Over the years, our team has developed a strong mobile application development know-how, starting in 2011 with the first Android application developed for a research effort on lifelogging.
Since then, we have developed a range of applications:
- SMore# Android app to access and control your Smart#1/#3/#5 BEV (battery-operated electric vehicle) as alternative to vendor application
- Competences demonstrated include modern UI design &implementation, notification handling, local SQLite database processing, REST-based server command&control
- Storica (link to download apk file, since app is not listed anymore on Google Playstore) Lifelogging app that records anything from call log, SMS, location, media, bluetooth and audio environment and many more
- here is a pdf file about using Storica from October 2015
- Competences demonstrated include modern UI design & implementation, Android fore-/background services, complex notification handling, device-local SQLite database processing (personal database after 14 years of recording includes now >2.6GB of data processed entirely on the device for visualisation)
- AIRS (Android Remote Sensing) @ Github, not maintained anymore as its main functionalities were integrated into Storica but, with proper modifications, it could still be used as a standalone mobile-based data gathering platform
- here is a pdf file about using AIRS from 2013
- see AIRS documentation
- Competences demonstrated include device-local database handling, Android service realisation
- AIRS Ruler (not available anymore on Google Playstore), complemented Storica & AIRS, allowing for rule-based actions, triggerred by events recorded by Storica/AIRS
- Competences demonstrated include intent-based IPC, modern card-based UI
- PhotoSign (not available anymore on Google Playstore), to process and watermark local images before publishing on, e.g., social media
- Competences demonstrated include media processing and intent-based IPC
- NORS on Sourceforge (March 2009), originally developed for Java MIDP on, e.g., Series60-based Nokia devices for remote monitoring
- MIDP basis also allowed execution on machine-to-machine devices for remote monitoring of, e.g., meeting facilities
- Was later transcoded into Android Java as the first version of AIRS (see above)