Intridea, a Web 2.0 development firm, has taken its enterprise blogging application, Present.ly, mobile with native clients for Windows Mobile, the Apple iPhone, BlackBerry and Google Android. The new mobile clients offer full Present.ly functionality including status updates, viewing of the user's update stream and replies, private direct messaging and more.
Intridea, a Web 2.0
development firm, has taken its enterprise blogging application,
Present.ly, mobile with native clients for Windows Mobile, the Apple
iPhone, BlackBerry and Google Android.
Intridea, which focuses on agile development of Web applications
using Ruby and Ruby on Rails, has delivered open-source native clients
for several of the most popular mobile platforms on the market and an
Adobe AIR desktop application for Present.ly.
Barg Upender, co-founder and senior partner at Intridea, said the
company's new browser-independent desktop implementation of Present.ly
is built on the Adobe AIR platform. Present.ly for the desktop lets
users view their timelines, post status updates and receive real-time
notifications of incoming updates on any platform using a simple,
intuitive interface. The AIR-based application gives users compact,
always-on, desktop access to Present.ly, making it easier and faster to
post and read updates while keeping other applications open for
productivity and speed, Upender said.
However, Intridea also has introduced native mobile microblogging
clients for several popular platforms, such that users can now have
full-featured status update capabilities on the Apple iPhone,
BlackBerry, Google Android or Windows Mobile device to interact with
co-workers anywhere, on any platform. The new mobile clients offer full
Present.ly functionality including status updates, viewing of the
user's update stream and replies, private direct messaging and more,
Upender said.
"With the introduction of the Present.ly mobile applications, you
can now get status anywhere at anytime," Upender told eWEEK.
"Personally, I rely on my Present.ly iPhone app to get status and
provide feedback on all my projects. This is great, we really do
'meet less and know more'" because of the new functionality, he said.
"Key to the adoption of any enterprise social business app is the
ability to make it work in a way that supports our customers' business
objectives and is consistent with their corporate culture," said David
Naffis, senior partner and head of product development for Intridea.
"Whether for insurance adjustment, mobile CRM or any other application,
our customers recognize the value of real-time status updates for
better communications and collaboration. By offering a multitude of
mobile platform options, and open-sourcing each client, we're trying to
give developers the freedom they need to deliver mobile microblogging
for any conceivable application."
Upender said all of Intridea's native clients are open source and available on GitHub.
"We hope that open-sourcing these applications will create a great
foundation for building more cool functionality around Present.ly. I'm
expecting to see some of Present.ly's most innovative new features come
from the community at large," said Naffis.
Intridea officials said its Present.ly iPhone application is based
on the open-sourced Natsulion Twitter iPhone application. It is
available for free in the App Store on iTunes. On the Android platform,
the Present.ly application is based on the open-sourced Twitter
application, TwitterDroid, which can be downloaded for free at the
Android Marketplace. The BlackBerry application can be downloaded on
Intridea's BlackBerry page. For users of other devices, Intridea offers
a generic mobile Web version of Present.ly. Developers can also go to
http://github.com/presently and end users can download the new clients
at https://presentlyapp.com/native_apps, the company said.
Darryl K. Taft covers the development tools and developer-related issues beat from his office in Baltimore. He has more than 10 years of experience in the business and is always looking for the next scoop. Taft is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and was named 'one of the most active middleware reporters in the world' by The Middleware Co. He also has his own card in the 'Who's Who in Enterprise Java' deck.