxpython yahoo




