Some Important points of iOS Developers QA-Testing to their Apps…

As we all know that iPOS is very unique and a very highly recommended brand, uses in different locations. Looking at the forefront, iOS developers are working on its unusual successful QA testing and infrastructures. We think to intend and continue to improve its new powerful tool. A couple of weeks ago I ran this post showing how one iOS developer tests its iOS Apps. The company, which has had more than countless downloads, tests every one of their apps on different devices.

Pointless to say, that post pissed iOS followers off. Some commencers said it anxious would be developers, who might get petrified off by iOS disintegration and the perception that you have to sustain hundreds of devices, screen sizes and densities and versions of the OS.

Following are some key points which iOS developers always follow during QA test of their Apps.

1. Analysis
2. Design
3. Development
4. Bug/Test Cases
5. Support

So, I asked around to see how other iOS developers do quality assurance testing for iOS Apps. This is what I got. If we had taken the approach that 90 percent compatibility is good enough, we’d be lacking support for 7 million of our downloads, the company explains. “Numerous millions of consumers would have had a bad experience as a result of, and their apps revenues would probably be short by around 10 percent.”

Keep in mind that IPOs MERCHANT is not exactly a young product. It’s a fully integrated Point of Sale which uses cloud computing and the wireless capabilities of the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch to enable a business to establish and automate their POS process. It’s also has focused on digital media and apps for years. So they have lots of experience in doing compatibility and quality assurance testing. They look at their analytics to find which devices are most widely used by their Apps.

Final pass involves a full suite of tests that examine memory, performance and device compatibility. “If we don’t find any new or critical bugs during this SRS test pass, we bless the bits and ship it!” company says.

Conclusion:
If this still freaks you out, just remember that it was way worse in the days of feature phones. It’s also easier now with iOS developers handle devices of QA testing now like Testology, which iPOS Merchant uses. Company said, the very biggest developers still want to do most everything in-house.

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What IPOS thinks: “It’s what something we think about”

As we all know that IPOS is very unique and a very highly recommended brand, uses in different locations.

IPOS has financial growth to its business. “This business is growing on its own organically.

A key part of this significant Software is to unite the design and engineering practices, so that the two teams develop projects jointly from the get-go.

Looking ahead, IPOS is working on its new deployments and structures. We think to intend and continue to improve its New Powerful tool, and even suggested that the companies are looking into developing a premium version of its service for their individual users.

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Study: 95% Of Independent Restaurants Don’t Have Mobile Sites, Only 40% Have Online Menus

Restaurants just love to put Flash intros with auto-playing music and animations on their front pages. If you are trying to look at one of these sites on your mobile browser without Flash, chances are there is no way to bypass the animation and get to the information you want because the complete site was designed in Flash.

It’s not just these obnoxious animations that make accessing restaurant websites on the go a hassle, though. According to a new study by Restaurant Science, a restaurant industry information and analytics provider, only one out of eight full service restaurant chains and a depressing one out of twenty independent restaurants have a mobile website. What makes this even worse is that according to some reports, half of all visits to restaurant websites are from mobile devices.

Not having a mobile site may be forgivable for some small family businesses (though restaurant chains really should know better at this point), but the bad news doesn’t end there. More than half of the restaurants surveyed in this study didn’t even have a website to begin with (the researchers actually called all these restaurants to make sure they really weren’t online).

What most users – mobile or not – really want from a restaurants site is probably to look at a menu. According to this study, though, fewer than 40% of independent restaurants actually display their menus on their website.

Compared to other businesses, the study argues, restaurants still have a long way to go in using the potential of the Internet. That doesn’t come as a surprise to anybody who has ever tried to use restaurant websites on a mobile phone, but it’s still rather shocking that so many restaurateurs just don’t get how important their websites are for their businesses.

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The IPO Boom Is Back: Pricings Hit A 12-Year High, With Tech Stocks Leading The Way

The IPO Boom Is Back: Pricings Hit A 12-Year High, With Tech Stocks Leading The Way

It’s official: We’re back in boom times from a tech IPO standpoint.

