Fundamentals of Mobile App Development Technology PDF
Fundamentals of Mobile App Development Technology PDF
Mobile application development is a term used to denote the act or process by which application software is
developed for handheld devices, such as personal digital assistants, enterprise digital assistants or mobile
phones.
These applications can be pre-installed on phones during manufacturing platforms, or delivered as web
applications using server-side or client-side processing (e.g. JavaScript) to provide an "application-like"
experience within a Web browser.
Application software developers also have to consider a lengthy array of screen sizes, hardware specifications
and configurations because of intense competition in mobile software and changes within each of the
platforms. Mobile app development has been steadily growing, both in terms of revenues and jobs created. A
2013 analyst report estimates there are 529,000 direct App Economy jobs within the EU 28 members, 60% of
which are mobile app developers.
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As part of the development process, Mobile User Interface (UI) Design is also an essential in the creation of
mobile apps. Mobile UI considers constraints & contexts, screen, input and mobility as outlines for design. The
user is often the focus of interaction with their device, and the interface entails components of both hardware
and software. User input allows for the users to manipulate a system, and device's output allows the system to
indicate the effects of the users' manipulation.
Mobile UI design constraints include limited attention and form factors, such as a mobile device's screen size
for a user's hand(s). Mobile UI contexts signal cues from user activity, such as location and scheduling that can
be shown from user interactions within a mobile application. Overall, mobile UI design's goal is primarily for an
understandable, user-friendly interface. The UI of mobile apps should: consider users' limited attention,
minimize keystrokes, and be task-oriented with a minimum set of functions. This functionality is supported by
Mobile enterprise application platforms or Integrated development environments (IDEs).
Mobile UIs, or front-ends, rely on mobile back-ends to support access to enterprise systems. The mobile
back-end facilitates data routing, security, authentication, authorization, working off-line, and service
orchestration. This functionality is supported by a mix of middleware components including mobile app servers,
Mobile Backend as a service (MBaaS), and SOA infrastructure.
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Platform
The platform organizations need to develop, deploy and manage mobile apps is made from many components,
and tools allow a developers to write, test and deploy applications into the target platform environment.
UI design tools
SDKs to access device features
Cross-platform accommodations/support
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Back-end servers
Back-end tools pick up where the front-end tools leave off, and provide a set of reusable services that are
centrally managed and controlled and provide the following capabilities
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Security add-on layers
With BYOD becoming the norm within more enterprises, IT departments often need stop-gap, tactical solutions
that layer on top of existing apps, phones, and platform component. Features include
App wrapping for security
Data encryption
Client actions
Reporting and statistics
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Types of Mobile Applications
They also have access to a phone's various devices, such as its camera and address book. In addition, users
can use some apps without an Internet connection. However, this type of app is expensive to develop because it
is tied to one type of operating system, forcing the company that creates the app to make duplicate versions
that work on other platforms.
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Web applications
There are actually three types of web apps: traditional, responsive and adaptive. Traditional web apps include
any website. But what are responsive and adaptive web apps? A responsive web app takes on a different
design when it’s opened on a mobile device (i.e. phone or tablet), altering its design to suit the device it is
viewed on. An adaptive web app, in contrast, doesn’t change its design. It will display the same design, but will
adjust it to fit the different screen size of a mobile device.
The biggest benefit of web apps is that they are built using the most popular programming languages—so
developer talent is readily available. However, a responsive web app has two principal drawbacks
It can’t use any hardware on a device (i.e. an iPhone’s camera).
Its “discoverability” will be reduced because it won’t be in any app stores.
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Getting to the root of Mobile App Development
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Interconnected apps
The problem with the traditional mobile app stems from its popularity. Because they’re so useful, many of us
have dozens, if not hundreds, of favorites, and managing them all is getting difficult. Rather than trying to make
them all immediately clickable on a small screen, it’s getting easier to access search resources, at which point
there seems less point in downloading apps in the first place.
This is why top mobile app development teams are now investigating ways to get apps to talk to each other.
Using app extensions can enable them to do so without compromising on security, and there’s also the option
of using widgets to let them share resources so that, for instance, an app providing maps could let you buy
related guidebooks from another app with minimal clicking.
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What does the Future hold?
According to Business Insider: "But apps are very clearly not going to be around forever. Certainly not in their
current, bulky square form. There isn't enough mobile homepage real estate for the web's 500 million plus
active websites to each have its own app and for everyone to download them.
Mobile apps are popular right now because mobile search is terrible and they lay out content in a small
-screen-friendly way. If apps do stick around, they may transform more into bookmarks, where people only
have a few favorites on their home screens, and all other mobile content can be accessed some other
way."(With Inputs from the Web)
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About Orchestrate
Orchestrate is a US based business process management organization with Headquarters in Dallas, Texas.
Orchestrate offers services to the diverse outsourcing requirements of clients in an extensive range of
businesses including IT, finance, mortgage and contact center. We provide a comprehensive suite of technology
and services to our clients that help accelerate sales and boost their profit. Our solutions and services help
SMEs and enterprises implement technologies and processes that boost their profitability across the
organization.
www.orchestrate.com