A 2 minute video showing our iPhone application integrating with Microsoft’s Commerce Server 2009 is now up on youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FIALvF1GpE
DSI blog on .Net, Java and technology in general
A 2 minute video showing our iPhone application integrating with Microsoft’s Commerce Server 2009 is now up on youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FIALvF1GpE
The iDeal A Day iPhone applications (we now have a family of iPhone applications - more on this later) has been integrated with Pinch Media analytics. Some sample screen shots are attached (now onto Omniture integration!).
The latest generation of iPhones and mobile phones offer screen sizes and functionality that now makes mobile commerce a viable channel for multi-channel retailers. We have taken a major step into this mobile commerce world with our new ‘iDeal A Day’ iPhone application.
Essentially ‘iDeal A Day’ sells one item per offer until it is sold out or until the deal is replaced. The deal is presented to the iPhone user and with a few simple taps the purchase is made. On the checkout page ‘iDeal A Day’ confirms the order plus gives customers a sneak peak of the following deal, ahead of other bargain hunters!
The application can be branded to each particular retailer and lets online stores easily establish their mobile presence using their existing web assets. The ‘iDeal A Day’ concept reflects just one implementation of a promotion type and can be customised to suit the individual retailers’ offers.
Take a look at a short demo of ‘iDeal A Day’ on the iPhone here: iDeal A Day iPhone Application Demo
YouTube is becoming accessible through your mobile phone using http://m.youtube.com and their new Mobile Java application. The application is currently in beta and is only available to US and UK users. It is supported by J2ME MIDP2 capable devices.
This is a great news for the mobile Java community. I hope this will bring YouTube a bigger coverage and Java a very successful case study for mobile applications.
I’m not sure how this application will survive when Android is adopted. But this is unlikely to happen overnight. And maybe they’re already working on an Android version of the application.
- Yagiz Erkan -
Technorati Tags: YouTube, Mobile Java, J2ME, MIDP2, Android