numble said:Android fans: You can have your Pleco and Android too!
http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/21/andr ... to-iphone/
Does that mean Mike can work on the Desktop version now? :twisted:
numble said:Android fans: You can have your Pleco and Android too!
http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/21/andr ... to-iphone/
mfcb said:RobRedbeard,
- mike frequently mentioned, that the windows version is just "little" work to port over from WM.
mfcb said:- there are also portable devices running windows, i find the name "desktop version" to be a little bit misleading..
mikelove said:Interesting - any particular reason you didn't pick an iPhone instead? (obviously not a keyboard issue ) And I assume you're not somebody who'd ever buy an iPod Touch and carry around two devices? Trying to understand the market here.
Chinese-Forums users are significantly nerdier than typical Chinese learners, I think, so I'm not confident the data from a poll there would be more accurate (= not stacked with votes from Android fans who have absolutely no interest in Pleco but just promote Android everywhere they go) than from one on our website, though I suppose having it somewhere not hosted by Pleco would demonstrate that I wasn't tampering with the results...
mikelove said:That is a concern with the poll, yes. But other metrics aren't necessarily much better; we get a lot more email from BlackBerry users than Android ones, for example, but most of the emails from the former are of the "does Pleco work on BlackBerry" type, while most of the Android ones are of the "are you planning to develop a version for Android" type, so it may be that Android users are more likely to visit our website, find this thread, and have their question very thoroughly (albeit indecisively) answered here without having to write in at all So ultimately this has to be a gut business decision one way or the other.
...
You can buy music from almost any source for your iPhone. The majority of my music on my iPhone comes from Amazon's digital music store and Google China's music site. The iTunes store doesn't even sell DRM music anymore. I don't know what you're going on about Quicktime--nowadays that's just the video player used to play videos on the iPhone, and sometimes embedded video or audio (mostly open formats) on Safari. Jailbreaking is practically a one button push these days, with a simple reversion. I used my iPhone with China Mobile while in China, NOT China Unicom. Yes, you need to sync with iTunes, but that should not be a dealbreaker.RobRedbeard said:By indentured servitude I wasn't just talking about complex features, I was mostly talking about pretty ordinary stuff:
I HATE iTune, I HATE Quicktime, and I don't want to jailbreak a phone but I also don't want to have a phone that is tied to a carrier (remember, I'm in China, where that isn't normal).
I want to buy my music from any source I want, and sync it with whatever media player I want.
How do you know this? It's been roughly 2 years since an iPhone version was announced, and it's still not done, it's still rough around the edges compared to most polished iPhone apps.An Android version could be written and finished in the time it will take to see if WP7 gains widespread adoption.
Basically says that developers that care about making money will concentrate on iPhone more and Android less, and Android will continue to get sub-par apps. And that the alternative is not to focus on iPhone + Android + WP7 + Blackberry + Symbian + WebOS, but instead to create web-only apps. Interesting arguments for Pleco to consider moving forward.westmeadboy said:
Very interesting - our pattern here is opposite. In our expat group I'm the only techie and I'm nearly the only one not using Android. None of the Chinese staff has Android - they are all Windows Mobile.Azabu said:Most of the expats (I'm talking about 40 people) around me at work in China are low tech users. Many study Chinese seriously but they aren't tech or gadget fiends and they don't care about specs between WM, iPhone and other smartphone devices. Work gives them Blackberries. They don't know what Android is. They can afford iPhones and what they like that it is easy to use. They usually buy grey market iPhones or just pick one up in Hong Kong. iPhone 12> BB 8 > Rest aren't smartphones. No one uses WM or Android apart from local Chinese.
mikelove said:So the question, then, is whether in the face of ever-growing competition from free and low-cost "apps," we should really still be putting all of our energies into continuing to make mobile "applications," which is what an Android port (at least in the way most of the people here seem to be envisioning it) would essentially be. A desktop "application" is a different story: the desire for extra features / functionality remains strong there, as does the willingness to pay triple-digit prices for software, and the likelihood of new competitors emerging is almost nonexistent, so while the "application" model may not even survive on desktops forever - between Office Online and Mint a lot of consumers may soon be able to get by without buying any third-party software for their PCs at all - it's likely to survive longer than it does on mobiles at least.
If we start transitioning out of the mobile "application" business, though, the question arises of where we go from there - what else can Pleco do for you? What other valuable product or service can we provide that takes advantage of our Chinese dictionary expertise / brand / license portfolio? Do we start simply churning out "apps," do we continue developing "applications" but on desktops, do we develop a web-based product (I continue to be impressed by the success of Skritter in that regard - if people are willing to pay a monthly subscription fee for access to a high-quality web-based character flashcard system, they might also be willing to do so for a high-quality web-based dictionary, in spite of the availability of ad-supported free alternatives to both), do we focus on corporate / educational institutional / government buyers who want to get everything well-integrated from a single vendor and don't mind paying a premium for that? Where do we go from here, in other words, if we don't just keep doing the same thing on different mobile platforms? (I suppose that's the larger question about this entire thread - consolidation of old territories versus conquest of new ones)
If you look at the Android SDK, there is nothing specific to Google Location Services. The location API provides a location and an accuracy. So, devices with Skyhook will just be giving values with slightly better accuracy. No need for devs to change anything.mikelove said:Particularly given the ongoing possibility of fragmentation - Motorola's Skyhook announcement today suggests that Android developers might soon have to juggle two different location APIs, for example. It may very well be that the "app" market can even survive that sort of fragmentation comfortably enough - there seem to be plenty of people writing Android apps now, if 1/3 of them optimize for HTC, 1/3 for Motorola and 1/3 for the vanilla Google version you'd probably still get a couple of quality apps in every major category for each sub-platform (and games easily ported to all three) - but it likely wouldn't be a very hospitable environment for Pleco.