{"id":4685,"date":"2009-07-28T15:38:40","date_gmt":"2009-07-28T22:38:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=4685"},"modified":"2009-07-29T10:40:52","modified_gmt":"2009-07-29T17:40:52","slug":"verizon-woos-developers-with-openness","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/4685\/","title":{"rendered":"Updated: Verizon Woos Developers With Openness"},"content":{"rendered":"
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I’ve been watching a live webcast of\u00a0 the Verizon Developer Community Conference<\/a> that is being held today in San Jose. The U.S.’s biggest mobile operator is saying that they are through with the walled garden and proprietary platforms.\u00a0 Developers are being promised that going forward it will be much easier, faster and less costly to get their apps to market on Verizon phones.<\/p>\n Key elements of the new developer initiative include:<\/p>\n This all sounds like a good deal for developers.\u00a0 Of course the devil in the details\u00a0 but I do see a lot I like, particularly the fact that it looks like relatively easy access will be provided to location and other device APIs.\u00a0 No testing and certification costs are a big win for developers too. That’s one Apple app store innovation that’s spreading like wildfire.<\/p>\n One disappointment is that although claiming to be moving beyond proprietary platforms, Verizon is not abandoning the proprietary BREW platform on its dumbphones.\u00a0 However, they are making it easier, cheaper and more financially viable\u00a0 to develop for BREW.\u00a0 John Stratton, CMO of Verizon, stated that these changes will finally make free BREW apps feasible. The lowering of barriers is certainly good news for BREW developers and should give a boost to the platform’s popularity with developers.\u00a0 Worldwide though, Java ME is the dominant standard for feature phone application development. I really wish Verizon had announced support for Java rather than fostering fragmentation by continuing to back a niche platform.<\/p>\n The widget platform, JIL <\/a>seems similar to the Opera, BONDI, Nokia WRT and Netfront widget platforms. All five are based\u00a0 on JavaScript and XML and incorporate elements of the W3C’s incomplete Web Widget specification.\u00a0 Unfortunately it looks like there is no inter-opperability between the five widget platforms and widgets will have to be re-written for each.\u00a0 Argh!, more fragmentation.<\/p>\n I’m curious about Vodafone’s participation in JIL.\u00a0 Voda is a part owner of Verizon and has been supporting the Opera Widget platform, even sponsoring an Opera\u00a0 Widget developer contest with a \u00a320,000 grand prize earlier this year<\/a>.\u00a0 Is Vodafone abandoning Opera for JIL or is Opera a stealth partner of JIL?\u00a0 I hope to have a chance to ask Opera CEO Jon von Tetzchner about that at the Opera Tweetup in San Francisco <\/a>this evening.<\/p>\n Update:<\/span> Jon told me that he is familiar with JIL, they aren’t a partner but that Opera is working to to bring all the Widget platforms including JIL, Bondi, Nokia and Netfront together under a common W3C Widget specification. That’s a great goal and I hope it’s achieved, interoperability is in everyone’s best interest including vendors, developers and users.<\/p>\n I’m also wondering about those 60 new 3rd party devices that Verizon is allowing on their network.\u00a0 Is there a list of them somewhere? \u00a0 I haven’t seen any advertised. Are they actually on the market? I really wish CDMA networks were as open as GSM. Why can’t we just use any FCC approved CDMA handset that supports the proper bands on Verizon?\u00a0 Now that would be open.<\/p>\n Still all griping aside, it really does look like Verizon is serious about opening up their heretofore rather closed world.\u00a0 It’s the smart thing to do.\u00a0 Apps are a huge driver of handset sales these days.\u00a0 Making development and getting to market easier, cheaper and faster should make a lot more apps will be available on Verizon phones.\u00a0 I looking forward to seeing how it all pans out.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I’ve been watching a live webcast of\u00a0 the Verizon Developer Community Conference that is being held today in San Jose. The U.S.’s biggest mobile operator is saying that they are through with the walled garden and proprietary platforms.\u00a0 Developers are being promised that going forward it will be much easier, faster and less costly to get their apps to market on Verizon phones. Key elements of the new developer initiative include: A new vCast Application Store launching by year end … Continue reading \n