Microsoft help us to switch from Qt to WP7 : so don't worry ! be happy :(
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Sure these are not lacks of Nokia. These are partial point of view. Because peoples needs to create news. That's all.
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N9 ? it seems clear -reading what Nokia and Elop said - that there is no futur at all !!!
Regarding next billion, for now we only see Symbian .... and the end in 2016 ( and before for example in USA) ...
It's very sad to see that Qt -known for its crossplatform sdk- seems to be easily portable to Android, Ios , WP7 ... and it's not pushed because of commercial problem ... What need developer is an easy way to program (Qt is fine ) and a crossplatform Mobile/Desktop solution ... I know since 11 Februar the all done response is "Open governance : If you wants, you can do it ... it's open !!!"
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An advice to any Qt lover: be consistent on the scope of your concerns.
If you worry about Qt now then look at all the growing stats on SDK downloads, mobile apps developed, the progress on Qt 4.7, 4.8, 5, in different industries, OS and form factors... If you worry about Qt in the future then look at the Qt Project, Qt 5, Nokia's "next billion" strategy...
In the past months we have seen many discussions exactly like this one where any constructive comment about the current situation is answered with "sure, but what about the future?" and at the same time any constructive comment about the future is answered with "sure, but what about now?" :)
No matter how we look at it the progress of Qt in 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 4.0 and now 5 is consistently incremental. Sure, there are some challenges but how is this any different from Qt in the past or any other cool technology in these speed crazy times? Actually this is part of the adrenaline and excitement of working in cutting edge tech.
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@qgil: it-s true and is coherent iwht what @qtnext says, despite of his point of view about.
@tanext sayd:
bq. I know since 11 Februar the all done response is “Open governance : If you wants, you can do it … it’s open !!!”This means that all those developers of Qt (in a real growing number) has nothing to be worried. As a final judgemnt are the choices of the developers that defines the market application and the development platforms.
There was to be worried if Qt was closed ad a commercial applicaiton, not if it will be full open
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[quote author="leon.anavi" date="1316619845"]Please do not misunderstand me. I am enjoying developing with Qt for Symbian, MeeGo, MeeGo Harmattan and Android but I am a bit disappointed that I have to rewrite my apps from scratch if I want to make them compatible with Windows Phone 7.[/quote]
Then just don't. I for myself have decided that there won't be any applications ported to Windows Phone 7, more specifically to the Windows Phone 7 SDK. I might release applications for a community-driven Qt port (Windows Phone 7 is Windows CE after all) for rooted devices.
An ecosystem with less than 2% market share and no indication that this will change in the future is far from interesting for me - even if it is Nokia new prime platform. Time invested in improving applications on supported platforms will gain more revenue. And we are not talking about a port here, we are talking about a complete rewrite of existing software (including documenting, testing and so on), a complete second support chain and two seperate codebases of the same project which have to be serviced.
As things are now the Windows Phone 7 ecosystem desperately needs applications, but applications do not need the Windows Phone 7 ecosystem. I wouldn't bet on the current prohibition of native code and once it is lifted all those who -ported- rewrote their applications are the ... you know ... again.
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Just a question: everyone of us, referred to our software are are you sure that all need to be started from scratch ?
Then, I agree with you that it is not yet time to start a new echosystem.
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With below 2% market share why should we port anything to WP7 ? It will be hard for WP7 to have any substantial increase in its market share now that iPhone and Android devices are so popular. Many of my friends who would have bought a Symbian device are now choosing Android devices no matter how good the current Symbian phones are. And no, they are not waiting for a Nokia WP7 device. From what I have seen so far, I feel that most of the current Symbian users will move to Android rather than WP7, though I could be wrong. The WP7 UI looks very good. But I'am not sure that alone would save it. With Symbian fast loosing its market share and N9 being the last Meego phone, the only hope for Qt on mobile space is ' Next billion '. Anybody sure what that is ? Is it S40 or anything else ? If it is S40 then what about Java ME ? Wll Qt on S40 allows c++ programmability ? or only Qml for third party applications ? Anybody have more info on this ?
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Qt support would have been good for Wp7 as some others pointed out. Currently WP7 don't have an echo system. Still there are some development going on around Symbian and WP7 could have benefited from Qt for Symbian applications. A large number of .Net developers are web database application developers. They are not suddenly going to turn to the mobile space. Then who else is going to develop for WP7.
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@Jayakrishnan: it is an interesting news, I was thining to real applications, nto only web applications
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[quote author="Lukas Geyer" date="1316629554"]As long as there isn't managed Qt porting to Windows Phone 7 will mean to develop, test, document and maintain an application from scratch using C# and XAML (or HTML5/JS or XNA).[/quote]
I never saw that you could develop WP7 apps in HTML5/JS. Are you not mixing this up with Windows 8 where you can indeed develop apps (much faster) in WinJS?
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"No.":http://www.windowsphone.com/de-DE/apps/0349adf6-d6b3-404f-84ea-63ef97c12b79. In addition, WP7 got a HTML5/CSS3-capable browser (although most will just use PhoneGap to create standalone apps).