The mouse was the
original idea of Doug
Engelbart who was the
head of the Augmentation
Research Center (ARC) at
Stanford Research
Institute. Engelbart's
philosophy is best
embodied, in my opinion,
in the design of another
device that he invented,
the five-finger keyboard
- with keys like a piano,
used by one hand. The
problem was, Engelbart's
five-finger keyboard and
mouse combination was
very difficult to learn.
I want to thank everyone
who showed up to share my
enthusiasm for the iPhone
as it is, what I believe,
the mobile development
platform to target. I
also want to thank those
people who tolerated my
evasiveness and lack of
detail during the SDK
session. As I've said
before, just because
everybody else on the
internet has no problem
violating NDAs, when I
click 'Agree', I know
what I am agreeing to and
I intend to stick to that
agreement.
This session will provide
attendees with an
overview of the iPhone
SDK, including discussion
of the App Store, Apple's
planned distribution
channel for SDK
applications. Keep in
mind that the contents of
the SDK and experiences
while using it are
covered under NDA, so be
prepared for me to talk
in generics and leave out
specific details that
might be covered by the
NDA. I am planning on
providing a quick
introduction to
Objective-C for those
attendees who may have
never seen it and might
be worried that it will
be difficult to code in
(it isn't!).
They're termed 'early
adopters.' They're the
early birds who snap up
the latest wireless
devices like Apple's
breakthrough iPhone.
These high-tech consumer
electronics' enthusiasts
are critical to a new
product's success because
their opinions can often
make or break a new
product based on their
satisfaction with its
reliability and its
ability to live up to its
claims. If you make and
market these gadgets, you
must ensure they don't
fly the coop - and if
they do, that they leave
content.
Today's executives are on
the move and they need to
be able to run their
companies remotely.
Mobile business
intelligence (BI)
applications allow them
to access critical
corporate data from their
laptops, smart phones,
and PDAs. The iPhone
promises to deliver
information on an even
more compact and
versatile device. But can
BI vendors make it work
with the information
executives depend on?
Oct. 15, 2007 11:00 AM Reads: 4,416
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