Events.

Meet other members of the Betavine community

Upcoming Events

MOTODEV Summit

8th December 2008, São Paulo, Brazil

Devoxx08

8th - 12th December, Antwerp, Belgium

Java Mobile, Media & eMbedded Developer Days (M3DD)

21st – 22nd January 2009, Santa Clara, CA, USA

GSMA Mobile World Congress

16th - 19th February 2009, Barcelona, Spain

Recent Events

Recent Posts

This blog is to let the community know about the free (but no lunch) Mobile Experiences workshop I am running from 12pm on the 30th of April in Contact Theatre Space 3 in Manchester as part of kick off events for Futuresonic 2008 which is a Urban Festival of Art, Music & Ideas running between the 1-5 May in Manchester in the UK . The workshop aim is to facilitate cooperation between artists, designers, and developers in the mobile space
This year we intend to focus on the three technology areas currently growing in significance in the mobile phone space that of Location Based Services, RFID and Near Field Communications, and Mobile Widgets (WRT and WidSets) and each will be presented by a Forum Nokia Champion. The workshop is intended to be accessible and open to a variety of interest and in particular we want to provide an opportunity for designers to find out what these technologies have to offer and what the limitations, what support are and development environments exist, where they can get access to examples. We will also provide an opportunity to mix and discuss design ideas with developers and experts experienced in these areas together with providing some hands on practical experience of the technology.

To finish the event we are planning a group participation of a mobile experience but i will post more information as soon as the details are finalised but it should be very cool.

Manchester is a great city with a unique atmosphere and culture and this Festival is a great experience so if you have never visited the city this may be all the excuse you need.

Please feel free to pass on this information to anyone you think will be interested.
Adam has written up some excellent notesabout the sessions that he sat in at Over the Air this past weekend.
Registration is closed now, but if you weren't able to get your name on the attendance list there will be a Twitter channel you can follow, as well as a Flickr group

(Credit goes to Mark Kramer for getting both set up - cheers!!)
Come meet us before the event on the Over the Air Backchannel Network

We are:

Nick Herriot
Owen Griffin
Dan Appelquist
Margaret Gold
Hello everybody,

I'm off to Over the Air, armed with my laptop, HSDPA card and sleeping bag. So has anyone started using the Backnetwork? :-)

Owen.
We're proud to be one of the Supporters of Over the Air, a grass-roots developer event that is already looking like it will be one of the major events of the year.

The Betavine Team will be helping out throughout the event with registration and helping people find their way around, so look out for us in our colourful t-shirts. It would be great to meet more of the Betavine community in person!

On Friday we'll be part of the Network APIs panel at 14:00, running a Masterclass on the Betavine APIs at 16:30, talking about Mobile Java at 18:00, and talking about Mobile s60 Widgets at 19:00 before breaking for food and drinks. (check out the schedule online)

Registration is completely free, but filling up fast - so make sure that your name is on the list!
It was great to meet so many of you at the Mobile Jam Session in Barcelona. The turn-out was quite good considering how many more suits than actual developers are able to go to MWC.

There were a number of very good discussion sessions, and I took piles and piles of notes about issues you all face that we could be helping to address here on Betavine, or subject-matter areas we could introduce on Betavine.

Specifically:


  • How to develop multi-platform applications, in particular the pro’s and con’s of the various platforms (my own thinking is that this needs to be a wiki so that it can grow organically and take on structure as it goes along - but most importantly so that it can be a user-generated knowledge database)
  • Statistics with regards to handset penetration in various markets, and the segmentation of the handset market by demographic (i.e. how to develop your handset strategy)
  • How to conduct initial testing, create test plans, and find robust testing services before going to market (also how to design feedback functionality to allow testing to continue with end-users post launch)
  • A section describing the various standards bodies, a summary of their mandate & organisational structure, any feed we can find discussing their work, output, report summaries, controversies, etc, and most importantly, a channel for the developer community to provide input to the standards bodies without having to be super active or subscribe to all sorts of newsletters and reports.
  • Fragmentation information for specific technical aspects of devices, such as Flash, MIDP3, Java JSRs, etc. (Apparently Adobe has a thorough database that is only an authoring tool, and people are struggling to find the one version that they need out of the hundreds that have been compiled. Another problem is that deployment is difficult because it requires people to compile sys files)
  • Device information was big on everyone’s wish list. Some mentioned filling in the wurfl fields on behalf of all developers. Forum Nokia and Motorola were named as having good device specs – they are the industry examples to follow.
  • A database of Cell IDs and meta tags (this was a really big one that many people at Mobile Jam were eager to collaborate on)
  • Security & signing information (there was a broad call for some kind of single sign-on solution)
  • ‘Naming & shaming’ area where developers can rant about the perpetuation of bugs in newly released versions of mobile software, the poor results delivery of Novarra, poorly thought out device design, etc…
  • User-interface and user-experience design (especially around new device interfaces such as ‘gestures’, and widgets)


We'll be checking off as much of this list as we can over the coming months, so be sure to share your thoughts with us about structure, content & usability.

Event Spotlight

 

Events

Do you know about other great events in the mobile space going on anywhere in the world? Then drop us a note and we will get it on the calendar to share with other Betavine members.

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Symbian Smartphone Show - Day two



The opening keynote speaker today was Kai Oistamo (Executive Vice President of Devices in Nokia) who took to the stage using his mobile phone to drive a small remote-controlled truck – Fortunately his Business skills are better than his driving skills as the truck crashed into the back of stage! He was using an N92 with Bluetooth enabled, accelerators used to direct the truck in forward/reverse, left/right directions and some 3rd party software. Kai talked about how social networking is driving new communications and web behaviors. “Place, People and Time” is the context that is creating the next generation of web apps. He talked of a vision where by pointing a device at a landmark e.g., a theatre it would immediately retrieve what was showing that evening, who was selling tickets and for how much! - welcome to the world of “point and find”.

