Mobile phonebook mash-up application developed using Web technologies
Short Description
This document discusses how to develop user interfaces of mobile devices using Web technologies. The user interfaces provide integrated access to on-device functionality and to Web-based services. The main benefits of this development approach are familiarity of comparably many developers with AJAX –style Web development, re-use of a proven and powerful browser engine, and ease of creating mash-ups. Based on our experience from prototyping a Phonebook Mash-up on top of the S60 WebKit browser engine the main remaining work items are an AJAX framework, which allow creating Web user interfaces with a mobile friendly user interface and interaction style, a usable security solution for JavaScript access to local resources, and JavaScript performance improvements.
Website: assets.expectnation.com | Filesize: 1504kb
No of Page(s): 5
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Mashup Designer for Yahoo Pipes
Short Description
Mashups
It’s been called the essence of Web 2.0. It’s the ability to combine pieces of different web sites to create something new, something meaningful. Something for you and the people who have your tastes. Your social network. Not some mass market portal built by corporate programmers who think that they know you and your personal tastes. Referred to as a composite web site by some and Mashup site by others, we call it amalgamating web data through the process of transcoding. Whatever. It’s about giving you the data that you want on your mobile phone or desktop browser. It’s Web 2.0. It’s about you.
Website: altmobile.com | Filesize: 2731kb
No of Page(s): 31
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The RDF Book Mashup From Web APIs to a Web of Data
Short Description
1. Web APIs and Mashups
2. The RDF Book Mashup
3. Use Cases
1. Annotate HTML Pages with Book Mashup Data
2. Enrich other Data Sources with Book Mashup Data
3. Form a Part of the Emerging Web of Data
Website: www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de | Filesize: 1340kb
No of Page(s): 13
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iPhone and iPodtouch Programming Handling Touch Interactions and Events for Mobile Safari
Short Description
An essential part of any Web 2.0 application is the ability to respond to events triggered by the user or by a condition that occurs on the client: the clicking of a button, the pressing of a key, the scrolling of a window. While the user interacts with an HTML element, the entire document, or the browser window, JavaScript serves as the watchful eye behind the scenes that monitors all of this activity taking place and fires off events as they occur.
Website: media.wiley.com | Filesize: 104kb
No of Page(s): 4
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Safari Web Content Guide for iPhone
Short Description
Safari on iPhone, the application for browsing theweb on iPhone and iPod touch, is a fullweb browser running on a small handheld device with a high-resolution screen. This unique implementation of Safari responds to a finger as the input device and supports gestures for zooming and panning. It also renders webpages in portrait or landscape orientation. It contains many built-in features such as PDF viewing, video playback, and support for links to the native Phone, Mail, Maps, and YouTube applications.
Website: beta.devworld.apple.com | Filesize: 6113kb
No of Page(s): 96
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Top 10 Web 2.0 attack vectors
Short Description
Web 2.0 is the novel term coined for new generation Web applications. start.com, Google maps, Writely and MySpace.com are a few examples. The shifting technological landscape is the driving force behind these Web 2.0 applications. On the one hand are Web services that are empowering server-side core technology components and on the other hand are AJAX and Rich Internet Application (RIA) clients that are enhancing client-end interfaces in the browser itself. XML is making a significant impact at both presentation and transport (HTTP/HTTPS) layers. To some extent XML is replacing HTML at the presentation layer while SOAP is becoming the XML-based transport mechanism of choice.
Website: www.net-square.com | Filesize: 29kb
No of Page(s): 4
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Silverlight Overview
Short Description
Silverlight 1.1 will contain a substantial subset of the .NET 3.5 runtime (also running cross-browser and cross-platform) and will enable a new generation of smart/rich internet applications. Silverlight 1.1 has the potential to become an ASP.NET or even an HTML application killer, especially where sophisticated, feature-rich applications are involved. Silverlight will essentially host a full .NET runtime engine within a sandbox on the client computer and allow a .NET smart client application to run on any platform, all with the same deployment characteristics as a thin-client application (once the Silverlight plug-in has been installed). Essentially, Silverlight creates a “best of both worlds” environment, in which users can experience responsive, media-rich internet applications that leverage local computing power and resources, while administrators enjoy the benefits of ?notouch ? deployments and centralized control.
Website: www.devforce.com.au | Filesize: 39kb
No of Page(s): 3
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