- Install to the widget tray on the home or “idle” screen
- Display iconified in the widget tray
- Can be dragged to the home or “idle” screen, can be launched on-drag or on-touch, and run directly on the home screen
- Can arbitrarily resize, can display multiple views, and can display live data independently of and simultaneously with other widgets
- Multiple widgets run simultaneously
- Are developed using HTML (UTF-8 encoding), CSS, and JavaScript
- Are packaged and deployed as ZIP format file archives (UTF-8 encoded pathnames recommended), with a WGT file extension, and are defined by config.xml, index.html, and icon.png files with arbitrarily many additional HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and image files, following W3C recommendations for directory structure
- Are recognised (on Symbian OS) by the application installer and loaded to a dedicated widget folder
- To get our current members, and the mobile development community generally, to think about the possibilities that the advent of web-runtime technologies on the mobile open up.
- To reach out to new groups of developers who previously may not have considered developing for mobile, but who with the arrival of widgets on mobile devices, now have the ideal skills to capitalise on this opportunity.
While right now Samsung are giving developers the opportunity to Win big with Widgets, I can’t help but think that the widget story has only just begun…
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