Please wait while the page is being loaded Skip this advertisement >
Saturday | 30 August, 2008
ARN
RIM to offer plug-in for Visual Studio
RIM announced that it will release a plug in that will allow developers build applications for the BlackBerry in the .Net programming environment.
Nancy Gohring (IDG News Service) 08 May, 2007 12:37:19

Related Stories
  • +

    ARN's A-Z guide to networking 19 December, 2007 14:50:54

    As business needs change, so do the requirements for the business backbone. ARN looks at networking trends and technologies and reports on predictions for 2008 and beyond.
  • +

    Everything you need to know about Microsoft certs 31 December, 2007 07:16:29

    Certification guru Patrick Regan explains the new Microsoft certs and reveals which Cisco, project management and security certs are worthwhile.
    Moderator-Julie: Welcome and thank you for coming. Our guest today is certification guru Patrick Regan. Patrick has penned over a dozen books, written the study guides for the A+ certification exams for Cisco Press and is currently writing an Exam Cram on Windows Server 2008. When not writing books, Patrick is a senior network engineer at Pacific Coast Companies supporting a large enterprise network and a celebrity blogger for Microsoft Subnet. We are giving away 15 free copies of Patrick's latest book, too. Go to the contest page for details. Now onto the chat.
  • +

    Zenoss: New dog masters old monitoring tricks 30 November, 2007 12:50:00

    Zenoss Core 2.1 impresses with object-based approach, strong device discovery, native Windows monitoring, and open source extensibility
    Since the dawn of the business network, there has been a need to ensure that the network services provided to the enterprise are alive and responsive. Traditionally, in midsized businesses, this role has been filled by complex, closed source, and fantastically expensive solutions from manufacturers such as BMC, CA, HP, and IBM. And while these extravagant expenses make no customer happy, many users of these packages also complain of their complexity. Enough administrators have spent enough time wrangling with their monitoring systems to make a lot of smart people imagine that there must be a better way.
  • +

    Business continuity 09 November, 2007 17:09:55

Additional Resources
ARN Library

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our ARN newsletters!
The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services.
RSS Feeds

Research In Motion (RIM) will let developers create applications for BlackBerry phones using Microsoft's .Net programming environment, continuing its efforts to broaden the capabilities of the devices.

The BlackBerry plug-in for Microsoft Visual Studio lets developers write applications that integrate with existing back-end servers through .Net Web Services, RIM said Monday. The plug-in works with the BlackBerry Mobile Data System.

The new support will open up the BlackBerry developer community to include .Net developers and could make it easier for enterprise developers to build new mobile applications for workers.

While the BlackBerry for many years was mainly a mobile e-mail device, RIM has increasingly enabled more capabilities for developing other wireless applications as it faces growing competition from companies such as Microsoft and its Windows Mobile operating system.

For example, RIM offers the Mobile Data System, an application development framework for enterprise BlackBerry users. Customers use the MDS to build applications that allow mobile workers to access standard enterprise applications from companies like SAP.

In late 2005, RIM added support for Web services but that didn't include the .Net framework.

RIM also enables a Java development environment that allows developers to use Java to build applications for the BlackBerry.

The application development support from RIM may help it hang on to existing customers and attract new ones in the face of Windows Mobile competition. Windows Mobile devices can receive push e-mail from Microsoft Exchange, which many companies already use for PC-based e-mail. By contrast, enterprise customers must buy and support a separate server from RIM in order to push e-mail out to BlackBerry users. Support for more applications than just e-mail may make the extra server more attractive to enterprise customers.

RIM will make the plug-in for Visual Studio available for free later this year.

Market Place

ARN Member Login

 
Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

Play
ARN news
  • IFA: LG's newest TV includes Bluetooth

    Bluetooth will be installed in models in LG's PG7000-series plasma sets and LG7000-series LCD sets, which are due on sale across Europe before the end of September.

Play
Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

Play
Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery Zone

When an IT disaster occurs, how handy it would be to push a button and start again as if nothing had happened.
Discover and learn more about CA XOSoft today.
ARN Vendor Directory
ARN Library

Microsoft® takes legal action against software pirates

Recently Microsoft took legal action against individuals and resellers for distributing and selling unauthorised Microsoft software.

Sponsored Links