The FingerApps advantage lies in the extensive creative experience in Multimedia Design and the mastery of Open-Source and Closed-System Technologies which enables FingerApps to deliver Cutting-Edge New Media Content and Applications.
The FingerApps technical and creative teams possess unmatched capabilities in the following application development tools and languages:
Mobile
* J2ME & Symbian
* SMS, MMS, and WAP/WML/WbML
Web Animation
* Flash and ActionScripts
* MAYA
* Radium 3D
* MilkShape
* Blender 3D
* Crystal Space
* Non-Unifrom Rational Binary Splines (NURBS), 2D/3D animation
Server Technology
* Web Service (REST, SOAP/WSDL, WDDX, XML-RPC)
* PHP, GTK, JSP, ASP, PERL, RUBY On RAILS, CFM, PERL, MOD_C and TCL
* Apache, IIS, WEBRICK, XAMPP
Framework Technology
* Sun Java Studio
* Qcodo
* Ruby On Rails
* CakePHP
* Drupal
* Django
* Struts
Applications
* VB/.Net
* C++, C#, CBuilder and Delphi
* J++, J#, JBuilder, NET BEANS w/ Mobility Pack
* Delphi PHP, J2ME, PERL, RUBY, PYTHON, CFM, PERL, and TCL
* Java Processing (Proce55)
* ASM and WinASM
* LISP
Database
* MySQL, Replication and Clustering
* FireBird
* InnoDB
* Postgre
* Oracle
* MsSql
Platform OS
* Solaris
* Linux
* FreeBSD
* Mosix
* Microsoft (WIN2000/2003, WINXP)
Others
* Hard Disk Data Recovery
* OpenSocial
Compliance with the following standard
* W3C primarily pursues its mission through the creation of Web standards and guidelines. In its first ten years, W3C published more than eighty such W3C Recommendations. W3C also engages in education and outreach, develops software, and serves as an open forum for discussion about the Web. In order for the Web to reach its full potential, the most fundamental Web technologies must be compatible with one another and allow any hardware and software used to access the Web to work together. W3C refers to this goal as Web interoperability. By publishing open (non-proprietary) standards for Web languages and protocols, W3C seeks to avoid market fragmentation and thus Web fragmentation.
* OMA is the leading industry forum for developing market driven, interoperable mobile service enablers.
OMA was formed in June 2002 by nearly 200 companies including the world's leading mobile operators, device and network suppliers, information technology companies and content and service providers. The fact that the whole value chain is represented in OMA marks a change in the way specifications for mobile services are done. Rather than keeping the traditional approach of organizing activities around "technology silos", with different standards and specifications bodies representing different mobile technologies, working independently, OMA is aiming to consolidate into one organization all specification activities in the service enabler space.
* The Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) Initiative is an international effort aimed at developing and promoting an open standard for the Digital Rights Management expression language.
We are Web 2.0
This is not a mere term for us but a whole new way of doing things. Web 2.0 brings technology to end-users, empowering them to be creative, and to directly transform requirements to actions then to solutions wihout developer intervention.
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These advantage helps major Content Providers and Telco Networks better leverage the emerging mobile landscape as a key revenue-generator and allows them to build Industry-leading Mobile Brands; brands that connect through a strong one-to-one relationship with their increasingly-Mobile Consumers.
We are open source
We in the open source community have learned that this rapid evolutionary process produces better software than the traditional closed model, in which only a very few programmers can see the source and everybody else must blindly use an opaque block of bits.
The basic idea behind open source is very simple: When programmers can read, redistribute, and modify the source code for a piece of software, the software evolves. People improve it, people adapt it, people fix bugs. And this can happen at a speed that, if one is used to the slow pace of conventional software development, seems astonishing.