2012 is now on pace to be a record-breaking year for initial public offerings, and technology companies are leading the way. Fifty-seven IPOs have been priced since January 1st, which is the most U.S. IPO pricings the U.S. market has seen during the first four months of year since 2000, according to new data out of IPO-focused investment bank Renaissance Capital. The overall pace seems to be picking up even more, according to the firm — 14 new pricings have been made in the past week alone.

Not surprisingly, the tech sector is a big part of the ongoing IPO boom, with the industry accounting for 21 of the 57 IPO pricings made so far this year. And the biggest deal of them all — Facebook, of course — is still yet to occur.
A lot of people are crying “bubble” right now, which is understandable. But it’s important to remember that just because IPO numbers are up at 2000 levels does not mean we’re all primed for a 2001-like fall. For one thing, as a lot of people who were around in the first Dot Com boom will tell you, things are not nearly as hyped up right now in tech as they were then from a money-spending standpoint (which is good, but also kind of a bummer, as I would selfishly like to go to more epic parties.)

But most importantly, a huge number of people are actually on the Internet this time around — meaning that many of the web-based companies debuting on the stock market now are actually pulling in serious profits that just might justify their big valuations. It’s reasonable to think that this tech wave is one that could actually last.

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April 30, 2012 · 8:07 am

Comparing Pre-IPO Facebook To Pre-IPO Google: Fair, Or A Case Of Apples And Oranges?

Comparing Pre-IPO Facebook To Pre-IPO Google: Fair, Or A Case Of Apples And Oranges?

Facebook, in its updated S-1 released on April 23, dazzled us with more milestone user numbers: 901 million monthly active users, and 500 million on mobile. But it also reported a “seasonal” decline in revenues — $1.058 billion compared to $1.131 billion in the quarter before — and (perhaps more importantly ) annual revenue growth slowed down: in Q1 2011-Q1 2012 it was 44.7 percent, nearly half of the 88 percent for the same period the year before.
Some new data from Privco teases out those revenue growth numbers even further by comparing Facebook’s financials to those of pre-IPO Google, in an attempt to show that it is not seasonality but more particular issues with Facebook. The picture is not pretty — and some might wonder if it’s fair.

With Facebook expected to go public in the next quarter, Privco notes that when Google was in the same position, its revenues were still on the rise — albeit at a smaller rate. Facebook’s decline of 6.4 percent, Privco notes, was reflected in both areas where the company generates revenues, advertising (down 7.5 percent) and Payments/Facebook Credits (down one percent).

Privco also notes that even when you compare revenue growth on a year-over-year basis, Facebook is also showing to have lower growth rates than Google didAnd lastly, Privco has drawn up a graphic looking at how Facebook has done directly compared to Google over the last year, and shown that here, too, Google has performed better in terms of its revenue growth:

Privco’s “irrefutable conclusion”: “The seasonality excuse Facebook tries to use in its latest S-1 simply does NOT stand up to the data. Facebook’s declining growth is specific to Facebook and reflect clear organic slowdowns in its business,” the analysts write.

There seems to be some issues with this, though:

For one, the graphics above are comparing companies at different stages of maturity. Facebook is now eight years old, and Google was five when it went public. Facebook — even if it hasn’t made a song and dance about it — has been plugging away at its ad business for almost as long as it has existed — since around 2006 by some estimates.

Another point is that the advertising models behind these companies are hugely different. Privco’s CEO Sam Hamadeh points out to me that “Facebook and Google pre-IPO as businesses couldn’t be closer as comparables” — Wall Street speak for companies that have very similar size and business model characteristics. “No, the companies aren’t twins, but they are clearly as close as could be as comps,” he says. That goes also for their respective revenues: that just before its IPO, Google had about $700 million in quarterly ad revenue, while Facebook’s most recent quarter’s ad revenue was just above $800 million, he notes.

