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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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iPhone 3G - MobileMe vs. Live Mesh
Using MobileMe, you will receive push contacts, push e-mail, and push calendar notifications on the iPhone

In a previous blog post, I mentioned that Live Mesh could possibly be the answer to the big problem about state sharing in peer applications. That problem is that in order for an application to propagate its changes to another application, both of those applications need to be online at the same time. Live Mesh solves that problem by allowing an application to synchronize with "the cloud" and then the next time another instance of that same application starts up, it too can synchronize with "the cloud" to obtain the latest changes.

Currently, the beta implementation of Live Mesh includes the ability to share folders, share files within those folders, and you get an RSS-like newsfeed that tells you when people come and go in your mesh, when devices are added and removed from your mesh, and when changes to files take place in your shared mesh folders. The similarity with RSS is not trivial - the entire Live Mesh system is based around bi-directional change notification using APP (Atom Publishing Protocol) and other technologies like FeedSync (and RSS bi-directional change notification spec).

So how does this relate to MobileMe? MobileMe is, according to Phil Schiller's keynote, "Exchange for the rest of us". What this means is that using MobileMe, you will receive push contacts, push e-mail, and push calendar notifications. This will work with any MobileMe-aware application, including Outlook on the PC and iCal, Mail, and Address Book on the Mac and iPhone. This also includes the old iDisk functionality which allows you to share files among all of your devices using file synchronization technologies. iDisk works, but don't ever try to code directly on an iDisk folder with Xcode unless you have a back-up. Hopefully this peculiarity has been fixed in MobileMe. 

So, what's funny here is that MobileMe will hit the market on PCs and Macs before Microsoft's Live Mesh is even out of beta. Current implementations of Live Mesh don't even include Mac clients, though they claim to have Mac support in the future. Fast forward into the future when both MobileMe and Live Mesh are released. What will be the deciding factor between whether and end user will want MobileMe or whether they will want Live Mesh?

Bottom line is users will use whatever is least intrusive. This means whatever is the the most integrated solution will be the one users prefer. I don't know which one's going to win this war, only time will tell because MobileMe isn't finished announcing features and neither is Live Mesh. However, given Apple's track record, I will put good money on MobileMe being dead simple to use. The deciding factor for me as a developer will be the SDK. If I get a chance to look at the MOE (Mesh Operating Environment) SDK and I get a chance to compare it to the MobileMe SDK, then I'll be able to tell which one I might want to adopt for my own applications.

The ability for my application to have access to "cloud" services like MobileMe or like Live Mesh means that my applications are going to have an unprecedented level of functionality, robustness, and flexibility. Bottom line is regardless of whether MobileMe or Live Mesh is the victor, my applications will be better for having these services available to me. Who knows, I might be able to write an app that can sync data with either one, depending on the service to which my users are subscribing. 

Either way, I can't wait for the next beta of Live Mesh and to get my hands on the MOE SDK. Nor can I wait to get my hands on MobileMe and, if there is one, a MobileMe SDK. 

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About Kevin Hoffman
Kevin Hoffman, editor-in-chief of SYS-CON's iPhone Developer's Journal, has been programming since he was 10 and has written everything from DOS shareware to n-tier, enterprise web applications in VB, C++, Delphi, and C. Hoffman is coauthor of Professional .NET Framework (Wrox Press) and co-author with Robert Foster of Microsoft SharePoint 2007 Development Unleashed. He authors The .NET Addict's Blog at .NET Developer's Journal.

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Well, you were almost right: MobileMe isn't just dead simple to use - it's just plain dead.


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Pookie wrote: Well, you were almost right: MobileMe isn't just dead simple to use - it's just plain dead.
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