This question seems to happen a lot, and the answer, I've noticed, depends on the background of the fellow you ask (not suprising). Most guys I know that have a heavy web background advocate the HTML5 + Javascript. Guys that have their roots in desktop or client-server advocate a more "native" approach (i.e. Java/Objective-C).
Personally, I believe it depends on the need/problem you're trying to solve, and that going one should be familiar with both ways: the HTML5/Javascript way and the "native" way. On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 08:28, Andrew August <aaug...@kaplan.edu> wrote: > I have been watching this thread for months, on the sidelines. > I teach ANDROID development for Kaplan University. > > My background is in C# and I am most familiar with Visual Studio. > I wanted to include a class using C#, but thought it would be too > confusing for novice students. > So I have designed my course to use native JAVA. and Eclipse. > > It has been proposed that we should be looking at HTML5 for ALL mobile > development. > > My questions, with respect to your current projects: > Would you choose C# again? > Would you consider a HTML5 solution? > > As I am in the business of preparing your future staffers, > Where do you see the industry going? > > Thanks, > Prof Andy > > > > -- > *Andrew August* > *Faculty - Programming* > *School of Information Systems & Technology* > > 6301 Kaplan University Avenue > Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309 > > Cell: 561-313-8095 > AIM: aaugustkaplan > www.kaplan.edu > > *Building Futures* > > > _______________________________________________ > Monodroid mailing list > Monodroid@lists.ximian.com > > UNSUBSCRIBE INFORMATION: > http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/monodroid > > -- http://www.opgenorth.net
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