Saturday Feb 25, 2012 at 02:23 AM | Posted by: tresw | Category: mobile | Windows 8

By Tres Watkins

You’ve probably seen this: A young, very young, child opens a print magazine and presses her fingers against the paper, brushing against a model’s face, swiping from left to right. Then the child looks to what we assume is some trusted adult off camera. The young one has a look of dismay—the images, icons, and other objects, why don’t they move?

This popular YouTube video epitomizes the expectations tomorrow’s pupils will have regarding not just why, but how they are educated. It brings to light the powerful role mobile devices will play in learning. It reminds today’s developers that the proliferation of mobile devices in the social sphere will not only migrate to the domain of enterprise, but to that of education as well.

A fact that brings us to Apple, who has education in their sights, and how their movement into schools and universities appears to be well-received by academia, but why?

Is it due the bounty of educational offerings found in iBooks 2 and iTunes U? Perhaps not. As Time.com blogger Jared Newman points out, right now there are not nearly enough textbooks available to accommodate most schools’ curriculums. Publishers won’t create iBook textbooks until iPads are in most institutions, and those institutions won’t be able to justify spending on iPads until there’s a plethora of textbooks.

Is education’s propensity toward the iPad brought on by the discount received when a school buys in bulk? Probably not. For now, the discount schools receive is the same as any student—the same you and I would receive if we were enrolled in school. Even with the discount, you’ll still find that other devices are less expensive.

Does it simply suffice to say that Apple is the best tablet on the market—that its dominance in the consumer sector justifies its pending overtake of education? Well, what one declares best tablet depends on what you need that tablet to do. For integration with iPods, iPhones, and Apple TV, yes, iPad wins. But think about this: Deploying custom apps is easier with other devices. A device that runs on Android, for example, would more readily allow a university to deploy its own applications—it would be easier for students to create and test apps written in class.

Other Drawbacks

Flash isn’t supported. I know there are technical justifications for this, but it is still a technology widely used across the Web; does it deserve to be completely ignored? Like it or not, a lot of information isn’t accessible right now if one averts his or her eyes from Flash.

Finally, there is the issue of screen size. If you choose iOS as the educational standard, then you will always be bound to Apple hardware, whereas other platforms provide more options in screen size. For some academic purposes, a screen as small as the Kindle Fire would suffice. Other students might need a device with a louder speaker than that found on the iPad.

And let’s not forget another important factor—one that hasn’t arrived yet—Windows 8.

Microsoft will launch into the tablet scene with great deliberation, and it will do so already having in its arsenal powerful enterprise tools, ones we all know—Word, Excel, Outlook, etc.

Many of you, and I include myself, remember the value you placed on the Office suite when you were in school. That hasn’t changed.

Microsoft products are still the business tools of choice for most companies. If we acknowledge that part of a school’s mission is to prepare students for entry into the workplace, then is it too farfetched to give students a device capable of running Microsoft products?

Let’s not forget, for a long time Apple has forgone developing powerful business apps; instead, they’ve attended more to the needs of musicians, music fans, moviegoers—not so much to accountants and brokers.

Without any doubt or reservation, we can say that tablets will facilitate one of the most fundamental changes in education since the bound book itself. There should be no hesitation in getting these devices in the hands of students, but as school districts and universities invest in such instruments, ones that will advance their educational agendas, they should base their decisions on what is pragmatic, not what is popular.

Wednesday Feb 1, 2012 at 01:15 AM | Posted by: tresw | Category: ASP.NET MVC | C# | mobile | Mobile MVC | Reporting / Back Office

We are starting 2012 off with a bang…Essential Studio 2012 Volume 1 has been released!

At Syncfusion, our Mobile MVC platform is on the forefront of our development efforts. The Essential Studio 2012 Volume 1 release contains the largest ASP.NET MVC suite for mobile with 12 new controls. Our customers can now develop with the highly anticipated cross-platform mobile grid and the HTML 5 gauge. Samples of our new controls are available for users to interact with. We have expanded the HTML 5 Gauge for ASP.NET to include digital and rolling gauges. Our HTML 5 efforts were focused around our customers who can now take advantage of the high performance, ease of user interactivity, and stunning visuals enabled by the HTML 5 CANVAS element. Other features include:

In the video below, Vice President Daniel Jebaraj talks about some of the highlights of this release.

Everything we do here at Syncfusion is to make application development faster, easier, and sleeker. We based our latest and greatest features on customer requests. Yes, we listen and react so that we can be the best development partner on the market. Download the latest evaluation on our website.

Tuesday Dec 13, 2011 at 11:05 PM | Posted by: tresw | Category: ASP.NET MVC | mobile | Mobile MVC | Windows Phone 7

By Tres Watkins

We just wrapped up exhibiting at Visual Studio Live! Orlando, an event we sponsored with Microsoft. Being exhibiting sponsors, we went in with the mindset that this would be an exercise in disseminating information about our products—delivering the Syncfusion message. By the end of the week, after having spoken to so many developers not just about our products, but about their projects, predictions, and points of pain, it became clear that this event was more so an exchange of ideas than a broadcast of messaging.

This was the first VS Live! event I had personally attended. Going into the event, I knew we would spend substantial time talking about what we, Syncfusion, do as a component vendor. I anticipated conversing about the needs of today’s developers—the features being sought and the technologies being used. I was, however, pleasantly surprised at the number of conversations I had concerning the core reason everyone was in attendance in the first place—their current projects.

This past week I heard of a multitude of cases where .NET was being used to address the needs of some highly specialized sectors. Mapping in oil and gas, tracking genomes in seed breeding, creating an automated battery of questions for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) used in psychiatry and psychology—these were just a few that stood out amid a myriad of others spanning from warehouse management to book publishing.

What I found most remarkable in talking with many developers, working in multiple sectors on a multitude of solutions, is that the conversion would inevitably come to close on one phrase: “But now we’re thinking about mobile.” And upon that point, all eyes would drift to the tablets displayed at our table, as if the promise of a better tomorrow were held within that slim design.

And perhaps it is.

The one common element I found in the business requirements of all these cases, spanning numerous industries, is that each had users roving in the field; it’s those users who want, and are coming to expect, that mobile devices will meet their business needs at work as readily as they have met their personal needs at home.

Throughout the halls of VS Live!, “mobile” was the resounding cry, and it’s my understanding that the sessions on Web and mobile apps garnered heavy interest. So, if we’ve all signed onto mobile, the question now must be how to go forward with it.

We’ll be publishing a series of articles over the coming weeks that will address how to take your current assets from desktop to mobile devices. If you’d like to follow those articles as they are released, subscribe to the RSS feed for this blog; I’ll be posting notifications as articles roll out.

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