Focusing Mobile UC On The Multimodal “Customer Experience”
UCStrategies
“Bring Your Own Device” (BYOD) is the latest hot term used to describe the end user transition from desktop PCs to mobile, multimodal smartphones and tablets. Initially, BYOD was primarily focused on supporting mobile users within an organization who ...
See all stories on this topic »Google Play adds support for Android in-app subscriptions
Fiercemobilecontent
"To make this easier, we're introducing an HTTP-based publisher API through which enterprise-scale backend servers can validate or cancel subscriptions," Google Play Product Manager Ibrahim Elbouchikhi writes on the Android Developers Blog.
See all stories on this topic »Cloudant expands data services reach to Europe
InfoWorld
By Paul Krill | InfoWorld Cloudant, which provides cloud-based data services for Web and mobileapplications, is taking its "data layer as a service" technology global this week, with the expansion of its network to include European coverage, ...
See all stories on this topic »
Google brings in-app subscriptions to Android
Engadget
There's even a publisher API for extending the subscription beyond the walls of Google Play and your Android device. Glu Mobile will be first out the gate, turning on subscriptions in properties like Frontline Commando, but we're sure plenty of others ...
See all stories on this topic »White House launches new digital government strategy
O'Reilly Radar
In this memorandum, the president directs each major federal agency in the United States to make two key services that American citizens depend upon available on mobile devices within the next 12 months and to make "applicable" government information ...
See all stories on this topic »
UCStrategies
“Bring Your Own Device” (BYOD) is the latest hot term used to describe the end user transition from desktop PCs to mobile, multimodal smartphones and tablets. Initially, BYOD was primarily focused on supporting mobile users within an organization who ...
See all stories on this topic »Google Play adds support for Android in-app subscriptions
Fiercemobilecontent
"To make this easier, we're introducing an HTTP-based publisher API through which enterprise-scale backend servers can validate or cancel subscriptions," Google Play Product Manager Ibrahim Elbouchikhi writes on the Android Developers Blog.
See all stories on this topic »Cloudant expands data services reach to Europe
InfoWorld
By Paul Krill | InfoWorld Cloudant, which provides cloud-based data services for Web and mobileapplications, is taking its "data layer as a service" technology global this week, with the expansion of its network to include European coverage, ...
See all stories on this topic »
Boot up: Windows 8 desktop shock, how iPads saved Greece, Apple's bad store ... The Guardian (blog) John Gruber thinks it is due to use of public APIs "in ways Apple doesn't want" - where Rogue Amoeba reverse-engineered the method to let iOS devices receive AirPlay content. That undermines Apple's authenticated chip hardware revenue stream. See all stories on this topic » | The Guardian (blog) |
Engadget
There's even a publisher API for extending the subscription beyond the walls of Google Play and your Android device. Glu Mobile will be first out the gate, turning on subscriptions in properties like Frontline Commando, but we're sure plenty of others ...
See all stories on this topic »White House launches new digital government strategy
O'Reilly Radar
In this memorandum, the president directs each major federal agency in the United States to make two key services that American citizens depend upon available on mobile devices within the next 12 months and to make "applicable" government information ...
See all stories on this topic »
Google launches in-app subscriptions on Google Play Econsultancy (blog) For developers building mobile and tablet apps, in-app billing is an indispensable monetization tool. After all, it's often easier and more profitable to give an app away for free and then charge for extra features. This is particularly true for gaming ... See all stories on this topic » | Econsultancy (blog) |