Archive for October 28th, 2008

Browser Media Develops Iphone Application For Livingsocial

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

BrowserMedia is pleased to announce its participation in the release of an iPhone application for LivingSocial, a social discovery and cataloging network that allows more than 6.8 million users to review and share their favorite movies, books, games, music, restaurants and beer.

BrowserMedia worked closely with the LivingSocial team to develop an iPhone application front-end to their existing social networking platform. Features of the application include account integration via webservices, the ability to review, rate and share, the ability to take and upload photographs, the ability to search and browse reviews, integrated recommendations, and the ability to browse friend profiles and review feeds.

Kerry Gunther, President and CEO of BrowserMedia, said, “Native iPhone application development is an emerging technology that can expand customer reach and give you an edge over your competition. We’re especially proud of the co-development of LivingSocial’s iPhone application and the collaborative process with our friends at LivingSocial that led to its development.”

BrowserMedia’s dedicated iPhone technology practice group provides an end-to-end solution for native iPhone application development. Using an agile development approach, BrowserMedia’s development offering includes strategic assessment and product placement recommendations, information architecture, creative services, and Cocoa software development. Since the Apple iPhone SDK was released on March 6, 2008, BrowserMedia has successfully developed more than a half-dozen applications.

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Sitemasher Offers Free Dev Environment To Partners

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Now that they have officially released their website development platform, Sitemasher has put together a Partner Program designed to help web development and marketing firms quickly build customer websites using it.

CMSWire covered the news of the Sitemasher Web Development Platform an all inclusive platform offering a website builder, content management, analytics, SEO and managed hosting in one neat little package. Although not something groundbreaking, we did acknowledge it as a solution for small to mid-sized companies trying to get something off the ground.

Sitemasher also appears to have recognized another potential market that of the basement website developer and non-technical kind. It has opened up a partnership program for web development and marketing firms who want to quickly build websites for their customers.

“We strive to help design, development and marketing firms find ways to make money faster. Most are artists and designers at heart, not technologists. By removing the technology side and giving them powerful design tools, they can increase revenues, profitability and even reach out to new markets,” said Sitemasher Vice President of Marketing Nicole Denil.

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Outsource Web Development Projects At Perceptionsystem

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Perceptionsystem, the India based web development company is known for
the value of their web development services for business houses. The company has started to offer a range of outsourcing services in all areas of web development specially designed to meet the diverse needs of small businesses.

Perceptionsystem has a dedicated and experience team for web development projects, dynamic websites, ecommerce shopping cart, database designs etc. Our PHP and .NET developers have expertise in open source customization, integration, template integration, joomla content management and more.

Perceptionsystem use Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP) and ASP.Net which provides a framework for building dynamic web applications which enable Internet and Intranet applications to be interactive.

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Yahoo Introduces Social Developer Platform

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Yahoo on Tuesday introduced its Yahoo Open Strategy (Y!OS) 1.0 Developer Release, a set of programming resources to help developers to build social applications for use on Yahoo.

“At a high level, we’re rolling out a social platform that will draw on the hundreds of millions of connections on Yahoo everything from random encounters with someone who commented on the same photo as you, to deep connections you have with friends who know nearly everything about you,” said Jay Rossiter, head of Yahoo Open Strategy, in a blog post. “By using the social contacts you already have on Yahoo through Mail, Messenger, Flickr, Finance, Fantasy Sports, etc.

Second, there’s Yahoo Query Language (YQL), a new Web service API for accessing other Web services using a SQL-style query language, rather than a lower-level programming code. Yahoo describes it as “a command-line version of Pipes,” Yahoo’s visual programming system for mashing up and remixing Web data, like RSS feeds.

Third, there’s the Yahoo Application Platform (YAP), a set of software and services to build applications that run on Yahoo. It includes a browser-based development environment, various APIs and Web services, a distribution and discovery infrastructure, and a runtime and rendering environment.

The week before that, Yahoo released its “universal profile,” a reworked identity scheme for managing personal information and activities within Yahoo’s rewired social infrastructure.

Over the coming months, Yahoo expects newly developed social applications to make the experience of using Yahoo more like Facebook or MySpace. Its goal is to drive more traffic to Yahoo and its partners and to encourage deeper engagement. If Yahoo is successful in doing so, it should generate more ad revenue as a result.

Yahoo aims to avoid some of the privacy pitfalls into which social networks like Facebook have stumbled. “We’ve done all of this in a way that keeps Yahoo as safe and secure as ever, while also building in full privacy and permission control so you’ll have complete control over things like what you broadcast publicly and what information you share with third-party sites, etc.,” said Rossiter.

Time will tell whether Yahoo can open up its infrastructure without opening potential vulnerabilities.

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One E-Commerce Company Reaches Out In The Economic Downturn

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Unlike other businesses who find they are restructuring, and downsizing from the latest news on Wall Street, Datalis Solutions Corporation, provider of e-commerce, SEO and website development services is boldly moving forward with the launch of a new division, Affordable E Solutions, (AES).

As affordable website and business launch consultants; Affordable E Solutions wants to help new and existing e-commerce companies survive and give them the websites and guidance they need, in order to find new opportunities created by current economic conditions. AES are advocates for start up e-commerce businesses, small businesses and companies who want to take the next step in either creating websites or changing their current websites.

Affordable E Solutions is helping businesses realize that you can get that “customized professional website look and feel” and full search engine optimization (SEO) capability for your company at a reasonable cost.
“With the down turn in the economy, and more people moving to open up their own e-commerce sites, AES has found a strong demand from customers in all industries seeking a company who understand website development, SEO, and how to make it customized for their individual needs. The demand of the emerging E-Commerce market for the web and SEO services that AES offers has never been stronger.

