CASCADA MOBILE PARTNERS WITH DEVICEANYWHERE FOR LIVE MOBILE APPLICATION TESTING
August 5th, 2008Partnership Gives Developers New Way to Test Breeze-Created Mobile Applications On Live Mobile Handsets over the Web.
Partnership Gives Developers New Way to Test Breeze-Created Mobile Applications On Live Mobile Handsets over the Web.
“Last month, we told you about Iceberg, an application that allows anyone to be a developer by simplifying programming into a process that can be done via easy-to-use DIY tools. More recently, another company called Cascada Mobile launched a platform that does the same for the mobile world….”
“The Breeze platform is free for any developer or programmer to use to create and distribute their mobile applications… I had some questions about this that were answered by Alan Lysne, Cascada Mobile CEO…”
“This past Monday while I was enjoying Niagara falls the company that brought you viral referral distribution for mobile applications and games, Cascada Mobile, launched a new service called Breeze which, according to the report, will allow anyone to create “globally distributed mobile applications in as little as fifteen minutes.”
“As the pressure builds for useful mobile applications on both the device manufacturer and wireless provider ends, the need for platforms that publish content across a wide array of mobile phones also increases.”
New mobile application development and distribution platform makes it easy for almost anyone to create, test and distribute mobile applications.
Cascada Mobile offers the simplest method for creating and distributing mobile applications for the more than 2 billion mobile phones in use around the world.
“Anyone who can build a web page can build a mobile application using a J2ME development tool called Breeze, according to the tool’s maker, Cascada Mobile.”
“Cascada Mobile’s Breeze is a recently launched mobile app publishing service which allows anyone to create and distribute mobile applications to phones any where in the world.”
Anyone who can build a web page can build a mobile application using a J2ME development tool called Breeze, according to the tool’s maker, Cascada Mobile.
Breeze lets users create applications and published them for free using online tools. The resulting applications include advertising, which developers can pay to remove. The model is similar to some website building applications, but produces real mobile applications that run on the phone.