public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from oseres with tags google & mobile

2011

Thousand of APIs Paint a Bright Future for the Web | Webmonkey | Wired.com

Once a novel idea that seemed limited to Flickr, the web-based API is now everywhere you turn — Twitter, Foursquare, Google Maps and thousands of other sites offer up their data in the form of an API. APIs mean that third-party developers can build their own tools and mashups, which in turn helps to fuel the popularity of the web service. It’s hard to imagine where sites like Flickr and Twitter would be today without APIs. In fact, these days some web services don’t even bother launching websites to go with their APIs — the API is the service. The SimpleGeo API, for example, doesn’t really have a corresponding website, it’s just an API that can be used anywhere, including inside mobile apps.

2010

Ne développez pas simplement une application, développez un business sur mobile

D’après une traduction et adaptation de l’article de Charles Yim Manager des partenariats de Google Mobile. Yim a travaillé dans l’équipe de business development du réseau de publicité mobile AdMob, qui a été racheté par Google en 2009 pour $750 millions. Ouvriez vous un magasin sans prévoir quoi que soit au-delà de sa grande ouverture? Bien sûr que non! Vous devriez prévoir autre chose pour sa réussite, et c’est pareil pour les applications. Des personnes parlent souvent de leurs « idées d’appli géniales » mais quand on leur demande ce qu’ils ont prévu après le lancement de l’appli, ils ont rarement la bonne réponse. C’est comme faire une excellente cérémonie d’inauguration de votre magasin et s’attendre à se que tout se fasse tout seul par la suite.

The State of the Internet Operating System - O'Reilly Radar

by 1 other
Ask yourself for a moment, what is the operating system of a Google or Bing search? What is the operating system of a mobile phone call? What is the operating system of maps and directions on your phone? What is the operating system of a tweet?

2009

TechTLV : Can you hear me now? The operator-centric mobile model is over

Can you hear me now? The operator-centric mobile model is over Last week, T-Mobile Germany made some waves by banning Skype for the iPhone. Some might read this as a long overdue reassertion of operator power, but I disagree. A few months ago, I learned from a reliable source that a major operator was deliberately not shipping a very popular mobile phone model that they knew their customers wanted because the phone didn’t give them enough control over what the customer does. The phone was too open. This is exactly what Google was talking about back in 2007 when it insisted on openness as a condition to bidding in the FCC’s spectrum auction. Ten years ago, when I covered mobile operators on Wall Street, they used to cite their vast capital expenditure on building on their cellular networks as their core differentiator. This was the reality behind Verizon’s amusing “can you hear me now?” campaign.

2008

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2005

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