AES has also adopted the unusual strategy of having its professionals offer a no-cost consultation to business owners who are looking for a business roadmap, idea, strategy, or solution to help benefit their business. Most importantly is for AES to develop long term relationships with its new clients.

Our marketing research shows that the amount of new e-commerce companies is increasing each month, and that we can expect an explosion of people wanting to get into the e-commerce market as a result of the current tumultuous economy. AES has found that the companies they help in the startup and fledgling stages actually go on to be counted among their best clients. For AES, this is an investment in our future business.” said Scott Peters, President and CEO for Affordable E Solutions.

One such client is Silver Age Surfers a startup e-commerce business targeting the Baby Boomer generation. Anne Hardy, President said, “AES really understood our needs and their expertise extends beyond website development. We relied on them for help with our strategic planning as we went forward developing the business. Their ability to be flexible, responsive and, most importantly affordable, are the key reasons we selected them.”

Halloween and costume retailer, Costume Super Center, CTO, John Coniglio said, “We retained AES more than a year ago for customized website work to enhance our customer buyer experience. It was a good decision and the services provided by AES had a positive impact on our sales projections.”
Kevin Leville, President and CEO of Eat Right America, an advocate of healthy eating habits and lifestyle choices said, “AES is a company with the knowledge and skill sets to quickly assess a company’s needs and design and develop a website that gives visitors a great on-line experience. We are continuing to retain their services due to their ability to work within our budget and help keep us moving even in these tough times where credit and venture capital monies are tight.”

“Affordable E Solutions designed its business to provide strong services to new and existing startups and ongoing e-commerce business ventures that do not want to pay the high costs of website and SEO development.” said Scott Peters, CEO, adding, “We are not just another provider; we offer companies the ability to have a professional website look and improved SEO at an affordable cost.”

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Azure Aimed At Moving Enterprises To Web

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

While much will be said about Microsoft’s cloud-computing strategy introduced Monday, at the heart of Windows Azure is a fairly simple goal: inspire corporate developers to rethink the way they develop software so applications can take better advantage of the Web.

Microsoft is trying to differentiate its Azure cloud-based development environment, unveiled in a keynote at the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles, from competitive offerings like Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) by saying Azure does more than just take traditional software and put it in the cloud.

In an interview Monday at the conference, Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie described how traditionally software has been built according to a scale-up model, which isn’t practical for the current era of the Web, when applications must be flexible and accessible to a large number of users both inside and outside the corporate firewall.

“The systems we’ve built for enterprises are really the scale-up model,” he said. “We build a system and we try to add hardware to make it get bigger and bigger and support bigger and bigger enterprises, but eventually that kind of falls apart.”

With Azure, developers can build software in a scale-out model, which Ozzie described using an analogy involving tennis balls, and how a person or persons might handle them if someone was throwing balls at them.

“Let’s say [someone] throws 100 balls at me,” he said. “There are limits to the scale-up model and if I fail, all the balls will fall to the ground.”

However, in a scale-out model, an application can distribute the task of catching the balls, which gives it more flexibility, Ozzie said. “There’s a chance that by just adding more people, we can take any number of balls that he’ll throw at us. And if one falls down, then maybe the guy next to him will pick it up, but he’ll keep going.”

Azure, then, allows developers to build applications according to this model, which means an application won’t break down as it tries to process all the different connections to users behind the firewall, on the Internet and to myriad devices that the current wave of Web applications must juggle.

Ozzie used the example of Microsoft’s Hotmail e-mail service as an application developed according to a scale-out model because the company knew from the beginning it would have to serve millions of users coming in from various connected environments. However, it didn’t build its e-mail server software, Exchange, in this way, and had to rearchitect the application later to fit this development model, he said.

“There’s a process you use to take an enterprise app and change it and rethink it to be that broad, horizontal thing,” Ozzie said. “We’ve done that with Exchange, and we’re doing that with more and more.”

In offering a cloud development and deployment platform, Microsoft has a harder task than competitors like Amazon or Salesforce.com, both of which started their businesses on the Web. With its software legacy, Microsoft has to tend to millions of developers who use its platforms to build software meant to live on premise in a corporate data center while balancing the rapidly evolving needs of more sophisticated Web applications.

James Governor, principal analyst for analyst firm RedMonk, had a more simplistic and tongue-in-cheek description of the scale-out model Azure is trying to provide for corporate applications, comparing it to “wearing your underpants on the outside of your clothes.”

Developers need to find a way to expose their applications to as many users as possible but still keep the security, scalability and other factors intrinsic to corporate computing environments in mind, he said.

Pitney Bowes Management Services, a subsidiary of Pitney Bowes that outsources business services such as mailing, communications and shipping to Fortune 1000 companies, is one company that is facing this problem. Pitney Bowes Management Services is working with Microsoft to test a version of its dMail digital mail conversion service running on Azure.

Terry Doeberl, director of business development for Pitney Bowes Management Services, said one benefit to a Web-based development model for applications is that it will make applications independent of the desktop operating systems, which he called “the bane of many companies’ existences” because of how difficult it can be to install new applications across desktop PCs.

As described by Microsoft, Azure abstracts the application from the OS using virtualization technology, which means the two can act independently of each other.

Doeberl said the separation between the application and the OS also simplifies the maintenance of support of individual desktop users while making the applications more accessible from mobile devices.

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