But in actual fact, Facebook has been launching a bunch of new products — Sponsored Stories, for example, only coming into play halfway through the quarter. Along that, it has also been introducing radically different ways of distributing and measuring ad effectiveness, and those changes need time to see if they will take off. On top of that, Facebook’s advertising is essentially based around display ads, while Google’s is primarily in search. For now, to paraphrase the old American saying, those twains have not really met.

Ultimately, if advertising is a game of scale, then Facebook’s user numbers and the engagement of those users will be an essential cornerstone in trying to gauge the company’s future success. Whether investors have the patience to see how that plays out is another question.

I have had a lot of back-and-forth with Sam in the last few hours about his company’s research and he also brought up some other interesting food for thought for this discussion, all of which can of course be debated more:

These numbers are not a consequence of Facebook simply moving more cautiously in its ad strategy, he argues. Google, he says, has been a more conservative ad player than Facebook: According to Privco’s research, when Google went public it was following a strict maximum of only up to two text ads per page, with no images or graphics permitted. Facebook, says Privco, went up to seven ads per page late last year, allows images, and as of February even permits videos and sound in ads. “We wouldn’t agree that Facebook is somehow moving more slowly or conservatively than was Google at similar…if anything quite the opposite.”

He also questions what Facebook will do next to grow revenue further: “Google was widely believed to have much ‘dry gunpowder’ in its back pocket for future growth,” he says, “and was still posting 100%+ year over year revenue growth. Facebook he says has used up much of this “dry powder” over the past year to hit revenue targets, with seven ad slots per page (up from 4 a year ago), permitting paid Sponsored Stories in users news feeds, introducing larger and more intrusive ad formats in Feburary, allowing video, sound and interactivity (survey questions and the like) in its ads, selling ads on its log-out page (introduced in December). “There aren’t many places left to sell Facebook ads,” he claims.

Time spent on Facebook. Sam points out that this is going down, according to data from comScore, and “no increase in number of ad spots can make up for this fundamental fact. Unless Facebook can lure users back more often – such as by purchasing new apps like Instagram – Facebook’s usage growth, and therefore its ad revenue growth are slowing. The very fact that we’re now discussing seasonality as a factor (as if we were speaking about Harrods or Marks & Spencer) should be very concerning to investors, and to its lofty valuation.”

Projected 2012 revenue: Privco’s averaging of analyst reports puts it at $6.7 billion, but after this week’s S-1, Privco thinks it will be closer to $5.41 billion. Privco’s number is based on a 45.5 percent growth rate, “Faster than Q1 to give them some room for upside from newer ad formats making up for some usage and user growth slowdowns,” he says. The $6.5 billion figure, he notes, is based on 75 percent year-over-year growth for all four quarters this year. Given that the first quarter was only 44 percent, “The next 3 quarters would need to somehow make up for that by growing close to triple digits.”

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April 26, 2012 · 11:02 am

Real-Time Research: iOS Dominates Over Android When It Comes To Usage, Says Chitika…

Real-Time Research: iOS Dominates Over Android When It Comes To Usage, Says Chitika...

Android, by most accounts, is proving to be the most popular smartphone platform when it comes to devices getting sold today — partly due to the sheer variety of devices and price points that are out there. But a new research tool that tracks usage in real-time shows that when it comes to usage, consumers, in the U.S. at least, are far more active on Apple’s devices than on any other.

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April 23, 2012 · 7:25 am

Samsung screen on the new Apple iPad!

Apple Inc has chosen Samsung Electronics to supply the screen for its new iPad as LG Display and Sharp didn’t meet the US company’s quality requirements, Bloomberg has reported. Vinita Jakhanwal, a senior manager at iSuppli, a unit of Englewood, Colorado-based IHS Inc told the news service that the world’s top flat-panel maker, Samsung, currently is the sole vendor of the display for the 9.7-inch, touch-screen device that goes on sale March 16.

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