Mobile 2.0 Conference: Twitter List
I've created a list of those speakers and attendants of the Mobile 2.0 Conference who are using Twitter here: http://bit.ly/listmob20. Let me know if you're attending / speaking but not yet on there (@forcevive).
On the web - on the move
I've created a list of those speakers and attendants of the Mobile 2.0 Conference who are using Twitter here: http://bit.ly/listmob20. Let me know if you're attending / speaking but not yet on there (@forcevive).
0 Comments Tags: Berlin, conference, list, mobile, twitter
Tomorrow, the Mobile 2.0 Conference kicks off in Berlin (venue). The first day is dedicated to a seminar on mobile social networks, followed by two conference days, each broken down ito three major subject areas (day 1: market analysis, mobile internet usage and service development, devices and mobile app stores; day 2: mobile advertising, mobile content, mobile gaming/video/tv).
One talk and a panel discussion look especially promising to everyone interested in the future of mobile - and mobile content in particular:
0 Comments Tags: Berlin, conference, content, future, location based services, mobile
Some time ago, I wrote about Vic Gundotra's (Google) and Ilja Laur's (GetJar) views on web apps vs. native applications and the role that the different platforms play (here and here).
Yesterday, Microsoft's chief software architect Ray Ozzie and Bob Muglia weighed in on the subject:
- It’s not the applications available on the various platforms that will be the differentiators.
- All the apps that count will be ported to every one of them [the platforms].
- Mobile apps require very little development, so it’s much easier to bring them onto every platform.
It makes sense for many developers to use HTML, especially as it becomes more powerful, but there will always be opportunities for people to build apps that go beyond what standards can do.
0 Comments Tags: applications, future, mobile, mobile web