In the first year of the iPhone's existence, Apple sold 6 million of them; brought the thing to 70 countries; and inspired an industry of misbegotten iPhone lookalikes from other companies. By the end of Year One, you could type iPhone into Google and get 229 million hits.
Now there's a new iPhone, the iPhone 3G. More importantly, there's a new version of the iPhone's software, called iPhone 2.0. And then there's the iPhone App Store, which offers thousands of add-on programs written by individuals, software companies, and everything in between.
This hands-on, in-depth book introduces developers to the initial release of the iPhone application platform and assists them in creating Web 2.0 applications that operate on the iPhone and integrate with its services. Author Richard Wagner shares his experience as he guides readers through the process of building new applications from scratch and migrating existing Web 2.0 applications to this new mobile platform.
Congratulations! The iPhone you just bought is one heck of a wireless telephone, complete with a capable 2-megapixel digital camera. But it’s way more than that: it's also a gorgeous widescreen video iPod and the smallest, most powerful Internet communications device yet. So now that you've got it, what do you do with it? That's where iPhone For Dummies comes in.
Author: Jonathan Zdziarski
Publisher: O'Reilly
Publish date: March 2008
Format: CHM
File size: 721.66 KB

Certain technologies bring out everyone's hidden geek, and iPhone did the moment it was released. Even though Apple created iPhone as a closed device, tens of thousands of developers bought them with the express purpose of designing and running third-party software. In this clear and concise book, veteran hacker Jonathan Zdziarski -- one of the original hackers of the iPhone -- explains the iPhone's native environment and how you can build software for this device using its Objective-C, C, and C++ development frameworks.
You can say the iPhone is everything it was supposed to be, or you can say it wasn't worth the hype. But one thing's for sure: it was the most eagerly awaited new gadget in consumer-electronics history. in the six months from when apple announced the iPhone to the day it went on sale, the phone was written up in 12,000 print articles and 69 million Web pages. at the flagship Fifth avenue apple store in New York, people began lining up for the iPhone five days before the thing went on sale. (Well, one guy did.)