Posts Tagged ‘ipad development nearshore’
Our Sweet Spot – The sorts of things we look for in a project.
At Agave Lab, we help companies and individuals affordably convert their ideas into products. This might mean transforming a napkin sketch into a fundable, high-quality beta release, or building out the feature set for the next release of an existing application.
Common themes include:
Working with clients to evolve a seed of an idea into a compelling product plan
Keeping our fees low so that our clients can afford to try take risks and try new things
A dedication to user interfaces that are clean and crisp
A belief that form should follow function
A focus on viral growth strategies
Industrial-strength code and architecture
Development processes based on Agile and Scrum
Projects That We Look for
iOS and Android
Mobile social
Feedback and reviews
Photo sharing
Holiday Cocktail iPhone Application
Posted by: andy in iPhone and iPad on December 9th, 2010
Hot of the presses and in the store for the holidays! We teamed up withBambou Design to create a nifty drink app for a client in San Francisco. Those of you who are of the boozy persuasion, check it out and let us know if you like it.
Happy (tipsy) Holidays,
The Agave Lab Team.
Intel Invests in Guadalajara
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on April 28th, 2010
A tech museum for kids?! A center for environmental design?! How cool!!
Intel, the manufacturer of microprocessors, will invest 2.3 billion pesos over the next three years in Guadalajara, Jalisco, announced world chairman Paul Otellini. The firm plans to expand its installations in this city with a design center, a technological museum for kids and a laboratory with links to small and medium-sized businesses. Otellini said that the new building would be one of the company’s first to be certified as a leader in environmental design and energy consumption.
Read more: http://www.poder360.com/dailynews_detail.php?blurbid=7045#ixzz0mPNmm0b0
Avoiding the iTunes App Store
Posted by: andy in iPhone and iPad on April 12th, 2010
So check this out – we found a way to make a regular website think that it’s a native iPhone or iPad application. This seems like a small deal but it’s actually HUGE.
Point your iPhone’s web browser at www.agavelab.com and see what you get. It looks like, acts like, seems exactly like an application that you’d download from the iTunes store. Ah, but you didn’t need a developer account, you weren’t at the mercy of Apple’s approval process (and lengthy delay), and you can make changes to it whenever you want – no need to recompile and re-release a new version of your product.
This gets especially interesting when you have a native iPhone app that wants to call out to a website – the transition is nearly seamless. We’re currently working on a very cool project that bridges the gap between a native app and a website – for now it’s secret but we’re within a few weeks of release. We’ll let you know when it comes out.





