No, you cannot run a backround process. Your application will quit
when another application is opened.

On Apr 19, 6:59 pm, "Michael DeJadon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I see some people are thinking about porting their app over to the iPhone.
> Does anyone know if the iPhone will let you run a background service process
> in their OS? I heard that they were being very restrictive about this.
>
> Mike DeJadon
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
>
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Moffett
> Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 3:09 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Cc: David Moffett
> Subject: [android-challenge] Re: Time For Plan B?
>
> It would seem that language translation would only be part of it since  
> Apple api is so much different from Android.  Porting the GUI will be  
> easy with Interface Builder.   We are putting our application on both  
> platforms but not translating but basically different development  
> efforts.   After playing with iPhone api though I really missed  
> Android.  A lot of my old NeXT friends seem to think iPhone api was  
> pushed out to early and they are hiding a lot of the good stuff, see  
> the record and playback of audio api.  Seems straight forward in  
> Android but very involved on the iPhone.
>
> Be careful Objective C is addictive and much more powerful than Java  
> because of runtime binding.  Java has some semblance of runtime  
> binding but is much more restrictive.  Of course there are gives and  
> takes with loose runtime binding like Objective C but it comes in real  
> handy at times.
>
> Apple kind of butchered the api from the NeXT days imho and in fact no  
> computer system has really done much beyond what NeXT did in the 90s.  
> Ahhh wait there is one thing most companies did that NeXT did not.  
> Sell computers.  :-)
>
> BTW I guess some may not know that OSX is just the latest incarnation  
> of NeXTStep.
>
> David
>
> On Apr 19, 2008, at 11:05 AM, Incognito wrote:
>
> > Well, I began to study Objective-c and it is very similar to Java, not
> > in sintax, but rather in how they have a lot of the same elements that
> > Java does, classes, interfaces, inheritance, polymorphism. I searched
> > for an automated tool to convert Java to Objective C and found one
> > company "http://www.innaworks.com/alcheMo-for-iPhone.html"; that does
> > this, more specifically it converts J2ME to Objective-C for IPhone.
> > They do not have a download at ther website, you must contact them to
> > get it or buy it. This is usually a signal that it costs a lot of
> > moeny. To tell you the truth I find them a bit sketchy. Right now I'm
> > coming up with a strategy to convert all my java code to Objective-C
> > code without the need of such utility. That is as far as I've gotten.
>
> > On Apr 19, 4:36 am, hitsu_g <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> Incognito,
> >> Please let us know how the iPhone port goes! I have been curious  
> >> about
> >> how difficult it would be and planned on giving it a go, but am
> >> currently sticking with developing for Android (after I have wallowed
> >> in a little bit more ADC-recovery laziness).
>
> >> On Apr 19, 3:05 pm, "Muthu Ramadoss" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
> >> wrote:
>
> >>> My Plan A-Z is to work on mobile applications that users love it  
> >>> and are
> >>> happy to even pay for it at the end of the day.
>
> >>> On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 7:45 PM, Incognito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
> >>> wrote:
>
> >>>> So, 1788 submissions in total (Shie*t!). Even if 788 are repeats  
> >>>> 1000
> >>>> is still a pretty high number. Competition is really hot. Given  
> >>>> that
> >>>> my applications do not have the prettiest interface (does not  
> >>>> make you
> >>>> go wow!) nor are they social networking applications, I believe my
> >>>> actual chances of winning are very slim. I do believe though that  
> >>>> my
> >>>> apps have a lot of value to offer (not of the myspace or youtube  
> >>>> type
> >>>> value but more of the academic value) at least for a niche in the
> >>>> overall market. I still believe that I can make money selling my  
> >>>> apps
> >>>> (a couple of thousand dollars a year for each).
>
> >>>> Since I still want to become rich (don't we all!?) I think is  
> >>>> time to
> >>>> implement Plan B, don't you think? Well, I just bought a new  
> >>>> macbook
> >>>> for $1300 US dollars (I went broke because of that purchase) and  
> >>>> will
> >>>> start porting my applications over to the IPhone. Hopefully I can
> >>>> finish the port in time before the store opening in June. Well  
> >>>> that is
> >>>> my plan B toward the path to richness. What is your plan B if you  
> >>>> do
> >>>> not win?
>
> >>>> As a last note, Plan C is that I will develop a game and social app
> >>>> for challenge II, already have some ideas and code started.
>
> >>> --
> >>> take care,
> >>> Muthu Ramadoss.
>
> >>>http://mobeegal.in
> >>> find stuff closer.- Hide quoted text -
>
> >> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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