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App Catalog, Default App, Doc View, Google Voice, How To, Internalz, Launcher, apps, google maps, jason robitaille, music, pdf, pdf view, txt, wave, webOS, webOS Internals, webos 1.3.1, webos 1.3.5

Making your app a “default app” in webOS

July 29th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Internalz, the default appDevelopers and users alike have all noticed this “Default Apps” option in the webOS launcher. Right now the only out-of-the-box option users are presented with is a choice of Google Maps or their carrier’s navigation solution (if applicable) for the default mapping software. But below the defaults for web, email, and phone, there’s a long list of file types and the default app used to open them (PDFs opened by PDF View, .WAV opened by Music, and so forth).

When the Default Apps scene appeared back in November with webOS 1.3.1, and was enabled with 1.3.5 a month later, we were all aflutter as to what that could mean for webOS. Pick your own third party dialer app (Google Voice), web browser, and more? That’d be grand. Sadly, Palm has yet to release an API for developers to set their app as an option for default apps, but that hasn’t stopped Jason Robitaille and Rod Whitby from hacking their way onto the Default Apps screen.

The addition of service calls registers an app with the Default Apps service, selecting the app as the default when no other apps present open that file type, and setting it as an option when there are already apps that open said file. For example, Robitaille’s Internalz app is registered as the default app for more than twenty different file types, and appears as an option for .TXT, with Doc View as the other and default choice. Tap on the file type, select the new apps, back swipe, and you’re good to go.

Jason does note that it’s not entirely stable (thus Palm not publishing the API), and that some not-all-that clean "mimetype" registering to get Internalz to be an option for file types already defaulted by another app (e.g. a PDF viewer app would have to masquerade as PDF View to trick Default Apps into giving it the option).

Of course, it’s worth noting that because Palm has not released the APIs to performing these service calls, any app submitted (be it to the App Catalog, beta, or web distribution feeds) will be automatically and summarily rejected. But that’s not to stop developers from wishing, hoping, dreaming, and preparing. And releasing via homebrew… nudge nudge, wink wink.

Source: MetaViewSoft

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Adobe Reader, App Catalog, G1, Palm, Palm Pre, Sprint, T-Mobile, YouTube, documents to go, news, pdf, podcast, pre

Documents to Go and Adobe Reader Spotted in Pre Video

May 11th 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Palm Pre Apps

Thanks to the eagle eyes of the PreCentral.net forum membership, that latest Palm Pre Podcast video revealed more than just the back gesture and double tapping. We quickly glimpsed the YouTube app that we saw earlier, but before that was opened, we got to see something even more fun: icons for the Pre NASCAR app, App Catalog, YouTube, Documents to Go, Adobe Reader, and a generic "Sprint" app that we suspect might be some sort of Account management app ala T-Mobile’s Android app. While we knew that App Catalog and YouTube were going to be there anyway, it’s still nice to see them actually in place.

Documents To Go and Adobe PDF iconsBut those other two: Documents To Go and Adobe Reader. While we can’t read the labels for those icons, the former should be recognizable to any Palm user from the past five years, and the latter, well, we all know that one as the PDF icon. Presumably, this means that the Pre will have the full document editing support that was hinted at by Inside Sprint Now, as well as the ability to natively view PDFs.

Thanks to miles4000 and Kyusaku for the spot!

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