rich Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 Intel has used the Chinese leg of its IDF (Intel Developer Forum) event to lift the wraps on its new HTML5 Development Environment. The environment is available free of licensing fees and other costs. This is an integrated software application development system to develop, test, debug, and deploy applications across multiple operating systems — there is compatibility with Apple iOS, Android, Windows 8, and Windows Phone 8. Intel insists that it "cares" about HTML5 because it believes it is important to help experienced and new developers transition to the cross-platform HTML5 approach so that they can deploy their apps and games on nearly all modern computing platforms. http://www.drdobbs.com/web-development/intel-announces-html5-development-enviro/240153058 http://html5dev-software.intel.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
feiss Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 weird.. I wonder which is the real interest of intel in this. But the whole thing is very strange... digging in the learning center it seems a bunch of libraries stick together and a lot of make up.. jqMobi, appMobi, impactjs, box2d.. you develop everything on the browser.. i'm getting old. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nem0ff Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 feiss:I agree, strange with this.Intel bought the XDK from appmobi and made it free, potentially very interesting, but I dont see any progress for quite a while.. almost no activity in the forums.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 I see a million java security warnings in chrome when I started the app, so I instantly removed it again. Java got way too insecure recently :/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rune Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 Don't forget that Intel is backing Tizen, which essentially runs packaged HTML5 apps. They aren't being very open about it, but Intel is slowly but surely getting behind HTML5. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tyson Posted April 18, 2013 Share Posted April 18, 2013 Tried using on the Mac with Java 7, outside of the browser. Very nice. Looks a lot like BlackBerry's Ripple in some ways. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris Posted April 19, 2013 Share Posted April 19, 2013 Ripple sucked completely because of the totally unreliable HTML engine. Is this one better? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nikki Posted April 19, 2013 Share Posted April 19, 2013 Intel insists that it "cares"... "cares" in airquotes Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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