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In spite of the continued misgivings on the part of some analysts and CIOs, the iPhone and its 140-thousand strong (gorilla of an) App Store continue to make their presence known throughout the business world and in the enterprise. In other words, the iPhone is here to stay whether IT likes or not.
IDC recently reported that the iPhone accounted for 14.4 percent of the global smartphone market last year, up from a little over 9 percent in 2008--remarkable for a mobile platform that hit the market a mere 2.5 years ago. Research In Motion (RIM), which came in second with 19.2 percent in 2009, grew its share by 4.2 percent over last year (see table below).
Nokia continued to hold an impressive lead over its two closest rivals, commanding a 38.2 percent share of shipments. However, unlike Apple and RIM, Nokia's piece of the smartphone pie shrank by nearly two percentage points from 2008.So what's IT and a company's internal development department to do to support the growing iPhone presence? And how can they leverage the iPhone itself to better perform their daily information technology tasks?
Let us know what you think.
As Apple did with the iPhone a few year ago, the company took the huge viewership opportunity of the Oscars last night to roll out its first television ad for the iPad (see above) The commercial showed viewers a number of tasks they can do with Apple's tablet. It was set to the music of Blue Van's "There Goes My Love."
The eagle-eyed out there noticed that Apple's CEO, Steve Jobs, didn't view the Oscars and his company's ad from home like the most of the rest of us. Instead, he watched the Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin-hosted show live in the Kodak Theatre.
And, as tuaw points out, the iPad ad may have revealed eBook pricing for apple's tablet PC. Not at all unimportant finding, as Apple has Amazon's Kindle eBook reader, among any number of other types of gadgets, squarely in its sights with the iPad and the device's iBooks app. The cost of eBooks for the iPad will, apparently, range from $8 to $15.
Network attached storage (NAS) servers company Synology America Corp has launched the latest edition of its DiskStation Manager (DSM) solution). Version 2.3 includes a number of new features, such as support for encryption, the easier setup of RAID volumes, backup to the Cloud, and--most importantly to readers of this blog--support for video surveillance of your storage setup through a new iPhone application. So, with the new app, called DS cam, Synology customers who use the company's Surveillance Station solution with their DiskStations can now view live and recorded events, as well as take snapshots, from their IP cameras on their iPhone. See here to learn more about the iPhone app and here to learn more about the overall DiskStation Upgrade.
SplashData, which recently acquired iambic, let us know today that it plans to update the latter's popular PIM app for the iPhone, Agendus, to version 2.0. According to the correspondence, the application will receive a major interface makeover and the addition of many new features. No other details about the upgrade were given. We expect to heare more from SplashData about Agendus 2.0 next month.
Now on version 1.2, Agenus, long available for other smartphone platforms, first found its way to the iPhone and iPod touch last summer. The edition for Apple's mobile devices ($4.99, available here), enhances and extends the built-in iPhone Contacts App while introducing its own comprehensive Task management function. It includes a Today View, a Task List View, a Compact and Expanded Contact Views, and features like Contact Linking, One Tap Dial / Email, quick item deletion, task categories, colors, grouping and filtering, over-the-air services such as integrated weather forecasts, and more.
Shortly after the release of Agendus 1.0, iambic updated the app to version 1.01, which introduced over thirty improvements, including the addition of full landscape support in all views and dialogs, iPhone OS 3.0 compatibility, and various new sorting, grouping and display options for both Contact and Task related views (such as priority indicator, due date, default categories, etc.). An added "services" preference panel allowed users to have the weather location automatically determined, as well as to specify a twitter client for the "share on twitter" functionality.
Last month, the developer rolled out an upgrade to Agendus 1.2. See a comprehensive list of new features and enhancements after the break.
Back in January, Datviz updated the Documets To Go to version 3.0, making it the only mobile Office application for the iPhone to support the viewing and editing of all three Office formats (Word, Excel and PowerPoint). It has now added support for Google Docs with the release of Documents to Go Premium 3.1.
According to the developer, access to the Cloud has become more and more important to its customers. So, with Document's 3.1, it is starting off support for these types of remote services, with Google Docs access.
