Prototyping tool eases design of iPhone apps
Enterprises that want to create applications for Apple's iPhone
will be able to build and try out prototypes using a special programming template
unveiled on Tuesday.
It's the latest template from iRise,
which has been selling a prototyping platform for other types of applications
for six years. The El Segundo, California, company introduced it at the Software
2008 trade show, being held in conjunction with Interop
in Las Vegas.
The iPhone is a coveted gadget, selling 1.7 million units in the year's first
quarter, with Apple forecasting
10 million iPhones in the market by the end of 2008. So far, application builders
who want to reach iPhone users have had to get their code to run on the phone's
Safari browser, but Apple's recently released SDK (software development kit)
lets them write applications to run directly on the phone.
The iRise software suite is used to create prototypes that look and behave
like an application but don't have the underlying code. This lets in-house or
outside programmers, and even nonprogrammers, design an application quickly
and easily just for demonstration. Then decision makers, such as business executives,
can see how it would work and sign off on the project, according to Mitch Bishop,
chief marketing officer at iRise. Using a mock-up of the user interface tells
executives more than pages of description, he said.
"Their attitude is, 'I'll know it when I see it,'" Bishop said. Traditionally,
the business side of an enterprise doesn't get to see a new application in action
until it's largely complete. "By then, it's really expensive to make changes,"
he said.
About 180 customers, mostly Fortune 500 companies, already use iRise for projects,
including Web-based applications, portals and SAP implementations, according
to Bishop. The company already has a few customers using the iPhone template,
he said.
"The promise of the iPhone is that people see it as a vast leap ahead
in customer experience, and it's a consistent platform," Bishop said. By
contrast, most mobile-software platforms vary by both carrier and device.
The template can simulate all of the iPhone's standard menu icons and user
actions, such as using sliders and zooming in and out of screens by "pinching"
and "unpinching." Application designers can use it to create custom
buttons, manipulate the menu icons and define the effects of actions such as
double-tapping a button, Bishop said.
The iPhone simulations will run on a desktop rather than an actual iPhone,
with users interacting with the virtual phone using a mouse. There is a downloadable
tool for using simulations based on iRise, so companies developing iPhone applications
will be able to send simulations to average consumers and get feedback.
OneSpring, a business-analysis
and user-experience design company in Atlanta, uses the iRise iPhone template
in an application simulation toolkit it calls the SimDK. OneSpring has helped
enterprises define applications based on some other mobile platforms, said Chuck
Konfrst, a senior user experience architect at OneSpring.
"Most applications, if you design them for mobile devices, are very text-heavy,"
Konfrst said. The iPhone's display capabilities give designers more freedom
and a whole new set of choices, he said. OneSpring offers a video
to demonstrate.
The iRise template for the iPhone is free to users of iRise, which costs about
US$5,000 per seat, according to Bishop. The OneSpring iPhone SimDK for iRise
will be available from OneSpring starting May 1 for $495.
IDG News Service
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