Twilio Programmable Video is back from the dead
Twilio Programmable Video is back. Twilio decided not to sunset this service. Here’s where their new focus lies and what it means to you and to the industry.
Read MoreEveryone wants an API these days. And they want developers to use these APIs. What can carriers do to attract developers?
APIs are the new black. If you are developing a service. Or a product. Or anything – you need to expose APIs.
Why? Because everybody does.
In recent years, carriers have lost much of their strength to the smartphone OS vendors – mainly Apple and Google, who are becoming more dominant: innovation today occurs on smartphones and not on the carrier’s network. And the way that innovation occurs is by way of APIs that are offered on the devices for application developers.
Carriers want some of that relationship and innovation back, and the most obvious way of doing that is by offering APIs that others will use. But it is easier said than done: most of the things developers need are on the smartphone already in terms of APIs – be it location, data connectivity, access to phone calls, SMS, etc.
What are carriers trying to do these days in this domain?
AT&T’s Developer Program isn’t new, but it is definitely growing.
The interesting things they do:
Telefonica has gone and branded their whole developer initiative as BlueVia.
They offer some neat APIs along with monetization tools for developers. Their main focus, in my view, is trying to reach out to developers directly for the use of their network through APIs.
Deutrsche Telekom has just launched their Developer Garden, which is essentially around providing building blocks for service creation through APIs.
The developer garden is a marketplace, where developers can find various sets of APIs that they can use: some of these come from APIs that Deutsche Telekom exposed directly, while others come from partnering with the likes of Voxeo.
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Other carriers are headed there as well, but these are the ones that are doing the most in my view.
The ways to go at this point in time, can probably be seen as multiple initiatives that carriers need to take:
Moving forward, M2M will increase the need and the ability of carriers to provide APIs: when the whole usage becomes automated between machines – what is there other than APIs?
Twilio Programmable Video is back. Twilio decided not to sunset this service. Here’s where their new focus lies and what it means to you and to the industry.
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