Patrick Olsson (Sony Ericsson, Head of Software Development) then took center stage to talk about Project Capuchin (announced back in Spring this year). In essence this was about taking the best bits of two languages, Java and Flash to produce a mobile-app. For example the UI could be built in Flash with all your business or application logic written up in Java and then packaged as a Java container. In fact you can mix and match but the end package must always be a Java container. It was announced earlier today that Capuchin would come to the Symbian Foundation.

These speakers were followed up by Benoit Schillings from Qt who talked about the “Code once, create more and deploy everywhere”. Benoit also announced today that new developer tools for the S60 platform would be released by the end of this year with deeper integration with the platform.

An active panel debate (who will win the runtime race?) and developer awards rounded off the session along with the announcement that Lee Williams had been appointed the executive director of the Symbian Foundation, swiftly followed up by his first public speech in this role. Check the press releases to hear about his 4 beacons or focus points for the foundation.

Did you attend the show? What were your thoughts? Good balance between business and developer subjects? Are there are any subjects that you would like to talk or hear more about?
posted by KevScarr KevScarr  |  View Comments (0)  |  Add Comment  | 

Symbian Smartphone Show - Day 1



David Wood (Executive VP Research, Symbian) opened the key note speeches with three important words "Developers, developers, developers". His theme was common through all speeches and was at the heart of most of the days sessions. Many companies are realising developers are the key to launching innovative apps. In addition, announced today, Symbian O/S will go free, estimated at around 7million lines of code!

John Ellis (Motorola) stepped up to give a very informative and very inspiring call to arms with clear statements around platform owners relinquishing control of a platform will lead to acceleration in innovation coupled with statistics like by 2012 more than half the planet will have mobiles.

Many seminars kicked off from 12:30 with developers and business topics available to all. Opera, S60 runtimes and Mobile Ajax to name a few really did a good job of capturing the audiences interest with some sessions ending all too soon - Often a good sign of a great topic with the need for further discussion.

Are you working with mobile Ajax, what best practices do you utilise? Do you think Betavine should have a Mobile Ajax zone?

Day two looks set to continue where day one finished off…
posted by KevScarr KevScarr  |  View Comments (0)  |  Add Comment  | 

3rd Annual OSiM World, Open Source in Mobile



Compared to last year's event, focus shifted from what is open source (and the respective business models) towards a focus on open collaboration as the way forward for the mobile industry to address platform fragmentation and engage with the developer community to accelerate innovation. There was a very good (IMHO) keynote from John Bruggeman (Wind River) providing a reality check on the issues of fragmentation and 'why Linux will never be as good as the iPhone'. Here's a recount from Symbian's David Wood: http://www.dw2-0.com/

Web enablement layer was on everyone's lips - at last year's conference there was only myself and Azingo extolling the virtues of a Web Runtime capability; this year practically every keynote focussed on the importance of Web Runtimes, Web apps and Widgets in driving innovation - according to Motorola 41% of the World's developers are now focusing on mobile and 51% of these only know Web technologies....hence the importance of supporting these designers & developers to accelerate mobile innovation. Azingo also gave some interesting statistics; according to them, designing an Address Book with new functionality would take around 96days if developed in C/C++, only 14days if using Flash and even less (7days) if using Web technologies. Obviously the Web Runtime landscape is also fragmented but (according to Azingo and Mozilla) it's a lot closer than the diversity between other execution environments (such as Symbian, Java, .NET etc.) and therefore not too far from the Write Once Run Anywhere ideal for most Web apps. Furthermore, the 'poor performance' of the scripting approach is receiving major boosts across all engines in the desktop space (WebKit, Mozilla and Chrome) and this will also transfer to mobile. The key area then where Web Runtimes may break down is the area of device APIs as each vendor seeks to be first to market with an 'enhanced' WRT. This potential issue of fragmentation, encouragingly, was acknowledged by all at the conference and hence importantly there were a number of 'calls to action' from many keynotes for the industry to pull together and make sure the opportunity is not lost.

- OMTP BONDI - joint presentation from OAA, VF and OMTP was therefore very timely in making people across the industry aware that there is an industry initiative looking to address some of these issues

David Pollington, Terminals Research.
posted by KevScarr KevScarr  |  View Comments (0)  |  Add Comment  | 

BarcampBrighton3 is over..

BarcampBrighton3 is over. Me and Sirin had a great time learning about all kinds of different technology.



For those that don't know BarCampBrighton http://barcampbrighton.org is a non-profit, free-to-attend, community-based web 'unconference' that is normally held at the University of Sussex in Brighton. The event was run by Brighton's local geek community and was a weekend of discussions, demonstrations, talks, coding and socialising where we all come together and learn from each other.

You can find out more about BarcampBrighton3, and what was presented at the backnetwork.

We don't know when or where the next Barcamp is but when we do, we'll post about it here.
posted by OwenGriffin OwenGriffin  |  View Comments (0)  |  Add Comment  | 

Off to BarcampBrighton

Some of the Betavine team (me and Sirin) are off to BarCampBrighton this weekend. Betavine are one of the silver sponsors and are providing one of the meals.

If you're planning to attend, why not introduce yourselves? You can connect to us using the backnetwork.
posted by OwenGriffin OwenGriffin  |  View Comments (0)  |  Add Comment  | 
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