|
|
|
RIM Boosting Ecosystem With BlackBerry APIs |
|
|
|
Written by Adam Gosling
|
|
Friday, 30 March 2007 |
BlackBerry maker Research in Motion is increasing the smartphone's
ecosystem by beefing up its support for Java in the hope that more
third party developers will create software for the phones.
RIM says that more than 125,000
registered developers have already downloaded the BlackBerry Java Development Environment (JDE), which exposes
thousands of Java APIs which provide developers' access to almost every
functional component and application on a BlackBerry. Over 500 software organizations have
already officially joined the BlackBerry ISV Alliance program
offering hundreds of business solutions and thousands of lifestyle
applications.
"Push-email
paved the way for the early success of this market, but mobile
applications will drive the next phase," said Mike Lazaridis, President
and Co-CEO at Research In Motion.
"The BlackBerry JDE has already
enabled the development of hundreds of horizontal and vertical business
applications and thousands of lifestyle applications on BlackBerry
smartphones. We are now opening the BlackBerry platform further with
the release of additional APIs that can help fuel the next wave of
mobile applications in areas such as Social Networking, Multi-Media,
eCommerce, News and Information Services, and Location-Based Services."
Among
the new APIs are Mobile Multi-Media with support for MP3, WAV,
WMA, AAC and AMR audio formats with support for routing audio playback
to the external speaker, connected headset and Bluetooth headset. There
is a Camera APIs and ones for Wallpaper and Ringtone customization
interfaces, XML and Web Services support, Messenger APIs and ways to
access the File System to manage documents and
other files.
APIs to support GPS either with a local GPS chip or external GPS receiver
connected over Bluetooth and Maps with address or a route functionality. BlackBerry
Maps provides developers all of the geo-coding and mapping data for free.
In the future support for 3D Graphics for more powerful gaming and
rich-media content as well as support for MMS Java APIs to complement
the existing
SMS and Phone APIs which enable third party applications to listen for
incoming phone calls and SMS messages, invoke the phone application to
place a call, and compose SMS messages for peer-to-peer messaging.
The
BlackBerry platform is also designed to extend its inherent security,
network efficiency, reliability and push capabilities to any
application, so developers can focus on their core application
offerings rather than the underlying infrastructure that enables
wireless connectivity.
Related news items Newer news items
Older news items |
|
|