I was just looking at the Android SDK web site last night.  It's not that I'm 
interested in developing stand-alone or thick-client applications for Droid, but 
I read that the emulator bundled with the SDK also supports browser emulation. 
 That may work better for me initially.  I don't have a mobile device to develop 
/ test with yet.
Our desktop user interfaces would simply not be suitable for cell phone screens; 
they're barely passable on iPad, which I played with for a few minutes at the 
Apple store.  We pack a lot of data and navigation in a minimum 1024X768 
footprint.  But we're interested in offering appropriately sized data inquiry 
and maintenance panels for mobile devices, so that parents, students, teachers, 
and administrators might use their client of choice to access the IBM i 
database.  We're also interested in using HTML 5 / CSS 3 elements and styles 
which mobile devices allegedly support.
I initially worried about the amount of additional programming that might be 
required to support both desktop and mobile clients.  But now I don't see that 
as a major hurdle.
-Nathan
From: Joe Pluta <joepluta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries <web400@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sat, October 9, 2010 2:38:26 PM
Subject: Re: [WEB400] Microsoft .NET frontending IBM i
Nathan Andelin wrote:
I'm interested in supporting mobile browsers, and one thing that fuels that 
interest is that we listened to industry thought leaders about modularizing 
code 
under an MVC model, and we can now see potentially across-the-board reuse of 
our 
server components to support mobile devices in addition to desktop clients.
 
Well theoretically at least everything you do for the web is available 
for the mobile devices, at least in the sense that most devices have 
browsers.  As long as you code to industry standard browser 
functionality and not IE, you're going to be golden, with the caveat 
that you half to code for smaller screens.
The real interesting bit though will be the thick client mobile 
application.  I'm sticking with Android for the time being simply 
because it's all about Java (yet one more reason Java is the best 
language for an RPG programmer to learn).  I may delve back into the 
iPhone, but for now the Droid is cool - especially since you can 
download and install a complete Droid emulation environment and SDK for 
free!
Joe
      
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