Hi Anil,

I just released JVending 2.0: http://code.google.com/p/jvending/. It
supports delivery of Java ME and I added support for stocking and delivery
of android applications over OMA OTA, which is similar to the JNLP (Web
Start) delivery. I'm delivering a client next week that hooks into JV and
allows the user to discover, download and install application. The Android
client will be open-source as well, but you can setup and kick around the JV
server first.

Also if anyone is interested, they can stock their application directly into
a JVending server, during a build release using Masa: Maven plugins for
Android - http://code.google.com/p/masa/.

Shane

On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Anil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Will you be developing something similar to Java Web Start for
> distribution?
> -
> Anil
>
> On Mar 26, 8:57 pm, "Jean-Baptiste Queru" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello, I'm the Google engineer who works on that area of Android.
> >
> > Indeed, the download system is still under development, and you can
> expect
> > to see changes there at some point.
> >
> > The two key aspects that you need to know is that:
> > -the MIME type is what matters. The URI extension is not relevant in
> this case.
> > -in order for the files to be downloaded and for your app to be
> launched, your
> > application needs to register as a viewer the MIME type of your files
> > (Intent.VIEW_ACTION).
> >
> > There's a high probability that in the long run the files downloaded
> from the
> > browser will be saved on the SD card (which the emulator can emulate).
> > However, I am not sure what the exact behavior is in the currently
> available
> > SDKs.
> >
> > (For what it's worth, at the implementation level, there's indeed going
> to be
> > some code that involves some content providers and some permissions, but
> > at your level you don't need to worry about that, that's only used by
> the
> > browser to manage its downloads).
> >
> > JBQ
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 26, 2008 at 5:52 PM, hackbod <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > >  This stuff is still under development, but I believe right now it is
> > >  downloaded into a content provider that anyone can access.  In the
> > >  future, this will be downloaded to a more sophisticated download
> > >  manager, that maintains per-item permissions so only the application
> > >  requesting a download can access the files it is downloading, and it
> > >  can then allow other applications to access particular uris -- such
> as
> > >  when the user clicks on one of the downloads, granting the launched
> > >  activity permission to open that particular uri.
> >
> > >  On Mar 26, 3:29 pm, Amos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >  > Thanks for your reply, Dianne!
> >
> > >  > I'll register my Activity like you specified.
> >
> > >  > But how will I be able to access the downloaded file. Will it be
> > >  > downloaded to a temp location and have global read permission set
> on
> > >  > it? How will the file's path be passed to me using the Intent sent
> by
> > >  > the browser?
> >
> > >  > Many thanks,
> >
> > >  > Amos
> >
> > >  > On Mar 26, 7:02 pm, hackbod <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > >  > > All of Android's file mappings are based on MIME types.  As long
> as
> > >  > > your web server is returning the correct MIME type, you can
> implement
> > >  > > an activity that says it knows how to VIEW that MIME type and it
> will
> > >  > > be launched when the user clicks on such a file after downloading
> it.
> >
> > >  > > On Mar 26, 3:34 am,Amos<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > >  > > > Hi,
> >
> > >  > > > I would like to implement the following scenario:
> >
> > >  > > > When a user browses a web page withBrowserand clicks a link
> with a
> > >  > > > special file extension (which is unique to my application, such
> as
> > >  > > > "www.mysite.com/somefile.xxx"), that file will be downloaded
> and then
> > >  > > > my application launched to view the downloaded file.
> >
> > >  > > > I'd like thebrowserto handle the file download if possible, and
> when
> > >  > > > it's done start one of my activities and provide the  file to
> it.
> >
> > >  > > > This is desktop behavior and I'm not sure it conforms to the
> Android
> > >  > > > intent/content provider way of doing things - but this is what
> I'd
> > >  > > > like to happen.
> >
> > >  > > > Any ideas or pointers?
> >
> > >  > > > Thanks in advance,
> >
> > >  > > >Amos
> >
>

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