Wow!
Wow!
The iPhone is a real computer, running Mac OSX.
With the expertise that we already got building FiveMac, we may deliver some interesting development tools for the iPhone and the FiveWin users ![]()
Congratulations, Antonio. Does this mean you can run programs we have developed for the pocketPC after compiling with FW for MAC on a iPhone?
Best regards,
Otto
Otto,
This means that we have the capability to build business applications for the iPhone, same as we can build them for the Pocket PC using FWPPC.
The FiveWin syntax is the same for Windows, Pocket PC, Linux, Mac and iPhone (next). So if you know FiveWin then you are able to develop a business application in any modern platform.
Does FTDN include FiveMac, PocketPC and will it include future iPhone? Though these three is no commercial interest, I am very much attracted to go for the great Mac software and also try pocket pc and iphone. ( right now we cant get iphone in our country though )
NageswaraRao,
Upon request, we can replace and include the products that you may need into the FTDN
Antonio,
>Look at the graphics quality of the iPhone GUI:
Nice! Are these screenshots taken on the iPone or are you developing for the iPhone on a PC or MAC using some iPhone emulation software?
James
James,
The screenshots are taken on the iPhone. There are no emulators available yet.
I build the applications on the PC. You can build them from Windows, Linux or Mac ![]()
Antonio Linares wrote:Building some test applications for the iPhone
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2272937,00.asp
This Thursday, Apple intends to announce the first official opportunity for third party developers to write true, native applications for the iPhone. The iPhone is a PC-class platform running a PC-class OS, with a 600-megahertz processor and a somewhat stripped-down version of Apple's OS X operating system. But up until now, users have either been restricted to "Web apps" or to hacking their phones in non-Apple-approved ways to get new abilities.