
Google (NSDQ: GOOG) has recently updated its Analytics product to help developers see how people are using specific parts of their iPhone and Android applications.
As with websites, you can track…
Source
With the unveiling of the Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2, the Swedish-Japanese handset maker has launched the Panel SDK to encourage developers to do what they do best for Sony Ericsson…
Source
Today Palm announced that it will permit early access to some developers on the Palm Pre Mojo SDK. The SDK is a necessary component to create applications and services for the Palm Pre. Besides, Palm also announced that it is going to offer developers integrated cloud services as well. This will let the Pre sync with data / content stored in the cloud (that is, the Internet). This is very similar to the push notifications for the Apple iPhone.
Palm is also planning to release a Palm OS emulator via a third-party company soon, called MotionApps. This will allow older Palm applications to run on webOS devices as well.

Palm Pre
Source: PhoneScoop
The Palm webOS platform and the Palm Pre mobile phone have been greeted with much enthusiasm at the 2009 MWC. Now there is even more good news from these quarters. O’Reilly Media and Palm, Inc. have today announced that they will be collaborating in order to create the very first official resource for programming the very new webOS platform. “Palm webOS: Developing Applications in JavaScript Using the Palm Mojo(TM) Framework”, written by Palm Vice President and Software Chief Technology Officer Mitch Allen, this is being edited and distributed by O’Reilly Media.
The very first chapter of the Rough Cuts Version of this book is now available online for free download from the Palm Developer Network at http://developer.palm.com. It is also expected to be available on the O’Reilly website on Monday by 10:30am ES. Programmers who want to learn to develop applications on webOS can now download the Rough Cuts version as a PDF. They can also participate in an ongoing live discussion about the book and the technology. The final book will be published following the release of Mojo, Palm’s webOS SDK (Software Development Kit).

Palm webOS