As a result, the mobile office suite now lets:
o Download, view & edit your files from Google Docs directly in DocsToGoo Save and synchronize changes back to Google Docs
o Upload files to Google Docs from your iPhone or iPod touch
Access multiple Exchange and Gmail accounts
Freeze rows or columns in spreadsheets
Documents To Go Premium goes for $14.99 here. All those who purchased a previous version will receive a free update to version 3.0. In addition, DataViz has submitted an update (also version 3.1) for its base "Documents To Go" product ($9.99, available here). At this time, it is "In Review" and once approved, all those who purchased a previous version of "Documents To Go" will receive it for free. This update adds: o Support for Gmail attachments
o Editing/viewing attachments using Docs To Go
o Freezing rows or columns in spreadsheets
o An In-App purchase option to upgrade to the Premium version
Nuance this week announced the extension of its Dragon NaturallySpeaking voice recognition technology for smartphones, including the iPhone, to the healthcare industry. Already popular in consumer apps for the iPhone (Dragon Dictation and Dragon Search), the new apps for physicians, nurses and other healthcare workers, such as therapists, are designed to help practitioners more efficiently access clinical information and document patient encounters using their mobile devices.
The company is previewing these voice-powered Dragon Medical Mobile technologies and solutions at Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society conference in Atlanta. It plans to roll them out throughout 2010, beginning in the spring.
See an overview of Nuance's conference roll out after the break.
Rhomobile has introduced Rhodes Elite Partners, a group of select mobile development shops who use the company's Rhodes "write once run on many" framework to create native apps for all leading smartphones, including iPhone, BlackBerry, Android, Windows Mobile and Symbian.
With the Rhodes platform developers czn use their existing HTML and Ruby knowledge to build native mobile applications, which take full advantage of smartphone capabilities such as GPS, PIM data, geo-location and camera. Using Rhomobile's RhoSync, users of Rhodes-based applications can work with their synchronized local data even when they are offline and disconnected.
"I am very proud to introduce the Rhodes Elite Partner network," said Adam Blum, CEO of Rhomobile, in a statement. "These are development shops that are not only using Rhodes to build native smartphone apps for their clients, but enabling their clients through training and ongoing support, to properly execute a mobile solution within their company."
Here is a list of Rhodes Features:
- Built from the ground up to leverage smartphones in the enterprise- Allows developers to write app interface in Ruby and HTML and simultaneously build as native apps (not web apps) for all smartphones
- Support for Push Synchronized Data on iPhone and BlackBerry
- Built-in tools for test-driven development
- Database-based event logging
- Interactive debugger (Android/iPhone emulators)
- Allows users to work with synced local data for rapid access and ease of operation when disconnected or offline
-- Full access to device capabilities: GPS, audio and video, PIM contacts, native mapping, camera Last week, Rhomobile updated Rhodes with new features such as the ability to debug in real-time and support for database-based logging. Another addition to Rhodes is support for the BlackBerry Java Development Environment v5.0, native mapping for BlackBerry and an API for returning screen size. The screensize API enables developers to conditionally handle different screen sizes smoothly, an important tool when approaching diverse platform environments including the BlackBerry and iPad, according to Rhomobile. After the break is a comprehensive list of new and existing Rhodes features.
Real-estate site Zillow.com today updated its free iPhone app. New features allow users to share Zillow's data on over 93 million U.S. homes using social media such as Facebook and Twitter. Additionally, home shoppers can now search and find homes for rent in along with homes for sale, recently-sold homes and Make Me Move listings.
Specific features in the updated version of the Zillow iPhone App include:
According to a recent survey by Harris Interactive , 25 percent of people who plan to move in the next three years say they will simultaneously shop for both homes for sale and homes for rent. Unique to Zillow, home shoppers can set search filters by home price or monthly payment, and simultaneously find both for sale and for rent homes within a price range they can afford.
Good.iWare's released an update to its GoodReader document viewer for the iPhpne that, for the first time, makes it not just a viewer but a document editor as well. With version 2.6, GoodReader now offers the ability to edit TXT files. Another new feature is the ability to import and export pictures to amd from the iPhone's Photo Album. GoodReader is available as a free, Lite, version and $0.99 paid edition. GoodReader Lite (available here) is identical to the full version in number of features, but limits the user to storing five files at any given time. The full version is available here.
Television networks are finding the iPhone a great way to promote their shows and get viewers more directly involved. The latest cable network to do so is TLC. Available here, TLC's newiPhonethe app sports video clips from the network's top shows, including Cake Boss, What Not to Wear, Little People, Big World and 19 Kids and Counting . It also allows users to share clips via email, Facebook and Twitter. Additional features include access to tips and insider perspectives from favorite TLC personalities and access to Lifestyle Guides covering Food, Family, Weddings, Style and Home. Discovery Communications, the company responsible for TLC, worked with Zumobi to create the iPhone app.

