1. Web Vision for Mobile (April 1, 2010)
Read the rest of this entry »
(April 1, 2010) Connie Chan provides an introduction to the course. Ben Galbraith then gives an overview of web application development. Palm executives including VP, Directors, and Senior Product Managers lead a course on mobile application development on the WebOS. Students have the unique opportunity to attain the technical knowledge needed to create their own apps, get insider information about the application submission process at companies like Apple and Palm, and network with various members of Palm’s executive team. Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford Engineering: soe.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com
Are the lecture slides available: would be of great help following the lecture.
very interesting honestly and i usually get bored easily so
Thank you for this series. Would it be possible to sort the playlist of videos in the class? That would make it easier to watch.
only android and nokia will survive and the iphone will be a past era
Great lecture tnx
from Israeli user
Congratulations Ben!! it’s simply excellent !!!
Excellent!!! Keep them coming.
Keep the videos coming!! I sure hope videos from Palm Developer Day shows up also as I’m not able to make it because of work. Thank You! Great Video!
Fantastic.
Great introductory class!! … can’t wait for the next videos!!
Ben’s pitch about developing HTML5 for Palm is nice, but unfortunately, in practice, WebOS’s HTML5 capabilities are actually way behind the iPhone and now Android – no touch events, web workers, offline support, appcache, or geolocation (among other things). Honestly, it’s been sort of a bummer.
ben you are too cool a teacher!!!
Can you guys tag your videos by class or build playlists for the same class??
This was very interesting. Web design is not my thing but I’m looking forward to all these technologies being deployed in the regular web.
audio is off slightly
rofl i guess he hasnt used QT(c++) tex(labels, combo box, etc…) its no pain. Unless a programmer is too stuck up to switch away from emacs or unintelligent text editors.