Mobile enterprise application platform

A mobile enterprise application platform (MEAP) is a suite of products and services that enable development of mobile applications. The term was coined in a Gartner Magic Quadrant report in 2008 when they renamed their "multi-channel access gateway market".[1]

Purpose

MEAPs address the difficulties of developing mobile software by managing the diversity of devices, networks and user groups at the time of deployment and throughout the mobile solution’s lifecycle. Unlike standalone apps, a MEAP provides a comprehensive, long-term approach to deploying mobility. Cross-platform considerations are one big driver behind using MEAPs. For example, a company can use a MEAP to develop the mobile application once and deploy it to a variety of mobile devices (including smart phones, tablets, notebooks and ruggedized handhelds) with no changes to the underlying business logic.[2]

Platform applications are best for companies that wish to deploy multiple applications on a single infrastructure, scaled to the size of their current mobile field force and available in an online and offline mode.[3] Mobile platforms provide higher level languages and easy development templates to simplify and speed the mobile application development timeframe, requiring less programming knowledge for mobile business application deployment.

Rule of three

The Rule of Three refers to a concept developed by Gartner, whereby companies are encouraged to consider the MEAP approach to mobility when they need their mobile solutions to:

  1. Support three or more mobile applications
  2. Support three or more mobile operating systems (OS)
  3. Integrate with at least three back-end data sources

According to Gartner, using a common mobility platform like an MEAP brings considerable savings and strategic advantages in this situation.[4]

Components and features

Structure

A MEAP solution is generally composed of two parts: a mobile middleware server and a mobile client application. A middleware server is the solution component that handles all system integration, security, communications, scalability, cross-platform support, etc. No data is stored in the middleware server—it just manages data from the back-end system to the mobile device and back. Most MEAPs also come with a mobile configuration/development toolset that allows companies to create and adjust the mobile solutions.

Mobile applications are software that connect to the middleware server and drives both the user interface and the business logic on the device. These applications are often able to transfer seamlessly across the Mobile operating system, as a platform to launch applications upon. Mobile apps can be deployed as "thick" applications—or native apps that are installed on the device—or rendered in the device's browser using technologies such as HTML5 (something that's often called the "thin" approach). Whether a "thick" or "thin" application is deployed depends on application complexity, device support, requirements for user experience, and the need for app availability in the absence of network coverage.

Features and capabilities

Some toolsets have been introduced into MEAP solution for hybrid mode, which use JavaScript based UI design SDK, such as Dojo Toolkit, YUI Library, jQuery Mobile, Sencha Touch. And a new JavaScript based Device featured APIs encapsulation (GeoLoc, Connective, AccMeter, Camera, G sensor, Events, File system, etc.) is plugged into IDE as well, such as PhoneGap (Apache Cordova), Appcelerator. That means a custom APP can use most of mobile device features without any of 4GL coding or native coding, and make it once developed, deployed anywhere.

Market

The MEAP software market is constantly evolving and expanding. According to TechNavio's analysts, "the Global Mobile Enterprise Application Platform market will reach $1.6 billion in 2014."[7]

See also

References

  1. "We've renamed the multichannel access gateway market to the mobile enterprise application platform market, reflecting its maturation, Apple's entry, and the move of mobile tools and platforms to the application development mainstream." Michael J. King, William Clark, "Magic Quadrant for Mobile Enterprise Application", Gartner Note G00162969, 18 December 2008. The following year Gartner added the "mobile consumer application platform" category in another magic quadrant report.
  2. Michael Brandenburg, Technical Editor. "Mobile enterprise application platforms: A primer". Searchmobilecomputing.techtarget.com. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
  3. http://storage.slalom.com/assets/documents/wp-meap-pov.pdf
  4. Gartner RAS Core Research Note G00211688, Michael J. King, William Clark, 20 April 2011
  5. "MSP, Mobile Service Platform". i-Rose, Ltd. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  6. "Many-device-to-many-platform Mobile App Integration is No Longer a Challenge". Configure.IT. Retrieved 2014-11-20.
  7. "Global Mobile Enterprise Applications Platforms (MEAPS) 6206411". Marketresearch.com. 2011-03-24. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
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